firewalld – Manage arbitrary ports/services with firewalld
Synopsis
- This module allows for addition or deletion of services and ports (either TCP or UDP) in either running or permanent firewalld rules.
 
Requirements
The below requirements are needed on the host that executes this module.
- firewalld >= 0.2.11
 
Parameters
| Parameter | Choices/Defaults | Comments | 
|---|---|---|
|   icmp_block    string   added in 2.8   |    The ICMP block you would like to add/remove to/from a zone in firewalld.   |  |
|   icmp_block_inversion    string   added in 2.8   |    Enable/Disable inversion of ICMP blocks for a zone in firewalld.   |  |
|   immediate    boolean    |   
  |    Should this configuration be applied immediately, if set as permanent.   |  
|   interface    string    |    The interface you would like to add/remove to/from a zone in firewalld.   |  |
|   masquerade    string    |    The masquerade setting you would like to enable/disable to/from zones within firewalld.   |  |
|   offline    boolean    |   
  |    Whether to run this module even when firewalld is offline.   |  
|   permanent    boolean    |   
  |    Should this configuration be in the running firewalld configuration or persist across reboots.  As of Ansible 2.3, permanent operations can operate on firewalld configs when it is not running (requires firewalld >= 3.0.9).  Note that if this is   no, immediate is assumed yes. |  
|   port    string    |    Name of a port or port range to add/remove to/from firewalld.  Must be in the form PORT/PROTOCOL or PORT-PORT/PROTOCOL for port ranges.   |  |
|   rich_rule    string    |    Rich rule to add/remove to/from firewalld.   |  |
|   service    string    |    Name of a service to add/remove to/from firewalld.  The service must be listed in output of firewall-cmd --get-services.   |  |
|   source    string    |    The source/network you would like to add/remove to/from firewalld.   |  |
|   state    string / required    |   
  |    Enable or disable a setting.  For ports: Should this port accept (enabled) or reject (disabled) connections.  The states   present and absent can only be used in zone level operations (i.e. when no other parameters but zone and state are set). |  
|   timeout    integer    |   Default: 0   |    The amount of time the rule should be in effect for when non-permanent.   |  
|   zone    string    |    The firewalld zone to add/remove to/from.  Note that the default zone can be configured per system but   public is default from upstream.Available choices can be extended based on per-system configs, listed here are "out of the box" defaults.  Possible values include   block, dmz, drop, external, home, internal, public, trusted, work. |  
Notes
Note
- Not tested on any Debian based system.
 - Requires the python2 bindings of firewalld, which may not be installed by default.
 - For distributions where the python2 firewalld bindings are unavailable (e.g Fedora 28 and later) you will have to set the ansible_python_interpreter for these hosts to the python3 interpreter path and install the python3 bindings.
 - Zone transactions (creating, deleting) can be performed by using only the zone and state parameters “present” or “absent”. Note that zone transactions must explicitly be permanent. This is a limitation in firewalld. This also means that you will have to reload firewalld after adding a zone that you wish to perform immediate actions on. The module will not take care of this for you implicitly because that would undo any previously performed immediate actions which were not permanent. Therefore, if you require immediate access to a newly created zone it is recommended you reload firewalld immediately after the zone creation returns with a changed state and before you perform any other immediate, non-permanent actions on that zone.
 
Examples
- firewalld:
    service: https
    permanent: yes
    state: enabled
- firewalld:
    port: 8081/tcp
    permanent: yes
    state: disabled
- firewalld:
    port: 161-162/udp
    permanent: yes
    state: enabled
- firewalld:
    zone: dmz
    service: http
    permanent: yes
    state: enabled
- firewalld:
    rich_rule: rule service name="ftp" audit limit value="1/m" accept
    permanent: yes
    state: enabled
- firewalld:
    source: 192.0.2.0/24
    zone: internal
    state: enabled
- firewalld:
    zone: trusted
    interface: eth2
    permanent: yes
    state: enabled
- firewalld:
    masquerade: yes
    state: enabled
    permanent: yes
    zone: dmz
- firewalld:
    zone: custom
    state: present
    permanent: yes
- firewalld:
    zone: drop
    state: present
    permanent: yes
    icmp_block_inversion: yes
- firewalld:
    zone: drop
    state: present
    permanent: yes
    icmp_block: echo-request
- name: Redirect port 443 to 8443 with Rich Rule
  firewalld:
    rich_rule: rule family=ipv4 forward-port port=443 protocol=tcp to-port=8443
    zone: public
    permanent: yes
    immediate: yes
    state: enabled
   Status
- This module is not guaranteed to have a backwards compatible interface. [preview]
 - This module is maintained by the Ansible Community. [community]
 
Authors
- Adam Miller (@maxamillion)
 
Hint
If you notice any issues in this documentation, you can edit this document to improve it.
    © 2012–2018 Michael DeHaan
© 2018–2019 Red Hat, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License version 3.
    https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/2.9/modules/firewalld_module.html