That means most - if not all - of the firewalld configuration will be applied outside the scope of iptables. While inspecting network rules with iptables, I realized that the switch to nftables means that iptables is now an abstraction layer that only shows a small part of the nftables rules. ![]() ![]() After spending a couple of days looking at logs and configurations for the involved components, I was about to throw in the towel and revert back to Fedora 30, where this seems to work straight out of the box.įocusing on firewalling, I realized that disabling firewalld seemed to do the trick, but I would prefer not to do that.
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