Arch ufw enabling
To enable UFW in Debian I do:
ufw --force enable
I understand from the Arch documentation that do so in Arch I should do instead:
systemctl start ufw
systemctl enable ufw
By "enabling" I mean "Ensuring UFW will run after each system boot".
Is my way of doing so in Arch totally resembles the way to do so in Debian?
arch-linux ufw
add a comment |
To enable UFW in Debian I do:
ufw --force enable
I understand from the Arch documentation that do so in Arch I should do instead:
systemctl start ufw
systemctl enable ufw
By "enabling" I mean "Ensuring UFW will run after each system boot".
Is my way of doing so in Arch totally resembles the way to do so in Debian?
arch-linux ufw
"The next line is only needed once the first time you install the package:# ufw enable
" wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Uncomplicated_Firewall
– sourcejedi
6 hours ago
Why not use iptables? UFW is just a way to make iptables simpler and uses more overhead, I know the increase is really unnoticeable. Yet, I get more throughput with just iptables than with UFW. It is a small difference, but it is there.
– Michael Prokopec
7 mins ago
add a comment |
To enable UFW in Debian I do:
ufw --force enable
I understand from the Arch documentation that do so in Arch I should do instead:
systemctl start ufw
systemctl enable ufw
By "enabling" I mean "Ensuring UFW will run after each system boot".
Is my way of doing so in Arch totally resembles the way to do so in Debian?
arch-linux ufw
To enable UFW in Debian I do:
ufw --force enable
I understand from the Arch documentation that do so in Arch I should do instead:
systemctl start ufw
systemctl enable ufw
By "enabling" I mean "Ensuring UFW will run after each system boot".
Is my way of doing so in Arch totally resembles the way to do so in Debian?
arch-linux ufw
arch-linux ufw
asked 6 hours ago
JohnDoeaJohnDoea
931132
931132
"The next line is only needed once the first time you install the package:# ufw enable
" wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Uncomplicated_Firewall
– sourcejedi
6 hours ago
Why not use iptables? UFW is just a way to make iptables simpler and uses more overhead, I know the increase is really unnoticeable. Yet, I get more throughput with just iptables than with UFW. It is a small difference, but it is there.
– Michael Prokopec
7 mins ago
add a comment |
"The next line is only needed once the first time you install the package:# ufw enable
" wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Uncomplicated_Firewall
– sourcejedi
6 hours ago
Why not use iptables? UFW is just a way to make iptables simpler and uses more overhead, I know the increase is really unnoticeable. Yet, I get more throughput with just iptables than with UFW. It is a small difference, but it is there.
– Michael Prokopec
7 mins ago
"The next line is only needed once the first time you install the package:
# ufw enable
" wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Uncomplicated_Firewall– sourcejedi
6 hours ago
"The next line is only needed once the first time you install the package:
# ufw enable
" wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Uncomplicated_Firewall– sourcejedi
6 hours ago
Why not use iptables? UFW is just a way to make iptables simpler and uses more overhead, I know the increase is really unnoticeable. Yet, I get more throughput with just iptables than with UFW. It is a small difference, but it is there.
– Michael Prokopec
7 mins ago
Why not use iptables? UFW is just a way to make iptables simpler and uses more overhead, I know the increase is really unnoticeable. Yet, I get more throughput with just iptables than with UFW. It is a small difference, but it is there.
– Michael Prokopec
7 mins ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
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It's simply ufw enable
- after enabling the service.
New contributor
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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It's simply ufw enable
- after enabling the service.
New contributor
add a comment |
It's simply ufw enable
- after enabling the service.
New contributor
add a comment |
It's simply ufw enable
- after enabling the service.
New contributor
It's simply ufw enable
- after enabling the service.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 6 hours ago
Ashley PrimoAshley Primo
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"The next line is only needed once the first time you install the package:
# ufw enable
" wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Uncomplicated_Firewall– sourcejedi
6 hours ago
Why not use iptables? UFW is just a way to make iptables simpler and uses more overhead, I know the increase is really unnoticeable. Yet, I get more throughput with just iptables than with UFW. It is a small difference, but it is there.
– Michael Prokopec
7 mins ago