10-25-2015, 06:41 PM
Hi,
gufw is just a GUI to manage ufw
You can use gufw to enable it.
or
to enable it & check status in a terminal(ctrl-alt-t), do:
It will continue to run, even after re-boot.
To disable it in a terminal(ctrl-alt-t), do:
To check status at any time in a teminal(ctrl-alt-t), do:
gufw is just a GUI to manage ufw
You can use gufw to enable it.
or
to enable it & check status in a terminal(ctrl-alt-t), do:
Code:
sudo ufw enable && sudo ufw status
It will continue to run, even after re-boot.
To disable it in a terminal(ctrl-alt-t), do:
Code:
sudo ufw disable
To check status at any time in a teminal(ctrl-alt-t), do:
Code:
sudo ufw status verbose
Upgrades WIP 2.6 to 2.8 - (6 X 2.6 to 2.8 completed on: 20/02/16 All O.K )
Linux Lite 3.0 Humming on a ASRock N3070 Mobo ~ btrfs RAID 10 Install on 4 Disks
Computers Early days:
ZX Spectrum(1982) , HP-150 MS-DOS(1983) , Amstrad CPC464(1984) , BBC Micro B+64(1985) , My First PC HP-Vectra(1987)
Linux Lite 3.0 Humming on a ASRock N3070 Mobo ~ btrfs RAID 10 Install on 4 Disks
Computers Early days:
ZX Spectrum(1982) , HP-150 MS-DOS(1983) , Amstrad CPC464(1984) , BBC Micro B+64(1985) , My First PC HP-Vectra(1987)