On Tuesday, June 28, 2011 02:38 AM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
John R Pierce wrote:
On 06/27/11 10:43 AM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
note that doesn't show all the pertinent info. I prefer `iptable -L
-vn`, and it still doesn't show the nat tables, you also need
`iptable -L -vn -t nat` to see those chains, and `iptable -L -vn -t
mangle` if you're using any mangle entries.
iptables-save is designed for iptables output.
sure, for saving to the startup scripts.... the commands I listed
above were to display the tables with full info... Without the -v
flag, -L only shows part of the important stuff.
iptables-save man:
DESCRIPTION:
iptables-save is used to dump the contents of an IP Table in easily
parseable format to STDOUT. Use I/O-redirection provided by your shell
to write to a file.
You seem to have a problem understanding what John is saying. When you
add the v flag, iptables will also report in/out interfaces so that you
don't have to guess when you are trying to fix up the rules on the spot
and not by editing some file.
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