I'd recommend, at least optionally via a pillar, being able to remove firewalld for e.g. CentOS/RHEL 7+:
- It'll avoid runtime conflicts
- iptables offers more flexible rulesets
3. firewalld is trash
You may also want to do the same for UFW for Ubuntu-based systems -- though it's not the system default, it can also cause runtime conflicts.
I'd recommend, at least optionally via a pillar, being able to remove firewalld for e.g. CentOS/RHEL 7+:
3. firewalld is trashYou may also want to do the same for UFW for Ubuntu-based systems -- though it's not the system default, it can also cause runtime conflicts.