Add and enable/disable Windows Firewall rule with Python












0














I have this following module using for Adding and Enable/Disable Windows Firewall Rule using Python.



I currently use subprocess.call to execute netsh command inside Python. I'm wondering if there is any better method to do this? Executing cmd command inside Python seems to be impractical to me.



import subprocess, ctypes, os, sys
from subprocess import Popen, DEVNULL

def chkAdmin():
""" Force to start application with admin rights """
try:
isAdmin = ctypes.windll.shell32.IsUserAnAdmin()
except AttributeError:
isAdmin = False
if not isAdmin:
ctypes.windll.shell32.ShellExecuteW(None, "runas", sys.executable, __file__, None, 1)

def addRule(rule_name, file_path):
""" Add rule to Windows Firewall """
subprocess.call("netsh advfirewall firewall add rule name="+ rule_name +" dir=out action=block enable=no program=" + file_path, shell=True, stdout=DEVNULL, stderr=DEVNULL)
print("Rule", rule_name, "for", file_path, "added")

def modifyRule(rule_name, state):
""" Enable/Disable specific rule, 0 = Disable / 1 = Enable """
if state:
subprocess.call("netsh advfirewall firewall set rule name="+ rule_name +" new enable=yes", shell=True, stdout=DEVNULL, stderr=DEVNULL)
print("Rule", rule_name, "Enabled")
else:
subprocess.call("netsh advfirewall firewall set rule name="+ rule_name +" new enable=no", shell=True, stdout=DEVNULL, stderr=DEVNULL)
print("Rule", rule_name, "Disabled")

chkAdmin()
addRule("RULE_NAME", "PATH_TO_FILE")
modifyRule("RULE_NAME", 1)








share




















  • 1




    could it be this : stackoverflow.com/a/5486837/6212957
    – Feelsbadman
    4 mins ago
















0














I have this following module using for Adding and Enable/Disable Windows Firewall Rule using Python.



I currently use subprocess.call to execute netsh command inside Python. I'm wondering if there is any better method to do this? Executing cmd command inside Python seems to be impractical to me.



import subprocess, ctypes, os, sys
from subprocess import Popen, DEVNULL

def chkAdmin():
""" Force to start application with admin rights """
try:
isAdmin = ctypes.windll.shell32.IsUserAnAdmin()
except AttributeError:
isAdmin = False
if not isAdmin:
ctypes.windll.shell32.ShellExecuteW(None, "runas", sys.executable, __file__, None, 1)

def addRule(rule_name, file_path):
""" Add rule to Windows Firewall """
subprocess.call("netsh advfirewall firewall add rule name="+ rule_name +" dir=out action=block enable=no program=" + file_path, shell=True, stdout=DEVNULL, stderr=DEVNULL)
print("Rule", rule_name, "for", file_path, "added")

def modifyRule(rule_name, state):
""" Enable/Disable specific rule, 0 = Disable / 1 = Enable """
if state:
subprocess.call("netsh advfirewall firewall set rule name="+ rule_name +" new enable=yes", shell=True, stdout=DEVNULL, stderr=DEVNULL)
print("Rule", rule_name, "Enabled")
else:
subprocess.call("netsh advfirewall firewall set rule name="+ rule_name +" new enable=no", shell=True, stdout=DEVNULL, stderr=DEVNULL)
print("Rule", rule_name, "Disabled")

chkAdmin()
addRule("RULE_NAME", "PATH_TO_FILE")
modifyRule("RULE_NAME", 1)








share




















  • 1




    could it be this : stackoverflow.com/a/5486837/6212957
    – Feelsbadman
    4 mins ago














0












0








0







I have this following module using for Adding and Enable/Disable Windows Firewall Rule using Python.



I currently use subprocess.call to execute netsh command inside Python. I'm wondering if there is any better method to do this? Executing cmd command inside Python seems to be impractical to me.



import subprocess, ctypes, os, sys
from subprocess import Popen, DEVNULL

def chkAdmin():
""" Force to start application with admin rights """
try:
isAdmin = ctypes.windll.shell32.IsUserAnAdmin()
except AttributeError:
isAdmin = False
if not isAdmin:
ctypes.windll.shell32.ShellExecuteW(None, "runas", sys.executable, __file__, None, 1)

def addRule(rule_name, file_path):
""" Add rule to Windows Firewall """
subprocess.call("netsh advfirewall firewall add rule name="+ rule_name +" dir=out action=block enable=no program=" + file_path, shell=True, stdout=DEVNULL, stderr=DEVNULL)
print("Rule", rule_name, "for", file_path, "added")

def modifyRule(rule_name, state):
""" Enable/Disable specific rule, 0 = Disable / 1 = Enable """
if state:
subprocess.call("netsh advfirewall firewall set rule name="+ rule_name +" new enable=yes", shell=True, stdout=DEVNULL, stderr=DEVNULL)
print("Rule", rule_name, "Enabled")
else:
subprocess.call("netsh advfirewall firewall set rule name="+ rule_name +" new enable=no", shell=True, stdout=DEVNULL, stderr=DEVNULL)
print("Rule", rule_name, "Disabled")

chkAdmin()
addRule("RULE_NAME", "PATH_TO_FILE")
modifyRule("RULE_NAME", 1)








share















I have this following module using for Adding and Enable/Disable Windows Firewall Rule using Python.



I currently use subprocess.call to execute netsh command inside Python. I'm wondering if there is any better method to do this? Executing cmd command inside Python seems to be impractical to me.



import subprocess, ctypes, os, sys
from subprocess import Popen, DEVNULL

def chkAdmin():
""" Force to start application with admin rights """
try:
isAdmin = ctypes.windll.shell32.IsUserAnAdmin()
except AttributeError:
isAdmin = False
if not isAdmin:
ctypes.windll.shell32.ShellExecuteW(None, "runas", sys.executable, __file__, None, 1)

def addRule(rule_name, file_path):
""" Add rule to Windows Firewall """
subprocess.call("netsh advfirewall firewall add rule name="+ rule_name +" dir=out action=block enable=no program=" + file_path, shell=True, stdout=DEVNULL, stderr=DEVNULL)
print("Rule", rule_name, "for", file_path, "added")

def modifyRule(rule_name, state):
""" Enable/Disable specific rule, 0 = Disable / 1 = Enable """
if state:
subprocess.call("netsh advfirewall firewall set rule name="+ rule_name +" new enable=yes", shell=True, stdout=DEVNULL, stderr=DEVNULL)
print("Rule", rule_name, "Enabled")
else:
subprocess.call("netsh advfirewall firewall set rule name="+ rule_name +" new enable=no", shell=True, stdout=DEVNULL, stderr=DEVNULL)
print("Rule", rule_name, "Disabled")

chkAdmin()
addRule("RULE_NAME", "PATH_TO_FILE")
modifyRule("RULE_NAME", 1)






python python-3.x





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edited 8 secs ago









Jamal

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asked 7 mins ago









phwtphwt

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  • 1




    could it be this : stackoverflow.com/a/5486837/6212957
    – Feelsbadman
    4 mins ago














  • 1




    could it be this : stackoverflow.com/a/5486837/6212957
    – Feelsbadman
    4 mins ago








1




1




could it be this : stackoverflow.com/a/5486837/6212957
– Feelsbadman
4 mins ago




could it be this : stackoverflow.com/a/5486837/6212957
– Feelsbadman
4 mins ago










0






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