Simple Access Control Lists.
Access control lists are composed of “allow” and “deny” halves to control access. Use “all” or “*” to match any address. To match a specific address use any address or address mask that IPAddr can understand.
Example:
list = %w[ deny all allow 192.168.1.1 allow ::ffff:192.168.1.2 allow 192.168.1.3 ] # From Socket#peeraddr, see also ACL#allow_socket? addr = ["AF_INET", 10, "lc630", "192.168.1.3"] acl = ACL.new p acl.allow_addr?(addr) # => true acl = ACL.new(list, ACL::DENY_ALLOW) p acl.allow_addr?(addr) # => true
Default to allow
Default to deny
The current version of ACL
Creates a new ACL
from list
with an evaluation order
of DENY_ALLOW
or ALLOW_DENY
.
An ACL
list
is an Array of “allow” or “deny” and an address or address mask or “all” or “*” to match any address:
%w[
deny all
allow 192.0.2.2
allow 192.0.2.128/26
]
# File drb/acl.rb, line 179 def initialize(list=nil, order = DENY_ALLOW) @order = order @deny = ACLList.new @allow = ACLList.new install_list(list) if list end
Allow connections from addrinfo addr
? It must be formatted like Socket#peeraddr:
["AF_INET", 10, "lc630", "192.0.2.1"]
# File drb/acl.rb, line 203 def allow_addr?(addr) case @order when DENY_ALLOW return true if @allow.match(addr) return false if @deny.match(addr) return true when ALLOW_DENY return false if @deny.match(addr) return true if @allow.match(addr) return false else false end end
Allow connections from Socket soc
?
# File drb/acl.rb, line 191 def allow_socket?(soc) allow_addr?(soc.peeraddr) end