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Firewalls
When providing resources on your host, whether network or storage, you will need to ensure that your host's firewall is configured correctly to do so.
To make matters even more confusing, there are actually two firewalls at play: the host's firewall, and the VPN firewall.
VPN Firewall
Isle uses the nebula project to
provide its VPN layer. Nebula ships with its own builtin
firewall, which only applies
to connections coming in over the virtual network interface which it creates.
This firewall can be manually configured using the isle vpn firewall
set of
sub-commands, or using the configuration file.
Any storage allocations which are defined will have their network ports automatically added to the VPN firewall by Isle. This means that you only need to configure the VPN firewall if you are hosting services for your isle network besides storage.
Host Firewall
The host you are running isle on will almost definitely have a firewall running, separate from the VPN firewall. If you wish to provide services for your Isle network from your host, you will need to allow their ports in your host's firewall.
isle does not automatically configure your host's firewall to any extent!
One option is to open your host to all traffic from your Isle network, and allow the VPN firewall to be fully responsible for filtering traffic. To do this on Linux using iptables, for example, you would add something like this to your iptables configuration:
-A INPUT --source <network CIDR> --jump ACCEPT
being sure to replace the network CIDR with the one for your network.
If you don't feel comfortable allowing nebula to deal with all packet filtering, you will need to manually determine and add the ports for each nebula service to your host's firewall. You will need to manually specify any configured storage allocation ports if this is the approach you take.