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| Subject: | Re: Fragmented UDP and Multicast Addresses |
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| Date: | Wed, 16 Nov 2005 10:23:22 +0000 |
On Tue, 2005-11-15 at 14:29 -0500, Chris Martin wrote:
Hello list, Today at work we found some very strange behavior on one of our servers. This machine was spitting out several thousand fragmented UDP packets to an IP multicast address. The rate of packet sending was quite high, using ethereal for about 10 minutes showed that of approximately 75,000 packets, almost 70,000 of them where these fragmented UDP packets. They were being sent to a 239.192.*.* which according to RFC 3171 is an Administratively Scoped Block of IPv4 Multicast. This really has us scratching our heads. I was wondering if anyone here had seen this kind of behavior before, or had any ideas as to what it could possibly be?
A first glance guess would be simple media multicasting software of some description. Can you narrow it down beyond UDP and recognise the protocol being used ? (or can you provide a packet dump so that we can). Do you have any host based analysis of the incident ? -- With Regards.. Barrie Dempster (zeedo) - Fortiter et Strenue "He who hingeth aboot, geteth hee-haw" Victor - Still Game blog: http://reboot-robot.net sites: http://www.bsrf.org.uk - http://www.security-forums.com ca: https://www.cacert.org/index.php?id=3
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