Currently I'm using this script to block China's IP address:
# Create the ipset list
ipset -N china hash:net
# remove any old list that might exist from previous runs of this script
rm cn.zone
# Pull the latest IP set for China
wget -P . http://www.ipdeny.com/ipblocks/data/countries/cn.zone
# Add each IP address from the downloaded list into the ipset 'china'
for i in $(cat ./cn.zone ); do ipset -A china $i; done
# Restore iptables
/sbin/iptables-restore < /etc/iptables/rules.v4
This works fine but how can I use it with multiple countries?
I tried this but it doesn't work:
ipset -N blockall hash:net
rm blockall.zone
for i in $(wget -P . http://www.ipdeny.com/ipblocks/data/countries/{cn,in,iq,af,ir,ae,sg,hk,kw,kg}.zone);
do ipset -A blockall $i; done
/sbin/iptables-restore < /etc/iptables/rules.v4
UPDATE
Based on Agnul's answer, I tried this:
rm blockall.zone
# pull files for each country
wget -P . http://www.ipdeny.com/ipblocks/data/countries/{cn,in,iq,af,ir,ae,sg,hk,kw,kg}.zone
# for each country file
for c in *.zone; do
#for each line in country
while read i; do
ipset -A blockall $i;
done <"$c"
done
Then I chmod
my script
chmod +x /etc/block-blockall.sh
However it doesn't create the file blockall.zone
or singular file *.zone
as it should.
{cn,in,iq,af,ir,ae,sg,hk,kw,kg}
it's wrong...what's the right method of array in bash? Apologies in advance for the simplicity of this question