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Network Security Secure-Shell
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RE: Login Attempt Limits

Subject: RE: Login Attempt Limits
Date: Thu, 5 May 2005 13:13:06 -0600

        Your proposal could lead to a DoS attack designed to deny large
ranges of IP addresses access to your SSHD service by using IP spoofing,
no?

-----Original Message-----
From: MPHMedia.Net [mailto:MPHMedia@InfoWest.com] 
Sent: Thursday, May 05, 2005 8:53 AM
To: secureshell@securityfocus.com
Subject: Login Attempt Limits


I had around 650 failed atttempts on the SSHD server from about 5 
different IPs yesterday.

 From prior daily reviews of the log file it is clear that the majority 
of the attempts come from hacked SSHD servers because the attempt 
username pattern is the same from IPs located in different parts of the 
world (though South Korea seems to have the largest volume of any
country).

The clear evidence is that the SSHD system fails in a good number of
cases.

One way to look at this failure is to say that the managers of those 
servers are not requiring sufficiently random passwords for their uesrs.

The clear mathematics is that use of 8 byte random passwords from the 
complete available password character set will not be cracked (to a very

high probability).

But the clear reality is that very few passwords are selected from the 
widest possible selection pool and rather from a rather small pool of 
familar words and phrases. This reality combined with a high volume of 
attempts obtains an SSHD system failure at a fairly regular rate, as 
evidence by the attacking IP variation.

I looked briefly at some earlier secureshell pages along the lines of my

following suggestions with the apparent conclusion that the  suggestions

have been considered but not implemented for one reason or another. They

are:

1. When an IP has failed attempts for different usernames within a short

period block that IP for some number of minutes. This would be done 
automatically using configuration file parameters. With this option I 
would block an IP for 30 minutes after three failed attempts with 
different usernames occuring under a minute.

2. Execute an IP block as above when there are 3 root user failures.

3. Execute an IP block as above when there are 5 same user failures.

Apparently there is an option to block an IP completely after the fact. 
I am not seeing repeated attempts on subsequent days from the same IP. 
Hence that option would not address the current attack patterns.

With the above automatic IP block features, the 650 failed attempts 
yesterday would have been reduced to less than 20. That could be seen as

a 5 bit (32 times) reduction in the probability of a successful attack 
and similarly a 5 bit reduction in the number of failed SSHD servers.

The effective result would be some multiple greater than 5 bits overall 
in that the hacked server pool would decline by a 5 bit multiple. That 
is, the attack volume originates from already hacked servers meaning 
that the overall attack volume derives from at least two layers to which

5 bit attenuation could be applied. I would consider an obvious 5 bit 
attenuation very useful, but an apparent compounded 5 bit attenuation 
seems to argue for immediate implementation. Looked at another way, the 
effective randomness of the currently used password pool should increase

by 5 to, say, 15 bits. Or we could say that overall SSHD security would 
be increased by a similar degree.

Whatever the implementation difficulties, the design is clear.

Save failures by IP in the above categories and execute the block using 
new configuration file parameters.

Neil Nelson





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