[Freeswitch-users] INVITE DoS Prevention
Spencer Thomason
spencer at 5ninesolutions.com
Mon Feb 21 10:10:04 MSK 2011
Yes, that works great if they respond to the challenge with a failed
auth. But the scenario I'm trying to prevent is if they just send the
INVITE and never respond to the challenge. Fail2Ban will not work as
every endpoint will initially send an INVITE and receive a challenge.
Legit calls will then respond correctly and not be logged as a SIP
auth failure but every call that is challenged will show up as SIP
auth challenge in the logs so there is no regex to differentiate
between legit an non legit traffic.
Spencer
On Feb 20, 2011, at 10:39 PM, Ken Rice wrote:
> Fail2Ban ... This is block an IP with too many failed attempts from
> something like SipVicious pretty quickly
>
>
> On 2/20/11 11:07 PM, "Spencer Thomason" <spencer at 5ninesolutions.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>> We run hosted Freeswitch instances in VMs with the internal profile
>> on
>> port 5060 connecting to clients mostly behind NAT and then the
>> external profile connecting to our proxies only. Protecting the
>> external profile its straightforward.. we only allow traffic to/from
>> our proxies at the firewall level. But protecting the internal
>> profile seems to be a bit more difficult because the UACs could be
>> theoretically anywhere on the network.
>>
>> I'm currently using Fail2Ban to prevent brute force registration and
>> INVITEs on auth failures, e.g.:
>> failregex = \[WARNING\] sofia_reg.c:\d+ SIP auth failure \(REGISTER\)
>> on sofia profile \'\w+\' for \[.*\] from ip <HOST>
>> \[WARNING\] sofia_reg.c:\d+ SIP auth failure \(INVITE\)
>> on sofia profile \'\w+\' for \[.*\] from ip <HOST>
>>
>> My question is, since its part of a normal SIP dialog to challenge
>> the
>> INVITE, is there any way to prevent a possible DoS from just sheer
>> volume of incoming INVITEs on an Internet facing server
>> automatically. I.e., If you block the logged challenge, you'd block
>> all legitimate INVITEs and registrations. Since its UDP traffic I
>> couldn't come up with a way to do it automatically at the iptables
>> level. i.e. number of concurrent connections. Is there some option
>> to
>> just not respond if a client is sending a number of requests over a
>> certain threshold? It might not stop them from sending the traffic
>> but pretty soon they'd get the idea that it wasn't going to go
>> anywhere. My concern is say there are 50 Freeswitch instances on a
>> box (albeit 8 core, 32GB ram, 8 15K raid 10 storage) and someone
>> starts sending thousands of rouge INVITEs to every VM on a physical
>> box that the CPU load from just challenging the incoming INVITEs
>> would
>> create a DoS. We the logs regularly to try to catch people doing
>> this
>> sort of thing and drop them at a router upstream of the core network,
>> but I'd like to have it happen without human intervention. Have I
>> completely over thought this and am missing something obvious?
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Spencer
>>
>>
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>
>
>
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