How To Protect SSH With Fail2Ban on CentOS 7
Table of Contents
Introduction #
While connecting to your server through SSH can be very secure, the SSH daemon itself is a service that must be exposed to the Internet to function properly. This comes with some inherent risk and offers a vector of attack for would-be assailants.
Any service that is exposed to the network is a potential target in this way. If you pay attention to application logs for these services, you will often see repeated, systematic login attempts that represent brute-force attacks by users and bots alike.
A service called Fail2ban can mitigate this problem by creating rules that automatically alter your iptables firewall configuration based on a predefined number of unsuccessful login attempts. This will allow your server to respond to illegitimate access attempts without intervention from you.
In this guide, we’ll cover how to install and use Fail2ban on a CentOS 7 server.
Install Fail2ban on CentOS 7 #
While Fail2ban is not available in the official CentOS package repository, it is packaged for the EPEL project. EPEL, standing for Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux, can be installed with a release package that is available from CentOS:
sudo yum install epel-release
You will be prompted to continue—press y, followed by Enter:
yum promptTransaction Summary
============================================================================
Install 1 Package
Total download size: 14 k
Installed size: 24 k
Is this ok [y/d/N]: y
Now we should be able to install the fail2ban
package:
sudo yum install fail2ban
Again, press y and Enter when prompted to continue.
Once the installation has finished, use systemctl
to enable the fail2ban
service:
sudo systemctl enable fail2ban
Configure Local Settings #
The Fail2ban service keeps its configuration files in the /etc/fail2ban
directory. There, you can find a file with default values called jail.conf
. Since this file may be overwritten by package upgrades, we shouldn’t edit it in-place. Instead, we’ll write a new file called jail.local
. Any values defined in jail.local
will override those in jail.conf
.
jail.conf
contains a [DEFAULT]
section, followed by sections for individual services. jail.local
may override any of these values. Additionally, files in /etc/fail2ban/jail.d/
can be used to override settings in both of these files. Files are applied in the following order:
/etc/fail2ban/jail.conf
/etc/fail2ban/jail.d/*.conf
, alphabetically
/etc/fail2ban/jail.local
/etc/fail2ban/jail.d/*.local
, alphabetically
Any file may contain a [DEFAULT]
section, executed first, and may also contain sections for individual jails. The last vavalue set for a given parameter takes precedence.
Let’s begin by writing a very simple version of jail.local
. Open a new file using nano
(or your editor of choice):
sudo nano /etc/fail2ban/jail.local
Paste the following:
/etc/fail2ban/jail.local
[DEFAULT]
# Ban hosts for one hour:
bantime = 3600
# Override /etc/fail2ban/jail.d/00-firewalld.conf:
banaction = iptables-multiport
[sshd]
enabled = true
This overrides three settings: It sets a new default bantime
for all services, makes sure we’re using iptables
for firewall configuration, and enables the sshd
jail.
Exit and save the new file (in nano
, press Ctrl-X to exit, y to save, and Enter to confirm the filename). Now we can restart the fail2ban
service using systemctl
:
sudo systemctl restart fail2ban
The systemctl
command should finish without any output. In order to check that the service is running, we can use fail2ban-client
:
sudo fail2ban-client status
Status
|- Number of jail: 1
`- Jail list: sshd
You can also get more detailed information about a specific jail:
sudo fail2ban-client status sshd
Explore Available Settings #
The version of jail.local
we defined above is a good start, but you may want to adjust a number of other settings. Open jail.conf
, and we’ll examine some of the defaults. If you decide to change any of these values, remember that they should be copied to the appropriate section of jail.local
and adjusted there, rather than modified in-place.
sudo nano /etc/fail2ban/jail.conf
Default Settings for All Jails #
First, scroll through the [DEFAULT]
section.
ignoreip = 127.0.0.1/8
You can adjust the source addresses that Fail2ban ignores by adding a value to the ignoreip
parameter. Currently, it is configured not to ban any traffic coming from the local machine. You can include additional addresses to ignore by appending them to the end of the parameter, separated by a space.
bantime = 600
The bantime
parameter sets the length of time that a client will be banned when they have failed to authenticate correctly. This is measured in seconds. By default, this is set to 600 seconds, or 10 minutes.
findtime = 600
maxretry = 3
The next two parameters that you want to pay attention to are findtime
and maxretry
. These work together to establish the conditions under which a client should be banned.
The maxretry
variable sets the number of tries a client has to authenticate within a window of time defined by findtime
, before being banned. With the default settings, Fail2ban will ban a client that unsuccessfully attempts to log in 3 times within a 10 minute window.
destemail = root@localhost
sendername = Fail2Ban
mta = sendmail
If you wish to configure email alerts, you may need to override the destemail
, sendername
, and mta
settings. The destemail
parameter sets the email address that should receive ban messages. The sendername
sets the value of the “From” field in the email. The mta
parameter configures what mail service will be used to send mail.
action = $(action_)s
This parameter configures the action that Fail2ban takes when it wants to institute a ban. The value action_
is defined in the file shortly before this parameter. The default action is to simply configure the firewall to reject traffic from the offending host until the ban time elapses.
If you would like to configure email alerts, you can override this value from action_
to action_mw
. If you want the email to include the relevant log lines, you can change it to action_mwl
. You’ll want to make sure you have the appropriate mail settings configured if you choose to use mail alerts.
Settings for Individual Jails #
After [DEFAULT]
, we’ll encounter sections configuring individual jails for different services. These will typically include a port
to be banned and a logpath
to monitor for malicious access attempts. For example, the SSH jail we already enabled in jail.local
has the following settings:
/etc/fail2ban/jail.local
[sshd]
port = ssh
logpath = %(sshd_log)s
In this case, ssh
is a pre-defined variable for the standard SSH port, and %(sshd_log)s
uses a value defined elsewhere in Fail2ban’s standard configuration (this helps keep jail.conf
portable between different operating systems).
Another setting you may encounter is the filter
that will be used to decide whether a line in a log indicates a failed authentication.
The filter
value is actually a reference to a file located in the /etc/fail2ban/filter.d
directory, with its .conf
extension removed. This file contains the regular expressions that determine whether a line in the log is bad. We won’t be covering this file in-depth in this guide, because it is fairly complex and the predefined settings match appropriate lines well.
However, you can see what kind of filters are available by looking into that directory:
ls /etc/fail2ban/filter.d
If you see a file that looks to be related to a service you are using, you should open it with a text editor. Most of the files are fairly well commented and you should be able to tell what type of condition the script was designed to guard against. Most of these filters have appropriate (disabled) sections in jail.conf
that we can enable in jail.local
if desired.
For instance, pretend that we are serving a website using Nginx and realize that a password-protected portion of our site is getting slammed with login attempts. We can tell Fail2ban to use the nginx-http-auth.conf
file to check for this condition within the /var/log/nginx/error.log
file.
This is actually already set up in a section called [nginx-http-auth]
in our /etc/fail2ban/jail.conf
file. We would just need to add an enabled
parameter for the nginx-http-auth
jail to jail.local
:
/etc/fail2ban/jail.local
[DEFAULT]
# Ban hosts for one hour:
bantime = 3600
# Override /etc/fail2ban/jail.d/00-firewalld.conf:
banaction = iptables-multiport
[sshd]
enabled = true
[nginx-http-auth]
enabled = true
And restart the fail2ban
service:
sudo systemctl restart fail2ban
Monitor Fail2ban Logs and Firewall Configuration #
It’s important to know that a service like Fail2ban is working as-intended. Start by using systemctl
to check the status of the service:
sudo systemctl status fail2ban
If something seems amiss here, you can troubleshoot by checking logs for the fail2ban
unit since the last boot:
sudo journalctl -b -u fail2ban
Next, use fail2ban-client
to query the overall status of fail2ban-server
, or any individual jail:
sudo fail2ban-client status
sudo fail2ban-client status jail_name
Follow Fail2ban’s log for a record of recent actions (press Ctrl-C to exit):
sudo tail -F /var/log/fail2ban.log
List the current rules configured for iptables:
sudo iptables -L
Show iptables rules in a format that reflects the commands necessary to enable each rule:
sudo iptables -S
Conclusion #
You should now be able to configure some basic banning policies for your services. Fail2ban is very easy to set up, and is a great way to protect any kind of service that uses authentication.
If you want to learn more about how Fail2ban works, you can check out our tutorial on how fail2ban rules and files work.