Pages

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

ATTACK

A quick and useful command for checking if a server is under ddos:
netstat -anp |grep ‘tcp\|udp’ | awk ‘{print $5}’ | cut -d: -f1 | sort | uniq -c | sort -n

That will list the IPs taking the most amounts of connections to a server. It is important to remember that ddos is becoming more sophisticated and they are using fewer connections with more attacking ips. If this is the case you will still get low number of connections even while you are under a DDOS.

Another very important thing to look at is how many active connections your server is currently processing.

netstat -n | grep :80 |wc -l

netstat -n | grep :80 | grep SYN |wc -l

The first command will show the number of active connections that are open to your server. Many of the attacks typically seen work by starting a connection to the server and then not sending any reply making the server wait for it to time out. The number of active connections from the first command is going to vary widely but if you are much above 500 you are probably having problems. If the second command is over 100 you are having trouble with a syn attack.

To Block a certain IP address that on server .Please use following commands

—————–command——————————

route add ipaddress reject

for example route add 192.168.0.168 reject

You can check whether given IP is blocked on server by using following command

route -n |grep IPaddress

—————–command——————————

OR

use follwoing command to block a ip with iptables on server
—————–command——————————
iptables -A INPUT 1 -s IPADRESS -j DROP/REJECT

service iptables restart

service iptables save

—————–command——————————

Then KILL all httpd connection and restarted httpd service by using following command

killall -KILL httpd

service httpd startssl


additionally you can check the connection ports here


lsof | grep ESTABLISHED
lsof | grep LISTEN

lsof -p PID

No comments:

Post a Comment