This page explains how to set up a firewall with UFW on Ubuntu 24.04 LTS server or desktop.
The steps are as follows for setting up UFW:
Step 1 – Set Up default UFW policies
First see the current status:
sudo ufw status
By default, the firewall is not enabled. Hence, you will see something as follows on a newly installed system:
Status: inactive
The default policy firewall works excellent for servers and the desktop. It is always a good policy to close all ports on the server and open only the required TCP or UDP ports. Let us block all incoming connections and only allow outgoing connections from the Ubuntu 24.04 LTS cloud server:
sudo ufw default allow outgoing
sudo ufw default deny incoming
Make sure IPv6 support enabled too. Run the grep command as follows:
grep IPV6 /etc/default/ufw
Otherwise, edit the /etc/default/ufw file using a text editor (feel free to choose your preferred text editor):
sudo nano /etc/default/ufw
Set it as follows:
IPV6=yes
Here is how to verify everything again using the egrep command
sudo grep -E 'POLICY|IPV6' /etc/default/ufw
That is all.
Step 2 – Open SSH TCP port 22 using the ufw
The next rational step is to allow incoming SSH connections on the default TCP port 22 as follows:
sudo ufw allow ssh
Say you are running the OpenSSH server on TCP port 1222, then:
sudo ufw allow 1222/tcp
You can limit ssh port access to combat bots as follows too:
sudo ufw limit ssh
See “How to limit SSH (TCP port 22) connections with ufw on Ubuntu Linux” for more information.
Step 3 – Turning on the firewall
That is all needed. Next, you need to turn on the firewall protection for your Ubuntu Linux 24.04 LTS machine. For example:
sudo ufw enable
You may need to confirm the operation if asked. To view the current firewall status, type the systemctl command as follows:
sudo ufw status
Please note that once UFW is enabled, it runs across system reboots. You can verify that easily using the systemctl command:
sudo systemctl status ufw.service
Outputs:
● ufw.service - Uncomplicated firewall Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/ufw.service; enabled; preset: enabled) Active: active (exited) since Wed 2024-05-15 09:22:12 UTC; 10min ago Docs: man:ufw(8) Main PID: 503 (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS) CPU: 6ms May 15 09:22:12 ubuntu systemd[1]: Starting ufw.service - Uncomplicated firewall... May 15 09:22:12 ubuntu-24-04 systemd[1]: Finished ufw.service - Uncomplicated firewall. root@ubuntu-24-04:~#
Step 4 – Opening (allow) TCP or UDP ports
After setting up a firewall policy and opening TCP port 22 for SSH, the next step is to open additional service ports based on the requirements of your application. For example, you may need to open TCP ports 80 and 443 for Nginx, Apache, or Lighttpd web servers:
sudo ufw allow 80/tcp comment 'Allow Apache HTTP'
sudo ufw allow 443/tcp comment 'Allow Apache HTTPS'
Here is how to open the OpenVPN UDP port 1194, type
sudo ufw allow 1194/udp comment 'Allow OpenVPN'
The ufw comment keywords adds comments, which act as an instrumental in understanding firewall rules.
Opening TCP and UDP port ranges
sudo ufw allow 3000:3200/tcp
sudo ufw allow 7000:8000/udp
Allowing connection from a single IP or CIDR
In this example, you want to allow ALL connections from an IP address called 8.8.8.8, enter:
sudo ufw allow from 8.8.8.8
Let us allow connections from an IP address called 123.1.2.3 to our port 25, enter:
sudo ufw allow from 123.1.2.3 to any port 25 proto tcp
And you can set destination IP 111.1.2.3 for port 25 too:
sudo ufw allow from 123.2.3.4 to 111.1.2.3 port 25 proto tcp
How to allow connection on specific interface
Open TCP port 22 for wg1 interface only:
sudo ufw allow in on wg1 to any port 22
Say you want to allow connection for TCP port 3306 on incusbr0 interface from 10.105.28.22, then add
sudo ufw allow in on incusbr0 from 10.105.28.22 to any port 3306 proto tcp
Step 5 – Blocking TCP or UDP ports and connections
Do you want to close ports and block certain IP addresses? The syntax is as follows to deny access. In other words, simply ignoring access to port 23:
sudo ufw deny 23/tcp comment 'Block telnet'
Here is how to deny all connections from an IP address called 1.1.1.1, enter:
sudo ufw deny from 1.1.1.1
How about clock IP/subnet (CIDR) called 1.42.42.32/27, enter:
sudo ufw deny from 1.42.42.32/27
Finally, deny access to 1.1.1.4 (say bad guys or hacker IP address) on port 22? Try:
sudo ufw deny from 1.1.1.4 to any port 22 proto tcp
Testing ufw rules for syntax error
Pass the --dry-run option to test a ufw rule. This means not modifying anything, just displaying the firewall changes. This is great for testing rules before insertion or deletion. The syntax:
sudo ufw --dry-run rule
sudo ufw --dry-run allow from 192.168.1.0/24 to any port 3128 proto tcp
# make some error and see what it doe
sudo ufw --dry-run allow from 192.168.1.1000/24 to any port 3128 proto tcp
Outputs:
ERROR: Bad source address
sudo ufw --dry-run allow from 192.168.1.1/24 to any port 3128 proto tcp_fake_proto
Outputs:
ERROR: Unsupported protocol 'tcp_fake_proto'
Step 6 – Viewing firewall rules
You can see firewall status as numbered list of RULES:
sudo ufw status numbered
Step 7 – Deleting ufw firewall rules
Get list all of the current rules in a numbered list format:
sudo ufw status numbered
Outputs:
Status: active To Action From -- ------ ---- [ 1] 22/tcp ALLOW IN Anywhere [ 2] 80/tcp ALLOW IN Anywhere # Allow Apache HTTP [ 3] 443/tcp ALLOW IN Anywhere # Allow Apache HTTPS [ 4] 1194/udp ALLOW IN Anywhere # Allow OpenVPN [ 5] 3000:3200/tcp ALLOW IN Anywhere [ 6] 7000:8000/udp ALLOW IN Anywhere [ 7] Anywhere ALLOW IN 8.8.8.8 [ 8] 25/tcp ALLOW IN 123.1.2.3 [ 9] 111.1.2.3 25/tcp ALLOW IN 123.2.3.4 [10] 22 on wg1 ALLOW IN Anywhere [11] 3306/tcp on incusbr0 ALLOW IN 10.105.28.22 [12] 23/tcp DENY IN Anywhere # Block telnet [13] Anywhere DENY IN 1.1.1.1 [14] Anywhere DENY IN 1.42.42.32/27 [15] 22/tcp DENY IN 1.1.1.4 [16] 22/tcp (v6) ALLOW IN Anywhere (v6) [17] 80/tcp (v6) ALLOW IN Anywhere (v6) # Allow Apache HTTP [18] 443/tcp (v6) ALLOW IN Anywhere (v6) # Allow Apache HTTPS [19] 1194/udp (v6) ALLOW IN Anywhere (v6) # Allow OpenVPN [20] 3000:3200/tcp (v6) ALLOW IN Anywhere (v6) [21] 7000:8000/udp (v6) ALLOW IN Anywhere (v6) [22] 22 (v6) on wg1 ALLOW IN Anywhere (v6) [23] 23/tcp (v6) DENY IN Anywhere (v6) # Block telnet
To remove firewall rule # 22 type the command:
sudo ufw delete 22
sudo ufw status numbered
See how to delete a UFW firewall rule on Ubuntu / Debian Linux tutorial for further information.
Step 8 – Stopping and removing UFW
If you no longer need ufw, here is how to disable it:
sudo ufw disable
sudo ufw reset
Step 9 – View the firewall logs
By default all UFW entries are logged into /var/log/ufw.log file. Use the grep/less/more and other commands to view the ufw logs. For examples:
sudo journalctl -u ufw.service
Let us print a list of all IP address trying to log in via SSH port but dropped by the UFW:
journalctl -u ufw.service -g 'DPT=22' |\
grep -E -o 'SRC=([0-9]{1,3}[\.]){3}[0-9]{1,3}' |\
awk -F'=' '{ print $2 }' | sort -u
Finally, here is how to display the list of rules:
sudo ufw show listening
Outputs:
tcp: tcp6: 22 * (systemd) [16] allow 22/tcp udp: 68 10.83.200.36 (systemd-networkd) [ 7] allow from 8.8.8.8 [13] deny from 1.1.1.1 [14] deny from 1.42.42.32/27
Also:
sudo ufw show added
Summing up
Wasn’t that easy? You’ve now learned how to safeguard your Ubuntu 24.04 LTS Linux server. For further guidance, consult the documentation online or access them using the man command (ufw help command).
man ufw
ufw help