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{|cellpadding="15" width="4030%"
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|width="10%" | '''-p tcp'''
|width="10%" | tells iptables to only match TCP packets. Alternately, the protocol could be set to '''udp''', '''icmp''', or '''all'''
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|width="10%" |'''-s0/0'''
|width="10%" |specifies the source IP address. 0/0 means a source address of “anywhere.” this has been put into the lab because your ip address will change because it is dynamically assigned. You can change this value if you want to the IP address that has been specifically assigned to your PC
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|width="10%" |'''-d0/0'''
|width="10%" |specifies the destination address. It makes sense that this address is set to “anywhere” because if we want to block all requests to the WWW, we will never know the specific IP address of web server that is trying to be accessed
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|width="10%" |'''--dport 80'''
|width="10%" |tells iptables to look at the destination port in the packet and see if it is equal to 80. Alternately, you can filter based on source addresses using the <code>--sport</code> switch
|width="10%" |'''-j'''
|width="10%" |means when condition is met, then jump to a particular target – Basic targets are '''ACCEPT''', '''DROP''', '''REJECT''', and '''LOG'''. The available targets depend on which table contains the chain
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|width="10%" |'''DROP'''
|width="10%" |means drop the packet – make it disappear - and do not continue processing rules. '''REJECT''' is similar, but causes an error packet to be sent back to the source host. '''ACCEPT''' causes the packet to be processed. '''LOG''' causes an entry to be made in the system logs showing that the packet was processed. Note that the LOG target is the only one that does not stop rule-checking in the chain - so you can log a packet with one rule, and then use a later rule in the chain to DROP, REJECT, or ACCEPT it