PeerGuardian Linux
PeerGuardian Linux (pgl) is a privacy oriented firewall application. It blocks connections to and from hosts specified in huge block lists (thousands or millions of IP ranges). pgl is based on the Linux kernel netfilter framework and iptables.
A more native, efficient solution to achieve the same end is to use the ipset kernel module in conjunction with the pg2ipset tool and the ipset-update script.
Installation
There are two AUR packages to choose from: pgl-cliAUR includes only the daemon and CLI tools, while pglAUR comes complete with a GUI (written using Qt).
Configuration
-
/etc/pgl/blocklists.list
contains a list of URL for retrieving the various block lists. -
/etc/pgl/pglcmd.conf
, empty by default, overrides the default settings present in/usr/lib/pgl/pglcmd.defaults
. -
/etc/pgl/allow.p2p
lists custom IP ranges that will not be filtered.
The default lists in /etc/pgl/blocklists.list
block many potentially legitimate IP address. Users are encouraged to exercise best judgment and the information available at I-Blocklist.
It is recommended to disable the filtering of HTTP connections by adding the following to /etc/pgl/pglcmd.conf
:
/etc/pgl/pglcmd.conf
WHITE_TCP_OUT="http https"
Conversely, one could white list all the ports except the ones used by the program to be blocked. The following example only use the block lists to stop incoming traffic on ports 53 (DNS) and 80 (HTTP):
/etc/pgl/pglcmd.conf
WHITE_TCP_IN="0:79 81:65535" WHITE_UDP_IN="0:52 54:65535"
Server
systemd initialization of the system means that it is quite possible for a server to be briefly unprotected, prior to pgl launch. To ensure adequate protection, create a service file named after the original server (i.e. /etc/systemd/system/httpd.service
and paste the following:
/etc/systemd/system/httpd.service
.include /usr/lib/systemd/system/httpd.service [Unit] Wants=pgl.service After=pgl.service
LAN
By default, pgl blocks traffic on the local IPv4 addresses. To disable this behavior, edit /etc/pgl/pglcmd.conf
to add an exception using the WHITE_IP_* setting:
/etc/pgl/pglcmd.conf
WHITE_IP_OUT="192.168.0.0/24"
/etc/pgl/pglcmd.conf
WHITE_IP_IN="192.168.0.0/24"
For further information, please refer to the # Whitelist IPs #
section of /usr/lib/pgl/pglcmd.defaults
.
Starting up
Once comfortable with the configuration of both the daemon and lists, start the pgl
service. To make sure that pgl works as intended, issue this command:
# pglcmd test
To start pgl automatically at boot, enable the pgl
service.
Running pgl from within a container
Users running pgl within a Linux Container may need to modify the package included lxc@.service
to include the loading of key modules needed by pgl.
/etc/systemd/system/lxc@.service
[Unit] Description=%i LXC After=network.target [Service] Type=forking ExecStartPre=/usr/bin/modprobe -a xt_NFQUEUE xt_mark xt_iprange ExecStart=/usr/bin/lxc-start -d -n %i ExecStop=/usr/bin/lxc-stop -n %i Delegate=true [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target