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| Subject: | RE: Testing IDS with tcpreplay |
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| Date: | Sun, 19 Feb 2006 19:44:09 -0500 |
Just responding to prashant; Yes netdude is an wondefull tool , But with respect to hiding sensitive ip addresses etc.. I think tcpreplay is a great tool to edit packets using tcprewrite I have found using both tcp replay and netdude extremely useful for ids testing purposes!! -----Original Message----- From: Prashant Khandelwal [mailto:prashant@juniper.net] Sent: Thursday, February 16, 2006 12:30 AM To: focus-ids@securityfocus.com Cc: Aaron Turner; ehanselman@netscape.net Subject: RE: Testing IDS with tcpreplay Ok, adding more to this discussion, Tcpreply becomes very handy in scenarios where complex application protocol based attacks have to be tested. In this case a quicker way would be editing the existing pcaps with tools like netdude and then tcpreplay it :-) .A good example would be testing Overflow protocol anomalies using pcap editing. I would say tcpreplay along with real time exploits/tools is the best way to do it. <snip> Obviously the biggest limitation of tcpreplay is it doesn't come with a library of pcaps. Maybe one of these days I can figure out the logistics to make that happen and encourage people to actually submit pcaps (which people tend to worry might have some kind of confidential IP in them) rather then just leech off everyone else. If anyone has any bright ideas I'd love to hear them. </snip> Well if its matter of hiding ip address and sensitive information then, I guess tests which are run with private ip address in labs can be captured and shared... just a thought... Thanks Prashant -----Original Message----- From: Aaron Turner [mailto:synfinatic@gmail.com] Sent: Wednesday, February 15, 2006 5:27 AM To: ehanselman@netscape.net Cc: focus-ids@securityfocus.com Subject: Re: Testing IDS with tcpreplay Generally speaking, tcpreplay is better when one or more of the following is true: 1) Trying to do comparative analysis and you want to make sure each device sees exactly the same thing 2) Need to automate or do a lot of regression testing and want a stable and relatively simple lab environment 3) Already have a library of pcap's (either from customers, the wild or capturing traffic of real tools like Metasploit) 4) Don't want to worry about re-installing or fixing target systems after they've been 0wn3d. VMware of course helps, but there is still a lot more administrative overhead. 5) You don't want to have to install and then maintain 10's or 100's of applications and their operating systems to break into. In general, tcpreplay isn't all that useful IMHO when you're first starting off and "want to do some IDS/IPS testing" or only intend to run a few tests or tests only once or twice unless you already happen to have a nice pcap library. Obviously the biggest limitation of tcpreplay is it doesn't come with a library of pcaps. Maybe one of these days I can figure out the logistics to make that happen and encourage people to actually submit pcaps (which people tend to worry might have some kind of confidential IP in them) rather then just leech off everyone else. If anyone has any bright ideas I'd love to hear them. -- Aaron Turner http://synfin.net/ ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 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. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 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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