User manual
Appendix B – System Log 
286
If we just wanted to look at traffic that went out to the IPSec world, we could use: 
iptables -I FORWARD -j LOG -o ipsec+ 
Clearly there are many more combinations possible. 
It is therefore possible to write rules that log inbound and outbound traffic, or to construct 
several rules that differentiate between the two. 
Rate Limiting 
iptables has the facility for rate-limiting the log messages that are generated, in order to 
avoid denial of service issues arising out of logging these access attempts. To achieve 
this, use the following option: 
--limit rate 
rate is the maximum average matching rate, specified as a number with an 
optional /second, /minute, /hour, or /day suffix. The default is 3/hour. 
--limit-burst number 
number is the maximum initial number of packets to match. This number gets 
recharged by one every time the limit specified above is not reached, up to this 
number. The default is 5. 
iptables has many more options. Perform a web search for manpage iptables to find the 
relevant documentation. 
The LOG rules configured by default (e.g. Default Deny:) are all limited to: 
  --limit 3/hour --limit-burst 5 










