# KF2-AntiDDoS Compiled versions for windows and linux are available on the [releases page](https://github.com/GenZmeY/KF2-AntiDDoS/releases). But you can build it yourself, for this there is a Makefile. ## How it works The program parses the output of the KF2 server(s) and counts the number of connections. If the number of connections from one IP exceeds the threshold and it is still not known that this is a player, the program will execute a deny script passing it the IP as an argument. The program will periodically execute the allow script, passing it a set of IPs blocked in the last period. ## HowTo: ``` Usage: | kf2-antiddos [option]... kf2_logs_output KF2 logs to redirect to stdin shell shell to run deny_script and allow_script deny_script firewall deny script (takes IP as argument) allow_script firewall allow script (takes IPs as arguments) Options: -j, --jobs N allow N jobs at once -o, --output MODE self|proxy|all|quiet -dt, --deny-time TIME minimum ip deny TIME (seconds) -mc, --max-connections N Skip N connections before run deny script -v, --version Show version -h, --help Show help ``` - Prepare an IP deny script for your firewall. The script must block the IP received by the first argument - Prepare an IP set allow script for your firewall. The script must unblock the set of IPs given by the arguments - Сreate a redirection of the output of all KF2 servers to the stdin of the program - In the parameters specify the scripts that you prepared and the shell that will execute them ## Centos example (change paths and values as you need) ### systemd service: ``` [Unit] Description=kf2-antiddos After=network-online.target Wants=network-online.target [Service] User=root Group=root Type=simple ExecStart=/bin/sh -c '/usr/bin/kf2-srv log tail | /usr/local/bin/kf2-antiddos-linux-amd64 /bin/bash /usr/local/share/kf2-antiddos/deny.sh /usr/local/share/kf2-antiddos/allow.sh' Restart=on-failure [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target ``` ### deny.sh ``` #!/bin/bash firewall-cmd --add-rich-rule="rule family=ipv4 source address=$1 port port=7777-7815 protocol=udp reject" firewall-cmd --add-rich-rule="rule family=ipv4 destination address=$1 reject" ``` ### allow.sh ``` #!/bin/bash for IP in $@ do firewall-cmd --remove-rich-rule="rule family=ipv4 source address=$IP port port=7777-7815 protocol=udp reject" firewall-cmd --remove-rich-rule="rule family=ipv4 destination address=$IP reject" done ``` ## Contributing It would be great if someone set up and tried it on windows