Limits
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A limit uses a token bucket filter to match packets:
- only until its rate is exceeded; or
- only after its rate is exceeded, if defined as an over limit.
Anonymous limits
Named limits
Declaring and using named limits
table inet limit_demo {
limit lim_400ppm { rate 400/minute ; comment "use to limit incoming icmp" ; }
limit lim_1kbps { rate over 1024 bytes/second burst 512 bytes ; comment "use to limit incoming smtp" ; }
chain IN {
type filter hook input priority filter; policy drop;
meta l4proto icmp limit name "lim_400ppm" accept
tcp dport 25 limit name "lim_1kbps" accept
}
}
The above ruleset defines a per-packet named limit lim_400ppm and a per-byte named limit lim_1kbps. The rules in input chain IN use these named limits to:
- Accept icmp packets, of all icmp types, up to a maximum rate of 400 packets / minute.
- Accept traffic to port tcp/25 (smtp), up to a maximum rate of 1024 bytes / second. Up to 512 bytes of such traffic arriving faster than this is accepted.
- Drop all other traffic.
The optional comment attribute requires at least nftables 0.9.7 and kernel 5.10.
Listing named limits
nft list [limit | limits] (as per below) returns the limit(s) with current byte count.
- List a particular limit:
% nft list limit [family] [table_name] [limit_name]
- List all limits in a particular table:
% nft list limits table [family] [table_name]
- List all limits in ruleset:
% nft list limits