Reset Little Snitch Rules

General

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  1. When you upgrade to Little Snitch 5, the existing, outdated installation will be automatically removed (this requires a restart of the computer for one last time). Your existing rules and settings from Little Snitch 4 will be preserved.
  2. Since rules of this type have an effect on all users, the permission to create them must be enabled in Little Snitch Configuration. Open Little Snitch Configuration Preferences Security and turn on “Allow Global Rule Editing”. Server (remote computer) This property can be one of: A list of domains — Matches remote computers where.
  • Network Filter — You can turn off the entire network filter here. This can be helpful if something does not work as expected and you want to know whether one of your Little Snitch rules is the cause. In demo mode, without a valid license, Little Snitch deactivates the filter every three hours and you need to manually turn it on again. This option can also be changed in the status menu.
  • Show status in menu bar — Choose whether the status menu shall be displayed.
  • Show inactivity warning in menu bar — With this option turned on the status menu displays a yellow warning triangle when the network filter is off.
  • Operation Mode — Choose between Alert Mode and Silent Mode here. This option can also be changed in the status menu.

Alert

Little Snitch Reset All Rules

Rules
  • Preselected Options — People have preferences what type of rule to create when a connection alert is shown. Some prefer to make all rules temporary in the first place, some make domain rules only, while others always make their rules as specific as possible. Here you can decide what the defaults are, so that you can quickly create your preferred type of rule.
  • Confirm connection alert automatically — When you use “Back to my Mac” to log in to your computer from remote, it is frustrating to be locked out just because Little Snitch is stalling your login, waiting for somebody to answer a connection alert, but nobody is at home. You could answer it yourself, if you could get around this single first alert… When you set up an alert timeout, you can answer alerts while you are in front of your computer and have them allowed or denied automatically with default settings when you are away.
  • Confirm with Return and Escape — Whether Allow and Deny can be triggered via keyboard. Some people prefer to use the mouse only, because they may be typing text when the alert appears, typing Return or Escape accidentally. Note that Little Snitch ignores keystrokes for the first second after the alert appears to catch most of these accidental keystrokes.
  • Detail Level — How much detail about the connection is shown by default and how many rule creation options are shown. Having too many details distracts from the relevant information, but some people prefer to see them. Whatever you choose here, when you click the Connection Details button, all details are shown and all rule creation options become available.

Network Monitor

  • Network Monitor on/off — Whether Network Monitor is available or not. If it is off, no new connection statistics are collected and Silent Mode connections are not recorded (but still allowed or denied immediately).
  • Keyboard Shortcut — A global keyboard shortcut to show and hide Little Snitch Network Monitor.
  • Show network activity in menu bar — Whether the status menu icon should display current data rates and blocked connections.
  • Show data rates as numerical values — With this option turned on the status menu shows numerical data rates in addition to the traffic meter.
  • Color scheme — Whether to display traffic rates in color (red for up-, green for download) or monochrome.
  • Data rate unit — The unit in which data rates are displayed in the status menu or in Network Monitor – either Bytes per second (B/s) or Bits per second (bps).
  • Automatically update my location in map — Whether to use Apple Location Services to determine where the My Location mark is drawn. For privacy reasons, Little Snitch determines your current location from your Language and Region Preferences by default. It places My Location in the middle of the country configured there.
  • Capacity — Little Snitch stores statistics for all connections with distinct properties (see section [How can we identify a connection?]). There is no time limit, so the amount of data stored could eat up your computer’s resources. We therefore limit the number of connection statistics stored. If the limit is exceeded, the oldest connections for each process are merged into an Older Connections entry so that we collect at least the total statistics for each process. The number you configure here is not the total number of (expanded) lines in the Connection List because each line represents a class of connections (with potentially different ports and Internet addresses).

Automatic Profile Switching

  • Enable automatic profile switching — Whether automatic profile switching is enabled at all.
  • Default Action — When you join a network not yet known to Little Snitch, it shows a New Network Alert. This may be annoying if you are traveling a lot, connecting to new networks often. With this option, you can set a default action which is performed instead of showing an alert. If you really want to assign a specific profile to a new network (which differs from the default), you need to do it manually.
  • Save geolocations of networks — The list of known networks contains all the technical details stored for each network, but the names may be cryptic, so you often cannot remember which network is which. Little Snitch can store geographic coordinates for each network, which makes them easier to identify. The info is determined via Apple Location Services.
  • Distinguish OpenVPN remote servers — If enabled, Little Snitch attempts to detect an OpenVPN remote's hostname, allowing you to assign a different profile to each remote. If disabled, all OpenVPN remotes are treated as the same network.

Reset Little Snitch

Security

Security preferences are locked by default. You need to click the lock in the bottom left corner and enter an Administrator password in order to make changes.

  • Allow Rule and Profile Editing — If you have managed accounts (e.g. for your children) on your computer, you may want to forbid users to edit rules and profiles. In order to make changes, you need to temporarily enable editing. The Rules Window offers quick access to this option in the toolbar. When a connection alert is shown while rule and profile editing is disabled, only temporary rules may be created.
  • Allow Profile Switching — Whether users may switch profiles. This option is always on if the previous option is on.
  • Allow Preferences Editing — Whether users may change preferences. Useful if you have managed accounts (e.g. for children) on your computer. Users who have authorized as Administrator by clicking the lock may still edit preferences or re-enable this option.
  • Allow Global Rule Editing — Whether users are allowed to create rules for Anyone. Since these rules affect other users, there is an option to prohibit their creation. Note, however, that System rules also affect other users and editing them must be allowed to all users.
  • Respect privacy of other users — Decide whether Network Monitor may display domain and host details for connections established by other users. Other users may not like if you see the domains they visit with their browser. Note that you decide for yourself whether you respect other users’ privacy. You cannot decide whether other users can see your connections.
  • Ignore code signature for connections to local network — There is a factory rule which allows access to the local network for trustworthy processes. This option determines whether allow rules for untrusted processes are automatically created when they try to connect to the local network.
  • Allow GUI scripting access to Little Snitch — Whether it is allowed to remote-control Little Snitch. It is obvious that allowing remote control undermines some of the security gained by Little Snitch, but you may need it for third party screen sharing applications, assistive devices or similar.

Advanced

  • Mark rules from connection alert as unapproved — Little Snitch Configuration marks unapproved rules with a blue bullet. It indicates that these rule were created outside of Little Snitch Configuration and you may want to review them. When this option is set, the connection alert creates rules with this unapproved-status.
  • Approve rules automatically — When this option is set, the unapproved-status is automatically removed from rules when you select them in Little Snitch Configuration. If it is not set, you need to approve rules manually, e.g. by clicking the Approve button in the top bar of the Unapproved Rules sidebar filter or by editing them (even when you cancel the Rule Editor).

Software Update

  • Automatically check for updates — Whether Little Snitch should contact sw-update.obdev.at every day and check for new versions. Strongly recommended, in order to benefit from security updates! Failing to install a security update in a timely manner may leave your computer vulnerable to attacks. If you have a pre-release version installed (beta, nightly build or similar), this option is always on.
  • Show pre-release versions — Whether you want to be notified about betas, nightly builds and similar. Always on in pre-release versions.

Registration

You can view your license properties here, enter a license key or be redirected to our web site.

With regard to the need for Sophos, see my Mac Malware Guide. There is Mac malware out there, and Sophos will protect you against it quite well, but Mac OS X does a pretty good job itself as well. One class of borderline malware - called adware - is becoming increasingly common, but most of it is not blocked by either Sophos or Mac OS X, unfortunately. Thus it's more important to know how to protect yourself.


Little Snitch is a mixed bag. On the one hand, there has been malware that short-circuited its own install process if Little Snitch was present... thus, just having Little Snitch installed prevented installation, because the hackers behind the malware knew that Little Snitch would prevent it from working properly. On the other hand, some malware has been known to completely disable Little Snitch and go on with its malicious business unimpeded.


Reset Little Snitch Rules Download

None of this malware is still viable, due to updates to Mac OS X. However, because of the possibility of the latter, Little Snitch cannot be relied on. If the malware is already running on your machine, it's too late for something like Little Snitch to be a reliable way of blocking outbound connections. If you choose to use Little Snitch with full knowledge of this limitation, that's fine.

Jun 16, 2014 6:14 AM