The former used hash value only contains the country code when a rule for a single country should be created.
In case a location group is used the hash value refers to the group name, which does not work here.
The required country code is part of the processed string and can be omitted from here. This works well for single codes and location groups, because those are processed in a loop.
Fixes #12809.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Schantl stefan.schantl@ipfire.org --- config/firewall/rules.pl | 10 ++++++---- 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
diff --git a/config/firewall/rules.pl b/config/firewall/rules.pl index d71304986..19dc7a6d1 100644 --- a/config/firewall/rules.pl +++ b/config/firewall/rules.pl @@ -411,8 +411,9 @@ sub buildrules { if ($source =~ /mac/) { push(@source_options, $source); } elsif ($source =~ /-m set/) { - # Grab location code from hash. - my $loc_src = $$hash{$key}[4]; + # Split given arguments into single chunks to + # obtain the set name. + my ($a, $b, $c, $loc_src, $e) = split(/ /, $source);
# Call function to load the networks list for this country. &ipset_restore($loc_src); @@ -425,8 +426,9 @@ sub buildrules { # Prepare destination options. my @destination_options = (); if ($destination =~ /-m set/) { - # Grab location code from hash. - my $loc_dst = $$hash{$key}[6]; + # Split given arguments into single chunks to + # obtain the set name. + my ($a, $b, $c, $loc_dst, $e) = split(/ /, $destination);
# Call function to load the networks list for this country. &ipset_restore($loc_dst);