Scott Ruckh
2007-Nov-29 15:41 UTC
Re: [SOLVED] Re: Limit Rule, Recent Match support, & shorewall upgrade
This is what you said Tom Eastep> Christian Villa Real Lopes wrote: >> Andrew Suffield wrote: >>> Then you most likely botched the installation of the new version of >>> iptables; somewhere, the paths got mixed up. This is likely to cause >>> you further trouble later. I''m not sufficiently familiar with redhat >>> to guess at where exactly the error occurred, but a correct >>> reinstallation should sort it out. >>> >> >> I''m a litte familiar and I can say you (Scott) installed and 64 bit >> version of CentOS and later installed some 32 bits packages and some how >> shorewall is looking for 32bit iptables instead of 64 bits version. > > Shorewall looks for $IPTABLES if that variable has been set in > shorewall.conf. Otherwise, it uses $PATH as set in shorewall.conf. If > neither is set, it uses a default $PATH > (/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin) >I will admit I was brain dead when I installed my own version of iptables. Now that I am reading this I remember reading Tom''s notes on the web page about the IPTABLES variable. In my older config I was specifically setting IPTABLES. When I upgraded shorewall I used the new default config and missed changing the IPTABLES variable. So besides doing a poor job with the iptables installation, I also missed something in the Shorewall upgrade. Even with that being said, running ''which iptables'', does produce the correct path to the newer version of iptables. Unfortunately using Tom''s logic above the shorewall.conf path takes precedence and that is probably where one of many problems stem. Too bad I did not originally do a better job with the iptables installation. I recall I was a bit nervous at the time and was not too confident in what I was doing. Thanks to everyone for refreshing my memory. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- SF.Net email is sponsored by: The Future of Linux Business White Paper from Novell. From the desktop to the data center, Linux is going mainstream. Let it simplify your IT future. http://altfarm.mediaplex.com/ad/ck/8857-50307-18918-4