Humm, won't msn fall back to http protocol?
On Friday 03 November 2006 09:43, Rafael Azenha Aquini wrote:
It's more simple deny the messenger's port. try the follow rule:
/sbin/iptables -t filter -A FORWARD -p tcp --dport 1863:1864 -j DROP
by this way, the client is disabled for auth process in MSN servers, and you can say bye-bye to this cancer... :-)
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On Fri, 2006-11-03 at 09:35 -0400, Charles Lacroix wrote:
won't that iptables command block some legit traffic ? like a google search or something ?
I remember blocking msn messenger with iptables and squid proxy, it was reliable but kinda heavy if you want to run only a firewall.
Recompiling a kernel once is alright but if you have to do it on every update it can get time consuming :)
anyways good luck.
On Friday 03 November 2006 06:37, Adriano Frare wrote:
Dear Friends,
I installed CENTOS 4.4 on server.
I need DROP MSN Messenger using IPTABLES, I created the rule below.
$IPTABLES -A INPUT -p tcp -m string --string "x-msn-messenger" -j DROP
But, When I run IPTABLES, I have received follow error:
DROP -> MSN Messenger iptables v1.2.11: Couldn't load match `string':/lib/iptables/libipt_string.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
Where DO I find library libipt_string ?
Thanks for help.
Adriano Frare _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
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