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| Subject: | Re: Router/Switches and viruses |
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| Date: | Thu, 5 May 2005 13:29:38 -0500 |
On 5/3/05, Seek Knowledge <aseeker03@yahoo.com> wrote:
Does anyone have any first-hand experience with a single infected desktop machine (or windows server for that matter) taking out a LAN switch?
I've encountered Cisco routing engines start to lose traffic with just a few (3-8) infected machines all emitting the "Nachi" ICMP packets. Never just one host. Generally the issue was on a router handling layer-2 connectivity to many VLANs, or a few very large (and sparsely populated) VLANs. For example, if you have an office that is using 10/8 as their local network (not kidding!), when a (remote) host starts to scan into the 10.* address space, the router serving the 10/8 VLAN will attempt to resolve and cache ARP information for every 10.* address targeted by the worm host(s). With 92-byte ICMP packets emitted Nachi, just a handful of hosts can generate some really amazing packet rates. It's an open secret that routers tend to fall over not from throughput (bytes per second) but from frame rate (packets per second).
Would anyone have any stories from the trenches of an infected machine causing a directly connected router to stop functioning?
See http://www.bgpexpert.com/archive2003q3.php for one explanation of how high-rate ping sweeping worms can cause CPU and memory exhaustion on routers which support a large range of directly attached networks. My employer deploys just about every modern router product Cisco is willing to sell a support contract for, and when Nachi hit, no model was exempt from failure. With the exception of "core" and "egress" routers that saw aggregate traffic from many sources, routers that did pure layer-3 routing tended to survive with few issues (CEF cache exhaustion); the routers that rebooted or hung were almost exclusively serving layer-2 access for large chunks of IP space
If so, what could be done to prevent such an outage? What IDS/IPS strategy might one implement to prevent and or at least detect such an event?
The easy band-aid is the rate-limit access ports. There is seldom any reason for any one "host" to emit very small packets at very high rates. There are commercial products which are meant to detect hosts exhibiting pathological behavior and isolate them from the production network, or just not let them in in the first place. Regarding the latter, can anybody report experiences with Cisco Clean Access and or "Cisco Clean Access Out-of-Band" ? Kevin Kadow -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Test Your IDS Is your IDS deployed correctly? Find out quickly and easily by testing it with real-world attacks from CORE IMPACT. Go to http://www.securityfocus.com/sponsor/CoreSecurity_focus-ids_040708 to learn more. --------------------------------------------------------------------------
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