Fallback and Uninstall
Tom
Eastep
2001-03-26
2001
Thomas M. Eastep
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version
1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with
no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover, and with no Back-Cover
Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled
GNU Free Documentation License
.
Falling Back to the Previous Version of Shorewall using the
Fallback Script
If you install Shorewall and discover that it doesn't work for
you, you can fall back to your previously installed version. To do that:
cd to the distribution directory for the version of Seattle
Firewall that you are currently running (NOT the version that you want
to fall back to).
Type "./fallback.sh"
The fallback script will replace /etc/shorewall/policy,
/etc/shorewall/rules, /etc/shorewall/interfaces, /etc/shorewall/nat,
/etc/shorewall/proxyarp and /etc/shorewall/masq with the version of
these files from before the current version was installed. Any changes
to any of these files will be lost.
Falling Back to the Previous Version of Shorewall using rpm
If your previous version of Shorewall was installed using RPM, you
may fall back to that version by typing "rpm -Uvh --force <old
rpm>" at a root shell prompt (Example: "rpm -Uvh --force
/downloads/shorewall-3.1=0noarch.rpm" would fall back to the 3.1-0
version of Shorewall).
Uninstalling Shorewall
If you no longer wish to use Shorewall, you may remove it by:
cd to the distribution directory for the version of Shorewall
that you have installed.
type "./uninstall.sh"
If you installed using an rpm, at a root shell prompt type "rpm
-e shorewall".