Dansguardian/ConfigFiles
More Dansguardian Config files
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Filter Groups
The following are rough notes re creating additional files & configuration steps needed for multiple filter groups.
This section is a work in progress & will be tidied up later.
Do not literally use/copy these steps as if they are sme commands as they are not, they are procedural steps to give a brief indication of what is involved.
Please note if you wish to authenticate users when opening a browser using pam auth method, then you will need to disable Transparent Proxy as it is not compatible with this method.
Issue the following command
config setprop squid Transparent no expand-template /etc/squid/squid.conf sv t /service/squid
Doing the above will also require you to specify the proxy settings in your browser, so you will need to add the server IP eg 192.168.1.1 and port 8080 for the proxy setting
You cannot have both Transparent Proxy and pam auth
Then do the following to use filter groups
configure pam auth using the db command from howto
copy /etc/dansguardian/dansguardianf1.conf to /etc/dansguardian/dansguardianf2.conf
and to a f3 version if required also
Copy /etc/dansguardian/list/f1 to /etc/dansguardian/list/f2 including all subfolders and files
edit /etc/dansguardian/dansguardianf2.conf and change all instances of f1 to f2 in filename locations
edit /etc/dansguardian/dansguardian.conf
Filter group options
filtergroups = 2
or however many filter groups you want to have
Auth plugins
remove # from in front of
authplugin = '/etc/dansguardian/authplugins/proxy-basic.conf'
leave other possibilities with # at start of line
edit /etc/dansguardian/dansguardianf1.conf
change Filter group mode
leave this unchanged as this group will be the filtered standard users group
groupmode = 1
Filter group name
remove # from front of groupname =
change to
groupname = 'Standard Users'
edit /etc/dansguardian/dansguardianf2.conf
change Filter group mode
change this as this group will be the unfiltered Admin Users group
groupmode = 2
Filter group name
remove # from front of groupname =
change to
groupname = 'Admin Users'
Content filtering files location
change all these to show f2 in the location path
change all other occurrences of f1 to f2 in file paths
edit /etc/dansguardian/lists/filtergroupslist
add entries for users who are members of filter group2
use this format
username=filtergroupnumber
eg
ray=filter2
It's not necessary to add all users who are in filter group 1 as everyone is automatically a member of group 1 by default.
Filter group 2 settings override filter group 1
restart dansguardian for changes to take effect
/etc/init.d/dansguardian restart
You can create as many groups as you want, using similar steps as above.
Each group can have different levels of filtering eg different exceptionlists and naughtyness limits etc etc etc.
edit the exception and banned lists in
/etc/dansguardian/lists/f3/exceptionsitelist etc etc etc
and in each other group list structure eg f1 & f2
obviously if f2 is a unfiltered group then setting changes to exception & other lists will have no effect
In practice you get asked for a login user & password when you access a web site.
Depending on your group membership you get filtered or unfiltered access.
Testing access
From a workstation web browser go to the site of www.sex.com or www.sex.com.au
You should receive a message advising the site is blocked. Try browsing to other sites with inappropriate content or a site on your banned site list and you should receive a site blocked message.
Remember that access to sites is controlled by settings in the config files.
Blacklists
You can install blacklists from mesd.k12.or.us or alternatively use the commercial blacklist from URLBlacklist.com
If you choose to use or trial the lists from blacklist .com, download the tgz file, uncompress and move to the
/etc/dansguardian/blacklists directory. There is also a blacklist from dungog.net that was installed at the beginning of this HOWTO.
dansguardian.conf & dansguardianf1.conf
The only setting that is vital for you to configure in the dansguardian.conf file is the accessdeniedaddress setting. You should set this to the address (not the file path) of your Apache server with the perl access denied reporting script. For most people this will be the same server as squid and DansGuardian. If you really want you can change this address to a normal html static page on any server.
Reporting Level
You can change the reporting level for when a page gets denied. It can say just 'Access Denied', or report why, or report why and what the denied phrase is. The latter may be more useful for testing, but the middler would be more useful in a school environment. Stealth mode logs what would be denied but doesn't do any blocking.
Logging Settings
This setting lets you configure the logging level. You can log nothing, just denied pages, text based and all requests. HTTPS requests only get logged when the logging is set to 3 - all requests.
Log Exception Hits
Log if an exception (user, ip, URL, or phrase) is matched and so the page gets let through. This can be useful for diagnosing why a site gets through the filter.
Log File Format
This setting alters the format of the DansGuardian log file. Please note option 3 (standard log format) is not yet unimplemented.
Network Settings
These allow you to modify the IP address that DansGuardian is listening on, the port DansGuardian listens on, the IP address of the server running squid as well as the squid port. It is possible to configure the Access Denied reporting page here also.
Content Filtering Settings
Here you can modify the location of the list files. Adjusting these locations is not recommended.
Naughtyness limit
This setting refers to the weighted phrase limit over which the page will be blocked. Each weighted phrase is given a value either positive or negative and the values added up. Phrases to do with good subjects will have negative values, and bad subjects will have positive values. See the weightedphraselist file for examples. As a rough guide, a value of 50 is for young children, 100 for older children, 160 for young adults.
Show weighted phrases found
If enabled then the phrases found that made up the total which exceeds the naughtyness limit will be logged and, if the reporting level is high enough, reported.
Reverse Lookups for Banned Sites and URLs
If set to on, DansGuardian will look up the forward DNS for an IP URL address and search for both in the banned site and URL lists. This would prevent a user from simply entering the IP for a banned address. It will reduce searching speed somewhat so unless you have a local caching DNS server, leave it off and use the Blanket IP Block option in the bannedsitelist file instead.
Build bannedsitelist and bannedurllist Cache Files
This will compare the date stamp of the list file with the date stamp of the cache file and will recreate as needed. If a bsl or bul .processed file exists, then that will be used instead. It will increase process start speed by 300%. On slow computers this will be significant. Fast computers do not need this option.
POST protection (web upload and forms)
This is for blocking or limiting uploads, not for blocking forms without any file upload. The value is given in kilobytes after MIME encoding and header information.
Username identification methods (used in logging)
The proxyauth option is for when basic proxy authentication is used (obviously no good for transparent proxying). The ntlm option is for when the proxy supports the MS NTLM authentication. This only works with IE5.5 sp1 and later, and has not been implemented yet. The ident option causes DansGuardian to try to connect to an identd server on the computer originating the request.
Forwarded For
This option adds an X-Forwarded-For: <clientIP> to the HTTP request header. This may help solve some problem sites that need to know the source IP.
Max Children
This sets the maximum number of processes to spawn to handle the incoming connections. This will prevent DoS attacks killing the server with too many spawned processes. On large sites you might want to double or triple this number.
Log Connection Handling Errors
This option logs some debug info regarding fork()ing and accept()ing which can usually be ignored. These are logged by syslog. It is safe to leave this setting on or off.
Further customisation
DansGuardian is highly configurable. The source code is available so you have the ultimate in configurability, although most people will be content with modifying the configuration files.
After you have modified any configuration file, to apply the changes you will need to restart DansGuardian.
There are two main configuration files, several banned lists and exception lists. These are all explained below:
exceptionsitelist
This contains a list of domain endings that if found in the requested URL, DansGuardian will not filter the page. Note that you should not put the http:// or the www. at the beginning of the entries.
exceptioniplist
This contains a list of client IPs who you want to bypass the filtering. For example, the network administrator's computer's IP.
exceptionuserlist
Usernames who will not be filtered (basic authentication or ident must be enabled).
exceptionphraselist
If any of the phrases listed here appear in a web page then the filtering is bypassed. Care should be taken adding phrases to this file as they can easily stop many pages from being blocked. It would be better to put a negative value in the weightedphraselist.
exceptionurllist
URLs in here are for parts of sites that filtering should be switched off for.
bannediplist
IP addresses of client machines to disallow web access to. Only put IP addresses here, not host names.
bannedphraselist
This contains a list of banned phrases. The phrases must be enclosed between < and >. DansGuardian is supplied with an example list. You can not use phrases such as <sex> as this will block sites such as Middlesex University. The phrases can contain spaces. Use them to your advantage. This is the most useful part of DansGuardian and will catch more pages than PICS and URL filtering put together.
Combinations of phrases can also be used, which if they are all found in a page, it is blocked. Exception phrases are no longer listed in this file - see exceptionphraselist.
banneduserlist
Users names, who, if basic proxy authentication is enabled, will automatically be denied web access.
bannedmimetypelist
This contains a list of banned MIME-types. If a URL request returns a MIME-type that is in this list, DansGuardian will block it. DansGuardian comes with some example MIME-types to deny. This is a good way of blocking inappropriate movies for example. It is obviously unwise to ban the MIME-types text/html or image/*.
bannedextensionlist
This contains a list of banned file extensions. If a URL ends in an extension that is in this list, DansGuardian will block it. DansGuardian comes with some example file extensions to deny. This is a good way of blocking kiddies from downloading those lovely screen savers and hacking tools. You are a fool if you ban the file extension .html, or .jpg etc.
bannedregexpurllist
This contains a list of banned regular expression URLs. For more information on regular expressions, see http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/7908799/xbd/re.html
Regular expressions are a very powerful pattern matching system. This file allows you to match URLs using this method.
bannedsitelist
This file contains a list of banned sites. Entering a domain name here bans the entire site. For banning specific parts of a site, see bannedurllist. Also, you can have a blanket ban all sites except those specifically excluded in exceptionsitelist. You can also block sites specified only as an IP address, and include a stock squidGuard blacklists collection. To enable these blacklists, download them from the extras section http://dansguardian.org/?page=extras
Simply put them somewhere appropriate, un-comment the squidGuard blacklists collection lines at the bottom of the bannedsitelist file, and check the paths are correct. For URL blacklists, edit the bannedurllist in a similar way.
bannedurllist
This allows you to block specific parts of a site rather than the whole site. To block an entire site, see bannedsitelist. To enable squidGuard blacklists for URLs, you will need to download the blacklists and edit the squidGuard blacklists collection section at the bottom (as for bannedsitelist above).
weightedphraselist
Each phrase is given a value either positive or negative and the values are added up. Phrases to do with good subjects will have negative values, and bad subjects will have positive values. Once the naughtyness limit is reached (within dansguardian.conf), the page is blocked. See the Naughtyness Limit description within the dansguardian.conf section below.
pics
This file allows you to finely tune the PICS filtering. Each PICS section comes with a description of the allowed settings and what they represent. The default settings with DansGuardian are set for youngish children, for example mild profanities and artistic nudity are allowed. PICS filtering can also be totally disabled / enabled using the enablePICS = on | off option.
For more detailed information on PICS ratings, see http://www.w3.org/PICS/
contentregexplist
ICRA
The ICRA section is fairly self-explanatory. A value of 0 means nothing of that category is allowed, whereas a value of 1 allows it. For example,
ICRAnudityartistic = 1
allows nude art. For more in-depth information see http://www.rsac.org/
RSAC
RSAC is an older version of ICRA. The values here range from 0 meaning none allowed, through 2 (the default value), to 4, which allows wanton and gratuitous amounts of the given category. For more in-depth information see http://www.rsac.org/
evaluWEB
evaluWEB rating uses a system similar to the British Film classification system:
0 = U (Universal, ie. suitable for even the youngest viewer)
1 = PG (Parental Guidance recommended)
2 = 18 (Only suitable for viewers aged 18 and over)
SafeSurf
Similar to RSAC, but containing a larger range of categories with the range from 0 = full filtering to 9 = wanton and gratuitous. For more in-depth information, see http://www.safesurf.com
Weburbia
See evaluWEB. For more in-depth information, see http://www.weburbia.com/safe/index.shtml
Vancouver Webpages
This is yet another ratings scheme. See http://vancouver-webpages.com/VWP1.0/
for more information.