-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 15
/
CREDITS
42 lines (37 loc) · 1.93 KB
/
CREDITS
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
Thomas Bullinger
- Contributed patches for the --no-jumps option
- Wrote the makefwsnort.sh script to download the latest stable snort
rules.
- Bugfix for correct IP protocol number.
- Bugfix for missed --ipt-script option.
- Suggested the ability to specify multiple sid's with the --snort-sids
option.
Paul O'Neil
- Discovered missed DMZ interface code bug.
Ahmad Almulhem
- Suggested --ipt-tos and --ipt-mark options
- Suggested ability to manually specify interface networks instead of
automatically parsing the output of ifconfig. This allows fwsnort to be
run on a system where no IP is assigned to an interface such as a linux
box that is acting as a bridge.
Hank Leininger
- Suggested the combination of the QUEUE target and string matching as a
way to speed up inline Snort implementations. This suggestion was made
at a talk I gave about Linux Firewalls at ShmooCon 2007, and the
--NFQUEUE and --QUEUE command line arguements were the result.
Grant Ferley
- Submitted patch to exclude loopback interfaces from iptables allow rules
parsing. This behavior can be reversed with the existing
--no-exclude-loopback command line argument.
- Submitted patch to IPTables::Parse to take into account iptables policy
output that contains "0" instead of "all" to represent any protocol.
- Suggested bugfix to allow negated networks to be specified within
iptables allow rules or within the fwsnort.conf file.
Franck Joncourt
- Submitted patch to fix double dash format in fwsnort man page.
- Architected the process of packaging fwsnort (and the other Cipherdyne
projects) for the Debian Linux distribution.
- Submitted fwsnort documentation fixes for the ChangeLog and fwsnort man
page.
- Suggested creating the Snort rules directory if it doesn't already exist
when downloading the rules from Emerging Threats.