iptables-save — dump iptables rules

ip6tables-save — dump iptables rules

Synopsis

iptables-save [-M modprobe] [-c] [-t table] [-f filename]

ip6tables-save [-M modprobe] [-c] [-t table] [-f filename]

Description

iptables-save and ip6tables-save are used to dump the contents of IP or IPv6 Table in easily parseable format either to STDOUT or to a specified file.

-M, --modprobe modprobe_program

Specify the path to the modprobe program. By default, iptables-save will inspect /proc/sys/kernel/modprobe to determine the executable's path.

-f, --file filename

Specify a filename to log the output to. If not specified, iptables-save will log to STDOUT.

-c, --counters

include the current values of all packet and byte counters in the output

-t, --table tablename

restrict output to only one table. If the kernel is configured with automatic module loading, an attempt will be made to load the appropriate module for that table if it is not already there.
If not specified, output includes all available tables.

Bugs

None known as of iptables-1.2.1 release

Authors

Harald Welte <laforge@gnumonks.org>
Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Andras Kis-Szabo <kisza@sch.bme.hu> contributed ip6tables-save.

See Also

iptables-restore(8), iptables(8)

The iptables-HOWTO, which details more iptables usage, the NAT-HOWTO, which details NAT, and the netfilter-hacking-HOWTO which details the internals.

Referenced By

ferm(1), iptables(8), iptables-apply(8), iptables-restore(8), iptables-xml(1), xtables-translate(8).

The man page ip6tables-save(8) is an alias of iptables-save(8).

iptables 1.8.3