forkjo/docs/content/doc/usage/fail2ban-setup.md

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2018-05-11T11:00:00+02:00 Usage: Setup fail2ban fail2ban-setup 16 true false
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usage Fail2ban setup 16 fail2ban-setup

Fail2ban setup to block users after failed login attemts

Remember that fail2ban is powerful and can cause lots of issues if you do it incorrectly, so make sure to test this before relying on it so you don't lock yourself out.

Gitea returns an HTTP 200 for bad logins in the web logs, but if you have logging options on in app.ini, then you should be able to go off of log/gitea.log, which gives you something like this on a bad authentication:

2018/04/26 18:15:54 [I] Failed authentication attempt for user from xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx

Add our filter in /etc/fail2ban/filter.d/gitea.conf:

# gitea.conf
[Definition]
failregex =  .*Failed authentication attempt for .* from <HOST>
ignoreregex =

Add our jail in /etc/fail2ban/jail.d/gitea.conf:

[gitea]
enabled = true
filter = gitea
logpath = /home/git/gitea/log/gitea.log
maxretry = 10
findtime = 3600
bantime = 900
action = iptables-allports

If you're using Docker, you'll also need to add an additional jail to handle the FORWARD chain in iptables. Configure it in /etc/fail2ban/jail.d/gitea-docker.conf:

[gitea-docker]
enabled = true
filter = gitea
logpath = /home/git/gitea/log/gitea.log
maxretry = 10
findtime = 3600
bantime = 900
action = iptables-allports[chain="FORWARD"]

Then simply run service fail2ban restart to apply your changes. You can check to see if fail2ban has accepted your configuration using service fail2ban status.

Make sure and read up on fail2ban and configure it to your needs, this bans someone for 15 minutes (from all ports) when they fail authentication 10 times in an hour.

If you run Gitea behind a reverse proxy with Nginx (for example with Docker), you need to add this to your Nginx configuration so that IPs don't show up as 127.0.0.1:

proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;