Package Data | |
---|---|
Maintainer Username: | AntonioCarlosRibeiro |
Maintainer Contact: | acr@antoniocarlosribeiro.com (Antonio Carlos Ribeiro) |
Package Create Date: | 2013-12-18 |
Package Last Update: | 2023-02-17 |
Language: | PHP |
License: | BSD-3-Clause |
Last Refreshed: | 2024-11-11 15:18:57 |
Package Statistics | |
---|---|
Total Downloads: | 893,618 |
Monthly Downloads: | 7,416 |
Daily Downloads: | 60 |
Total Stars: | 1,396 |
Total Watchers: | 50 |
Total Forks: | 164 |
Total Open Issues: | 41 |
This a "soft-firewall" package. Its purpose is to help people prevent unauthorized access to routes by IP address. It is able to keep track of IPs, countries and hosts (dynamic ip), and redirect non-authorized users to, for instance, a "Coming Soon" page, while letting whitelisted IPs to have access to the entire site. It is now also able to detect and block attacks (too many requests) from single IPs or whole countries.
This package can prevent some headaches and help you block some access to your apps, but cannot replace firewalls and appliances, for attacks at the network level, you'll still need a real firewall.
All IP addresses in those lists will no be able to access routes filtered by the blacklist filter.
Those IP addresses, ranges or countries can
Firewall is able to detect simple attacks to your page, by counting requests from the same IP or country. Just enable it on your config/firewall.php
and, to receive notifications, configure the Slack service in config/services.php
:
'slack' => [
'webhook_url' => env('SLACK_WEBHOOK_URL'),
],
and add the route notification method to your user model:
/**
* Route notifications for the Slack channel.
*
* @return string
*/
public function routeNotificationForSlack()
{
return config('services.slack.webhook_url');
}
IPs (white and black) lists can be stored in array, files and database. Initially database access to lists is disabled, so, to test your Firewall configuration you can publish the config file and edit the blacklist
or whitelist
arrays:
'blacklist' => array(
'127.0.0.1',
'192.168.17.0/24'
'127.0.0.1/255.255.255.255'
'10.0.0.1-10.0.0.255'
'172.17.*.*'
'country:br'
'/usr/bin/firewall/blacklisted.txt',
),
The file (for instance /usr/bin/firewall/blacklisted.txt
) must contain one IP, range or file name per line, and, yes, it will search for files recursivelly, so you can have a file of files if you need:
127.0.0.2
10.0.0.0-10.0.0.100
/tmp/blacklist.txt
Non-whitelisted IP addresses can be blocked or redirected. To configure redirection you'll have to publish the config.php
file and configure:
'redirect_non_whitelisted_to' => 'coming/soon',
You have access to the following commands:
firewall:list List all IP address, white and blacklisted.
firewall:updategeoip Update the GeoIP database.
firewall:blacklist Add an IP address to blacklist.
firewall:clear Remove all ip addresses from white and black lists.
firewall:remove Remove an IP address from white or black list.
firewall:whitelist Add an IP address to whitelist.
Those are results from firewall:list
:
+--------------+-----------+-----------+
| IP Address | Whitelist | Blacklist |
+--------------+-----------+-----------+
| 10.17.12.7 | | X |
| 10.17.12.100 | X | |
| 10.17.12.101 | X | |
| 10.17.12.102 | X | |
| 10.17.12.200 | | X |
+--------------+-----------+-----------+
+-----------------------+-----------+-----------+
| IP Address | Whitelist | Blacklist |
+-----------------------+-----------+-----------+
| 172.0.0.0-172.0.0.255 | | X |
| country:br | | X |
| host:mypc.myname.com | X | |
+-----------------------+-----------+-----------+
You can also use the Firewall Facade
to manage the lists:
$whitelisted = Firewall::isWhitelisted('10.17.12.1');
$blacklisted = Firewall::isBlacklisted('10.0.0.3');
Firewall::whitelist('192.168.1.1');
Firewall::blacklist('10.17.12.1', true); /// true = force in case IP is whitelisted
Firewall::blacklist('127.0.0.0-127.0.0.255');
Firewall::blacklist('200.212.331.0/28');
Firewall::blacklist('country:br');
if (Firewall::whichList($ip) !== false) // returns false, 'whitelist' or 'blacklist'
{
Firewall::remove($ip);
}
Return a blocking access response:
return Firewall::blockAccess();
Suspicious events will be (if you wish) logged, so tail
it:
php artisan tail
You can block a country by, instead of an ip address, pass country:<2-letter ISO code>
. So, to block all Brazil's IP addresses, you do:
php artisan firewall:blacklist country:br
You will have to add this requirement to your composer.json
file:
"geoip/geoip": "~1.14"
or
"geoip2/geoip2": "~2.0"
You need to enable country search on your firewall.php config file:
'enable_country_search' => true,
And you can schedule this command to update your cities GeoIp database regularly:
php artisan firewall:updategeoip
You can find those codes here: isocodes
You can block users from accessing some pages only for the current session, by using those methods:
Firewall::whitelistOnSession($ip);
Firewall::blacklistOnSession($ip);
Firewall::removeFromSession($ip);
Click here to see it working and in case you need a help figuring out things, try this repository.
Require the Firewall package using Composer:
composer require pragmarx/firewall
Laravel 5.5 and up
You don't have to do anything else, this package uses Package Auto-Discovery's feature, and should be available as soon as you install it via Composer.
Laravel 5.4 and below
Add the Service Provider and the Facade to your app/config/app.php:
PragmaRX\Firewall\Vendor\Laravel\ServiceProvider::class,
'Firewall' => PragmaRX\Firewall\Vendor\Laravel\Facade::class,
Add middlewares to your app/Http/Kernel.php
protected $routeMiddleware = [
...
'fw-only-whitelisted' => \PragmaRX\Firewall\Middleware\FirewallWhitelist::class,
'fw-block-blacklisted' => \PragmaRX\Firewall\Middleware\FirewallBlacklist::class,
'fw-block-attacks' => \PragmaRX\Firewall\Middleware\BlockAttacks::class,
];
or
protected $middlewareGroups = [
'web' => [
...
],
'api' => [
...
],
'firewall' => [
\PragmaRX\Firewall\Middleware\FirewallBlacklist::class,
\PragmaRX\Firewall\Middleware\BlockAttacks::class,
],
];
Then you can use them in your routes:
Route::group(['middleware' => 'fw-block-blacklisted'], function ()
{
Route::get('/', 'HomeController@index');
});
Or you could use both. In the following example the allow group will give free access to the 'coming soon' page and block or just redirect non-whitelisted IP addresses to another, while still blocking access to the blacklisted ones.
Route::group(['middleware' => 'fw-block-blacklisted'], function ()
{
Route::get('coming/soon', function()
{
return "We are about to launch, please come back in a few days.";
});
Route::group(['middleware' => 'fw-only-whitelisted'], function ()
{
Route::get('/', 'HomeController@index');
});
});
Note: You can add other middleware you have already created to the new groups by simply
adding it to the fw-allow-wl
or fw-block-bl
middleware group.
Migrate your database
php artisan migrate
Warning: If you already have a Firewall package installed and migrated, you need to update your migration name, in the migrations
table, to 2014_02_01_311070_create_firewall_table
, otherwise the migrate command will fail tell you the table already exists.
To publish the configuration file you'll have to:
Laravel 4
php artisan config:publish pragmarx/firewall
Laravel 5
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="PragmaRX\Firewall\Vendor\Laravel\ServiceProvider"
Firewall is licensed under the BSD 3-Clause License - see the LICENSE
file for details
Pull requests and issues are more than welcome.