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diff --git a/content/blog/2022-11-29-nginx-referrer-ban-list.md b/content/blog/2022-11-29-nginx-referrer-ban-list.md deleted file mode 100644 index ea62722..0000000 --- a/content/blog/2022-11-29-nginx-referrer-ban-list.md +++ /dev/null @@ -1,133 +0,0 @@ -+++ -date = 2022-11-29 -title = "Creating a Referrer Ban List in Nginx" -description = "Learn how to create a ban list for referring sites in Nginx." -+++ - -## Creating the Ban List - -In order to ban list referral domains or websites with Nginx, you need -to create a ban list file. The file below will accept regexes for -different domains or websites you wish to block. - -First, create the file in your nginx directory: - -```sh -doas nano /etc/nginx/banlist.conf -``` - -Next, paste the following contents in and fill out the regexes with -whichever domains you're blocking. - -```conf -# /etc/nginx/banlist.conf - -map $http_referer $bad_referer { - hostnames; - - default 0; - - # Put regexes for undesired referrers here - "~news.ycombinator.com" 1; -} -``` - -## Configuring Nginx - -In order for the ban list to work, Nginx needs to know it exists and how -to handle it. For this, edit the `nginx.conf` file. - -```sh -doas nano /etc/nginx/nginx.conf -``` - -Within this file, find the `http` block and add your ban list -file location to the end of the block. - -```conf -# /etc/nginx/nginx.conf - -http { - ... - - # Include ban list - include /etc/nginx/banlist.conf; -} -``` - -## Enabling the Ban List - -Finally, we need to take action when a bad referral site is found. To do -so, edit the configuration file for your website. For example, I have -all website configuration files in the `http.d` directory. -You may have them in the `sites-available` directory on some -distributions. - -```sh -doas nano /etc/nginx/http.d/example.com.conf -``` - -Within each website's configuration file, edit the `server` -blocks that are listening to ports 80 and 443 and create a check for the -`$bad_referrer` variable we created in the ban list file. - -If a matching site is found, you can return any [HTTP Status -Code](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_HTTP_status_codes) you want. -Code 403 (Forbidden) is logical in this case since you are preventing a -client connection due to a banned domain. - -```conf -server { - ... - - # If a referral site is banned, return an error - if ($bad_referer) { - return 403; - } - - ... -} -``` - -## Restart Nginx - -Lastly, restart Nginx to enable all changes made. - -```sh -doas rc-service nginx restart -``` - -## Testing Results - -In order to test the results, let's curl the contents of our site. To -start, I'll curl the site normally: - -```sh -curl https://cleberg.net -``` - -The HTML contents of the page come back successfully: - -```html -<!doctype html>...</html> -``` - -Next, let's include a banned referrer: - -```sh -curl --referer https://news.ycombinator.com https://cleberg.net -``` - -This time, I'm met with a 403 Forbidden response page. That means we -are successful and any clients being referred from a banned domain will -be met with this same response code. - -```html -<html> -<head><title>403 Forbidden</title></head> -<body> -<center><h1>403 Forbidden</h1></center> -<hr><center>nginx</center> -</body> -</html> -``` |