Книга: Linux Network Administrator Guide, Second Edition
Methods of Attack
Methods of Attack
As a network administrator, it is important that you understand the nature of potential attacks on computer security. We'll briefly describe the most important types of attacks so that you can better understand precisely what the Linux IP firewall will protect you against. You should do some additional reading to ensure that you are able to protect your network against other types of attacks. Here are some of the more important methods of attack and ways of protecting yourself against them:
Unauthorized access
This simply means that people who shouldn't use your computer services are able to connect and use them. For example, people outside your company might try to connect to your company accounting machine or to your NFS server.
There are various ways to avoid this attack by carefully specifying who can gain access through these services. You can prevent network access to all except the intended users.
Exploitation of known weaknesses in programs
Some programs and network services were not originally designed with strong security in mind and are inherently vulnerable to attack. The BSD remote services (rlogin, rexec, etc.) are an example.
The best way to protect yourself against this type of attack is to disable any vulnerable services or find alternatives. With Open Source, it is sometimes possible to repair the weaknesses in the software.
Denial of service
Denial of service attacks cause the service or program to cease functioning or prevent others from making use of the service or program. These may be performed at the network layer by sending carefully crafted and malicious datagrams that cause network connections to fail. They may also be performed at the application layer, where carefully crafted application commands are given to a program that cause it to become extremely busy or stop functioning.
Preventing suspicious network traffic from reaching your hosts and preventing suspicious program commands and requests are the best ways of minimizing the risk of a denial of service attack. It's useful to know the details of the attack method, so you should educate yourself about each new attack as it gets publicized.
Spoofing
This type of attack causes a host or application to mimic the actions of another. Typically the attacker pretends to be an innocent host by following IP addresses in network packets. For example, a well-documented exploit of the BSD rlogin service can use this method to mimic a TCP connection from another host by guessing TCP sequence numbers.
To protect against this type of attack, verify the authenticity of datagrams and commands. Prevent datagram routing with invalid source addresses. Introduce unpredictablility into connection control mechanisms, such as TCP sequence numbers and the allocation of dynamic port addresses.
Eavesdropping
This is the simplest type of attack. A host is configured to "listen" to and capture data not belonging to it. Carefully written eavesdropping programs can take usernames and passwords from user login network connections. Broadcast networks like Ethernet are especially vulnerable to this type of attack.
To protect against this type of threat, avoid use of broadcast network technologies and enforce the use of data encryption.
IP firewalling is very useful in preventing or reducing unauthorized access, network layer denial of service, and IP spoofing attacks. It not very useful in avoiding exploitation of weaknesses in network services or programs and eavesdropping.
- Methods of Attack
- What Is a Firewall?
- What Is IP Filtering?
- Setting Up Linux for Firewalling
- Three Ways We Can Do Filtering
- Original IP Firewall (2.0 Kernels)
- IP Firewall Chains (2.2 Kernels)
- Netfilter and IP Tables (2.4 Kernels)
- TOS Bit Manipulation
- Testing a Firewall Configuration
- A Sample Firewall Configuration
- 15.4 Resource Synchronization Methods
- 8.3. Driver Methods
- Adding Additional Test Methods
- Abstract Methods
- Virtual Methods
- Sealed Classes and Methods
- Overloading Methods
- Extension Methods (C# 3.0)
- Anonymous Methods and Lambda Expressions
- Generic Methods
- LINQ and Extension Methods
- Creating the Helper Methods