I use nftables to set my firewall rules. I typically manually configure the rules myself. Recently, I just happened to dump the ruleset, and, much to my surprise, my config was gone, and it was replaced with an enourmous amount of extremely cryptic firewall rules. After a quick examination of the rules, I found that it was Docker that had modified them. And after some brief research, I found a number of open issues, just like this one, of people complaining about this behaviour. I think it’s an enourmous security risk to have Docker silently do this by default.
I have heard that Podman doesn’t suffer from this issue, as it is daemonless. If that is true, I will certainly be switching from Docker to Podman.
It doesn’t nuke your rules. Just ads to them.
How come I don’t see my previous rules when I dump the ruleset, then? I have my rules written in
/etc/nftables.conf
, and they were previously applied by running# nft -f /etc/nftables.conf
. Now, when I dump the current ruleset with# nft list ruleset
, those previous rules aren’t there — all I see are Docker’s rules.You can use a bridge network or the host network.
In bridge network it is like a NAT host. With its own firewall settings.
In host network mode, it will just open the port it needs.