![]() The command is gracious enough to tell you explicitly what rule is being deleted (“Deleting: allow 443”, in the above example) before deleting it. That’s all there is to deleting rules from your UFW firewall. So it is advisable to always run ufw status numbered before and after the removal of a rule so you are up to speed with the current list. Running, ufw delete 2 a second time would now delete that rule. For example, removing the second rule would make the third rule to come to the second place. Deleting it would revert the default behaviour at port 443 to default - which is deny ingress and allow egress, unless the default itself is changed.ĭon’t run the same delete command over and over again! The numbering changes everytime you remove a rule that is not at the end of the list. From the above list of rules, this would delete the second rule which allows ingress at port 443. ![]()
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