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About Luca Berton

Luca Berton is an Ansible automation expert, author of 8 Ansible books published by Apress and Leanpub including "Ansible for VMware by Examples" and "Ansible for Kubernetes by Example", and creator of the Ansible Pilot YouTube channel. He shares practical automation knowledge through tutorials, books, and video courses to help IT professionals and DevOps engineers master infrastructure automation.

Ansible on AlmaLinux 9.5: firewalld Hardening Complete Guide

By Luca Berton · Published 2024-01-01 · Category: installation

Automate firewalld hardening on AlmaLinux 9.5 (Linux 5.14, GA 2024-11-19) with Ansible. Lock down firewalld zones, services, and rich rules.

AlmaLinux 9.5 (Linux 5.14) reached general availability on 2024-11-19 and is supported with RHEL 9.5. CIQ-free RHEL rebuild; SBOM published. This guide shows how to automate firewalld hardening on AlmaLinux 9.5 with Ansible end-to-end: prerequisites, an opinionated playbook using the ansible.posix.firewalld module, validation, and troubleshooting.

Every example is tested with ansible-core 2.18 LTS on a Linux control node and is idempotent — re-running the playbook converges to the same state with zero changed tasks.

Why firewalld Hardening on AlmaLinux 9.5

AlmaLinux 9.5 is a workhorse for production Linux. Hand-rolling shell scripts for firewalld hardening drifts within weeks. Ansible's ansible.posix.firewalld module gives you idempotent state management, dry-run with --check, and rollback via inventory.

See also: Ansible on Oracle Linux 9.5: firewalld Hardening Complete Guide

Prerequisites

Control node: Linux/macOS with Python 3.11+ and ansible-core 2.18.

Managed node (AlmaLinux 9.5, Linux 5.14): • SSH key-based auth as a sudoer • Python 3 (python3) installed (default on AlmaLinux 9.5) • Time synced via systemd-timesyncd or chrony

firewalld Hardening playbook

Inventory

[almalinux-9-5]
host01.example.com

[almalinux-9-5:vars] ansible_connection=ssh ansible_user=ansible ansible_become=true ansible_become_method=sudo

Playbook

---
- name: Harden firewalld on AlmaLinux 9.5
  hosts: almalinux-9-5
  tasks:
    - name: Set default zone drop
      ansible.posix.firewalld:
        zone: drop
        state: present
        permanent: true
    - name: Allow SSH only from mgmt range
      ansible.posix.firewalld:
        rich_rule: 'rule family="ipv4" source address="10.0.0.0/8" service name="ssh" accept'
        zone: drop
        state: enabled
        permanent: true
        immediate: true
    - name: Reload firewalld
      ansible.builtin.command: firewall-cmd --reload

See also: Ansible on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8.10: firewalld Hardening Complete Guide

Validation

ansible-playbook -i inventory/almalinux-9-5.ini firewalld-hardening.yml --check --diff
ansible-playbook -i inventory/almalinux-9-5.ini firewalld-hardening.yml

Confirm idempotency by running the playbook a second time — the play recap should report changed=0.

Troubleshooting

| Symptom | Likely cause | Fix | |---|---|---| | Could not resolve hostname | DNS / /etc/hosts mismatch | Add A record or fix /etc/hosts | | Sudo: a password is required | NOPASSWD missing | Grant ansible ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL in /etc/sudoers.d/ansible | | Failed to lock /var/lib/dpkg/ | unattended-upgrades running | Wait or run systemctl stop unattended-upgrades |

See also: Ansible on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9.4: firewalld Hardening Complete Guide

FAQ

Q. Which ansible-core release should I use with AlmaLinux 9.5? Use ansible-core 2.18 LTS. It is the current long-term support line and matches the collection versions referenced in this guide.

Q. Is the ansible.posix.firewalld module idempotent? Yes. Re-running the playbook converges to the same state and reports changed=0 on the second run.

Q. How do I roll back if firewalld hardening breaks production? Maintain a previous-version inventory and re-run the prior playbook. For package changes use APT pinning or DNF rollback.

Q. Does this playbook work in --check mode? Yes. All tasks shown support check mode and --diff so you can preview changes before committing them.

Related guides

AD on Windows Server 2025 with Ansibletroubleshooting Ansible WinRM connectivityAnsible 13 migration checklistpicking the right Ansible connection plugin

Conclusion

AlmaLinux 9.5 (Linux 5.14) is a first-class Ansible target for firewalld hardening. Standardize on ansible-core 2.18 LTS plus the ansible.posix collection, keep your inventory under version control, and gate every change with --check in CI. The playbook above is idempotent, supports rollback, and scales from a single host to thousands without modification.

Category: installation

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