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    What is the biggest attack in GBPS you stopped

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General pfSense Questions
    737 Posts 33 Posters 614.1k Views
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    • S
      Supermule Banned
      last edited by

      It is. And we have contacted the dev. team but no replies at all from Chris on this issue. (2-3 mths).

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      • DerelictD
        Derelict LAYER 8 Netgate
        last edited by

        You mentioned Windows weathers it better.  What about something like a Cisco ASA?

        Chattanooga, Tennessee, USA
        A comprehensive network diagram is worth 10,000 words and 15 conference calls.
        DO NOT set a source address/port in a port forward or firewall rule unless you KNOW you need it!
        Do Not Chat For Help! NO_WAN_EGRESS(TM)

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        • S
          Supermule Banned
          last edited by

          We havent had the pleasure of having one available to test.

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          • D
            doktornotor Banned
            last edited by

            Christ, we are back to this "oooooooh I've got a supersecret attack to instacrash pfSense"  noise again?

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            • KOMK
              KOM
              last edited by

              If what Supermule is saying is correct, 70-80 Mbps is no tank.  It's like a spit wad pea shooter.

              Well, it really depends on what you have.  70-80 Mbps wouldn't take down my corporate link, but it would totally hammer the links of many smaller companies I know.

              If pfSense really can be taken down by that, that is a huge serious issue.

              Agreed.  However, I will reserve judgement until I see more than hand-waving.

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              • S
                Supermule Banned
                last edited by

                Send me an IP address to test….

                Then I will surprise you.

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                • N
                  NOYB
                  last edited by

                  @KOM:

                  Well, it really depends on what you have.  70-80 Mbps wouldn't take down my corporate link, but it would totally hammer the links of many smaller companies I know.

                  This is not about taking down the "link" (filling the pipe).  It is about taking down pfSense.  In which case the link (pipe) may as well be down.  The point that is being put forth is that it doesn't matter that you have gigabit + pipe when it only takes about 70-80 Mbps to take down pfSense.  Rendering the pipe useless.

                  @KOM:

                  I will reserve judgement until I see more than hand-waving.

                  Supermule has made the offer to prove it.  What are you waiting for?  Accept the challenge.

                  Supermule has made the offer to prove this several times in this thread.  Would someone please take the challenge.  I would but don't have 70-80 Mbps of bandwidth.

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                  • KOMK
                    KOM
                    last edited by

                    What are you waiting for?  Accept the challenge.

                    I already did and didn't see what he was talking about.  He blasted me with a sustained 90 Mbps, my link max.  Our access was slow and I was getting service alarms from our external sensors, but pfSense was responsive.  I didn't see anything that I wouldn't already expect to see while under DoS.  He wanted to try another test where he blasts a port-forwarded server but I didn't have time or patience today for that.

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                    • S
                      Supermule Banned
                      last edited by

                      From the outside, his link was taken down immediately and it didnt respond to ping at all.

                      And that was on a pfsense that had NO port forwards set.

                      If it had a server behind and actually trying to route it, then his GUI would be hit as well.

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                      • KOMK
                        KOM
                        last edited by

                        But why would the GUI be slow?  While under full load, my CPU never rose above a few percent.  Minor disk activity.

                        I do think it would be nice for someone official to chime in either way.

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                        • S
                          Supermule Banned
                          last edited by

                          Exactly. It doesnt but it takes you offline even if it shouldnt…. but wait until you actually have a route to a server.

                          Then the load will be very visible in the GUI. Even if very few states and not much load is on the system.

                          You will see it in traffic graphs among other things, that they dont update as it should. There could be as much as 10 seconds between the graph update when hit.

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                          • KOMK
                            KOM
                            last edited by

                            It doesnt but it takes you offline even if it shouldnt….

                            Maybe I'm misunderstanding something, but yes, I do fully expect to be blown off the network if you flood my WAN.  That's a DoS by definition, is it not?

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                            • N
                              NOYB
                              last edited by

                              @KOM:

                              It doesnt but it takes you offline even if it shouldnt….

                              Maybe I'm misunderstanding something, but yes, I do fully expect to be blown off the network if you flood my WAN.  That's a DoS by definition, is it not?

                              I think the point here is that if pfSense can be knocked off with as little as 70-80 mbps, a gigabit pipe doesn't need to be flooded.  It's not about flooding the pipe.

                              Maybe not a problem for those with less bandwidth.  But for those with huge pipe, gigabit or more even, it would make it very easy for an attack to knock them offline with as little as 70-80 mbps.  No where near saturating at gigabit pipe.  Easy prey for an attacker.  Wouldn't even have to allocate much resources.

                              Yes it would be nice to hear from someone official.  If they where informed of this 2 to 3 months ago, and not responded, why do you supposed that would be.

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                              • S
                                Supermule Banned
                                last edited by

                                They were. CMB promised to get back to us but havent.

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                                • K
                                  kejianshi
                                  last edited by

                                  I'm not sure what you expect man…  A daily post from CMB saying he hasn't solved your issue yet?

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                                  • S
                                    Supermule Banned
                                    last edited by

                                    No….but maybe some updates to what they find or not find??

                                    Maybe hints to what could be done to minimize impact by adding things to system -> tunables??

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                                    • K
                                      kejianshi
                                      last edited by

                                      My impression thus far is there is nothing they have been able to figure out because its a OS issue.  I know they talked abit about it and posted about it in the past after someone took down their store website especially.  I wouldn't expect a whole bunch of talk from them until they figure it out which will probably happen when the OS gets patched.  Thats my guess.

                                      Generally speaking though, I think you want a specialized DDOS prevention service between your routers and the internet.

                                      Be careful with that too.  A couple days ago our DDOS protection got mysteriously hyper-sensitive and started blocking most everything!

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                                      • H
                                        Harvy66
                                        last edited by

                                        @KOM:

                                        What are you waiting for?  Accept the challenge.

                                        I already did and didn't see what he was talking about.  He blasted me with a sustained 90 Mbps, my link max.  Our access was slow and I was getting service alarms from our external sensors, but pfSense was responsive.  I didn't see anything that I wouldn't already expect to see while under DoS.  He wanted to try another test where he blasts a port-forwarded server but I didn't have time or patience today for that.

                                        Ahh, some new info that I haven't heard of until now. In the youtube videos of his own machine, small amounts of bandwidth was doing a lot more than just reducing bandwidth. But against your box, assuming the same attack, it didn't do much of anything than just eat some bandwidth.

                                        I wouldn't mind participating in being a guinea pig for a short bit. I would like to see if any value below 95Mb can render by 100Mb connection dead.

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                                        • S
                                          Supermule Banned
                                          last edited by

                                          Send me a PM :)

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                                          • H
                                            Harvy66
                                            last edited by

                                            I just suddenly thought it would be funny if the issue was the logging caused by the default block rules was spamming his log and hanging the system, with the abrupt swings caused by the system attempting to make room in the log.

                                            I think we covered this at one point, but I'm in a daze from lack of sleep and a busy week…. And Monday is tomorrow.. uhggg.

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