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    Quick Snort Setup Instructions for New Users

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved IDS/IPS
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    • M
      Mr. Jingles
      last edited by

      @Fobio:

      I have setup snort and it's been running well.  Thank you for those here with the setup tips.

      Today I tried to download FireFox and it all timed out to address: download-installer.cdn.mozilla.net

      I've followed the setup and disabled the ET-Policy-Mozilla rule.  What else could be affecting this?  I've done a few searches and haven't found anything here or elsewhere.

      Normally the alerts tab for the interface should give a clue, does it say anything?

      6 and a half billion people know that they are stupid, agressive, lower life forms.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • F
        Fobio
        last edited by

        @Mr.:

        @Fobio:

        I have setup snort and it's been running well.  Thank you for those here with the setup tips.

        Today I tried to download FireFox and it all timed out to address: download-installer.cdn.mozilla.net

        I've followed the setup and disabled the ET-Policy-Mozilla rule.  What else could be affecting this?  I've done a few searches and haven't found anything here or elsewhere.

        Normally the alerts tab for the interface should give a clue, does it say anything?

        Likely this:

        1:2003492 ET MALWARE Suspicious Mozilla User-Agent - Likely Fake (Mozilla/4.0)

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • VeldkornetV
          Veldkornet
          last edited by

          Hey guys,

          I keep getting the following alert "2000419 ET POLICY PE EXE or DLL Windows file download" but I dot even have emerging-policy.rules enabled (I never have)….. I only have
          emerging-botcc.rules
          emerging-compromised.rules
          emerging-dshield.rules
          emerging-exploit.rules
          emerging-malware.rules
          emerging-trojan.rules
          emerging-worm.rules

          Is it possible that it's coming from one of these other categories?

          I've force disabled it for now, but I have no idea why it's showing up...

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • D
            djseto
            last edited by

            @jflsakfja:

            The Missing Part to Quick Snort Setup Instructions for New Users

            Instructions on making the most of your shiny new IDS
            Snort is designed to block pretty much anything you can think of. That's why there are many false positives. When I first started using snort, I was constantly banging my head on my desk because most sites would be blocked for (seemingly) no reason.
            The CORRECT way to stop false positives is to disable the rules causing them, NOT using suppression lists. I may hear you ask "but all other places on the internet say use suppression lists, why shouldn't I?".
            A little (simplified) info on how snort works will help you understand why.
            Snort takes the packets and analyses them. Matches to the rules will be forwarded to alerts, then pfsense's plugin takes over and bans them. Suppression lists work just before the last step. They stop alerts from being produced. Disabling rules stops the "process" at the very beginning. Why analyze a packet if you are going to ignore it? This saves CPU processing which could be used for other purposes (eg enable more rules).
            There are times when this will not work. Rules deep deep inside snort (preprocessor rules) have no way of being disabled (if I'm wrong about this, please correct me). That's where suppression lists become useful.

            With that out of the way, this is the process to stop false positives.

            1. Identify the rule causing them. On the alerts tab you will find all alerts (no kidding). The last columns should show a number in the format x:YYYY:x and an explanation for the rule.
              I'll use this for this example:
              x:2000419:x ET POLICY PE EXE or DLL Windows file download
            2. copy the YYYY part (2000419). Take a look at the explanation. ET (emerging threats) POLICY. This means you'll find this rule in emerging-policy list.
            3. go to the snort home page (services> snort). Click the e to edit interface settings, then go to rules. In the drop down select emerging-policy. Assuming you use firefox, CTRL+F and paste the rule number (called sig_id, signature ID) and click next. For other browsers, find a way to search the page for a term and enter the number there.
            4. click the red or yellow (depending if you previously enabled the rule) to turn it into a lighter shade of yellow (see bottom of page).
            5. top of page, click apply changes and wait for the page to reload.
            6. go back to the snort home page and restart the interface (click the red x until it becomes green, wait a couple of seconds and click it again to turn it back to red) <<< DO NOT FORGET THIS STEP
              –----warning!!!-------
              as of version 2.5.8 the icons are now swapped. Green is running, red is not running. So invert the colors above

            1. relax, the rule is now disabled and will stop generating alerts. Go to blocked tab, and find the ip that it previously banned and unban it (click the button to the right of the explanation).

            In that rare case you cannot find the rule causing the alert (eg explanation does not offer information about the list), first check GPLv2 list, then IPS policy list. If you still cannot find it, a suppression entry is needed. Simply click the add to suppression list (little +) next to the rule on the alerts tab. Assuming you have set up your suppression list correctly, it will be added to it. Restart the interface (step 6 above), unban the ip, and you are done!

            And now for my contribution to the community. The default enabled rules are too relaxed. We need to enable more rules, but a word of caution. ONLY USE THIS LIST IF YOU HAVE ENOUGH MEMORY.
            I'm currently using it on redundant CARP firewalls, with a crappy p4 cpu and 2GB of ram each. The systems average about 25-30% RAM usage.The list below shows how snort is configured on a production environment and works perfectly (for me) but it is not complete. Entries that do not have a DONE > in front of them are NOT COMPLETED. Please review and make changes depending on your environment.

            In tab "Rules", under "Category" select:
            (--- means blank table at time of writing)

            DONE > emerging-activex > all

            DONE > emerging-attack_responses > all

            DONE > emerging-botcc > all

            DONE > emerging-chat > all except:
            2010784 ET CHAT Facebook Chat (send message)
            2010785 ET CHAT Facebook Chat (buddy list)
            2010786 ET CHAT Facebook Chat (settings)
            2010819 ET CHAT Facebook Chat using XMPP
            2002327 ET CHAT Google Talk (Jabber) Client Login
            2002334 ET CHAT Google IM traffic Jabber client sign-on
            2001241 ET CHAT MSN file transfer request
            2001242 ET CHAT MSN file transfer accept
            2001243 ET CHAT MSN file transfer reject
            2001682 ET CHAT MSN IM Poll via HTTP
            2002192 ET CHAT MSN status change
            2008289 ET CHAT Possible MSN Messenger File Transfer
            2009375 ET CHAT General MSN Chat Activity
            2009376 ET CHAT MSN User-Agent Activity

            DONE > emerging-ciarmy > all

            DONE > emerging-compromised > all

            DONE > emerging-current_events > all

            DONE > emerging-deleted > ---

            DONE > emerging-dns > all except:
            2008446 ET DNS Excessive DNS Responses with 1 or more RR's (100+ in 10
            seconds) - possible Cache Poisoning Attempt
            2008470 ET DNS Excessive NXDOMAIN responses - Possible DNS Backscatter or Domain Generation Algorithm Lookups
            2001117 ET DNS Standard query response, Name Error

            DONE > emerging-dos > all

            DONE > emerging-drop > all

            DONE > emerging-dshield > all

            DONE > emerging-exploit > all except:
            2001058 ET EXPLOIT libpng tRNS overflow attempt
            2002913 ET EXPLOIT VNC Client response
            2002914 ET EXPLOIT VNC Server VNC Auth Offer
            2002919 ET EXPLOIT VNC Good Authentication Reply
            2002915 ET EXPLOIT VNC Authentication Reply
            2002758 ET EXPLOIT WMF Escape Record Exploit - Version 1
            2002742 ET EXPLOIT WMF Escape Record Exploit - Version 3

            DONE > emerging-ftp > all

            DONE > emerging-games > all

            DONE > emerging-icmp > ---

            DONE > emerging-icmp_info > ---

            DONE > emerging-imap > ---

            DONE > emerging-inappropriate > all except:
            2002925 ET INAPPROPRIATE Google Image Search, Safe Mode Off
            2001608 ET INAPPROPRIATE Likely Porn

            DONE > emerging-info > all except:
            2014472 ET INFO JAVA - Java Archive Download
            2014473 ET INFO JAVA - Java Archive Download By Vulnerable Client
            2014819 ET INFO Packed Executable Download
            2015016 ET INFO FTP STOR to External Network
            2015561 ET INFO PDF Using CCITTFax Filter
            2015744 ET INFO EXE IsDebuggerPresent (Used in Malware Anti-Debugging)
            2016360 ET INFO JAVA - ClassID
            2016361 ET INFO JAVA - ClassID
            2016404 ET INFO MPEG Download Over HTTP (1)

            DONE > emerging-malware > all except:
            2008438 ET MALWARE Possible Windows executable sent when remote host claims to send a Text File

            DONE > emerging-misc > all

            DONE > emerging-mobile_malware > all except:
            2012251 ET MOBILE_MALWARE Google Android Device HTTP Request
            2012848 ET MOBILE_MALWARE Possible Mobile Malware POST of IMEI International Mobile Equipment Identity in URI

            DONE > emerging-netbios > all

            DONE > emerging-p2p > all except:
            2000369 ET P2P BitTorrent Announce
            2007727 ET P2P possible torrent download
            2008581 ET P2P BitTorrent DHT ping request
            2008583 ET P2P BitTorrent DHT nodes reply
            2008585 ET P2P BitTorrent DHT announce_peers request
            2010144 ET P2P Vuze BT UDP Connection (5)
            2011699 ET P2P Bittorrent P2P Client User-Agent (Transmission/1.x)

            *emerging-policy > all except:
            2000419 ET POLICY PE EXE or DLL Windows file download
            2000428 ET POLICY ZIP file download
            2001115 ET POLICY MSI (microsoft installer file) download
            2003595 ET POLICY exe download via HTTP - Informational
            2001898 ET POLICY eBay Bid Placed
            2001907 ET POLICY eBay Placing Item for sale
            2001908 ET POLICY eBay View Item
            2001909 ET POLICY eBay Watch This Item
            2003303 ET POLICY FTP Login Attempt (non-anonymous)
            2003410 ET POLICY FTP Login Successful
            2003121 ET POLICY docs.google.com Activity
            2003597 ET POLICY Google Calendar in Use
            2002801 ET POLICY Google Desktop User-Agent Detected
            2002838 ET POLICY Google Search Appliance browsing the Internet
            2000035 ET POLICY Hotmail Inbox Access
            2000036 ET POLICY Hotmail Message Access
            2000037 ET POLICY Hotmail Compose Message Access
            2000038 ET POLICY Hotmail Compose Message Submit
            2000039 ET POLICY Hotmail Compose Message Submit Data
            2008238 ET POLICY Hotmail Inbox Access
            2008239 ET POLICY Hotmail Message Access
            2008240 ET POLICY Hotmail Compose Message Access
            2008242 ET POLICY Hotmail Access Full Mode
            2006408 ET POLICY HTTP Request on Unusual Port Possibly Hostile
            2006409 ET POLICY HTTP POST on unusual Port Possibly Hostile
            2002330 ET POLICY Google Talk TLS Client Traffic
            2002332 ET POLICY Google IM traffic Windows client user sign-on
            2002333 ET POLICY Google IM traffic friend invited
            2002878 ET POLICY iTunes User Agent
            2002722 ET POLICY MP3 File Transfer Outbound
            2002723 ET POLICY MP3 File Transfer Inbound
            2001114 ET POLICY Mozilla XPI install files download
            2001973 ET POLICY SSH Server Banner Detected on Expected Port
            2001974 ET POLICY SSH Client Banner Detected on Expected Port
            2001975 ET POLICY SSHv2 Server KEX Detected on Expected Port
            2001976 ET POLICY SSHv2 Client KEX Detected on Expected Port
            2001977 ET POLICY SSHv2 Client New Keys detected on Expected Port
            2001978 ET POLICY SSH session in progress on Expected Port
            2001979 ET POLICY SSH Server Banner Detected on Unusual Port
            2001980 ET POLICY SSH Client Banner Detected on Unusual Port
            2001981 ET POLICY SSHv2 Server KEX Detected on Unusual Port
            2001982 ET POLICY SSHv2 Client KEX Detected on Unusual Port
            2001983 ET POLICY SSHv2 Client New Keys Detected on Unusual Port
            2001984 ET POLICY SSH session in progress on Unusual Port
            2013031 ET POLICY Python-urllib/ Suspicious User Agent
            2013414 ET POLICY Executable served from Amazon S3
            2014297 ET POLICY Vulnerable Java Version 1.7.x Detected
            2012647 ET POLICY Dropbox.com Offsite File Backup in Use
            2012648 ET POLICY Dropbox Client Broadcasting
            2014313 ET POLICY Executable Download From DropBox

            DONE > emerging-pop3 > ---

            DONE > emerging-rbn-malvertisers > all

            DONE > emerging-rbn > all

            DONE > emerging-rpc > ---

            DONE > emerging-scada > all

            DONE > emerging-scan > all except
            2002992 ET SCAN Rapid POP3 Connections - Possible Brute Force Attack
            2002993 ET SCAN Rapid POP3S Connections - Possible Brute Force Attack
            2002994 ET SCAN Rapid IMAP Connections - Possible Brute Force Attack
            2002995 ET SCAN Rapid IMAPS Connections - Possible Brute Force Attack

            DONE > emerging-shellcode > all except
            2011803 ET SHELLCODE Possible TCP x86 JMP to CALL Shellcode Detected
            2012252 ET SHELLCODE Common 0a0a0a0a Heap Spray String
            2012257 ET SHELLCODE Common %0c%0c%0c%0c Heap Spray String
            2012510 ET SHELLCODE UTF-8/16 Encoded Shellcode
            2013222 ET SHELLCODE Excessive Use of HeapLib Objects Likely Malicious Heap Spray Attempt
            2013267 ET SHELLCODE Hex Obfuscated JavaScript Heap Spray 0a0a0a0a

            DONE > emerging-smtp > all

            DONE > emerging-snmp > all

            DONE > emerging-sql > all

            DONE > emerging-telnet > all

            DONE > emerging-tftp > all

            DONE > emerging-tor > all

            emerging-trojan > all except

            DONE > emerging-user_agents > all except:
            2010697 ET USER_AGENTS Suspicious User-Agent Beginning with digits - Likely spyware/trojan

            DONE > emerging-voip > all

            DONE > emerging-web_client > all except
            2011347 ET WEB_CLIENT Possible String.FromCharCode Javascript Obfuscation Attempt
            2011507 ET WEB_CLIENT PDF With Embedded File
            2010518 ET WEB_CLIENT Possible HTTP 404 XSS Attempt (External Source)
            2012119 ET WEB_CLIENT Possible Hex Obfuscation Usage On Webpage
            2012205 ET WEB_CLIENT Possible Malicious String.fromCharCode with charCodeAt String
            2012266 ET WEB_CLIENT Hex Obfuscation of unescape % Encoding
            2012272 ET WEB_CLIENT Hex Obfuscation of eval % Encoding
            2012398 ET WEB_CLIENT Hex Obfuscation of replace Javascript Function % Encoding

            DONE > emerging-web_server > all except
            2003099 ET WEB_SERVER Poison Null Byte

            emerging-web_specific_apps > all except:
            2010890 ET WEB_SPECIFIC_APPS phpBB3 registration (Step1 GET)
            2010891 ET WEB_SPECIFIC_APPS phpBB3 registration (Step2 POST)
            2010892 ET WEB_SPECIFIC_APPS phpBB3 registration (Step3 GET)
            2010893 ET WEB_SPECIFIC_APPS phpBB3 registration (Step4 POST)

            DONE > emerging-worm > all

            DONE > GPLv2 community rules > all except
            254 DNS SPOOF query response with TTL of 1 min. and no authority
            384 PROTOCOL-ICMP PING
            385 PROTOCOL-ICMP traceroute
            399 PROTOCOL-ICMP Destination Unreachable Host Unreachable
            402 PROTOCOL-ICMP Destination Unreachable Port Unreachable
            408 PROTOCOL-ICMP Echo Reply
            540 POLICY-SOCIAL Microsoft MSN message
            648 INDICATOR-SHELLCODE x86 NOOP
            649 INDICATOR-SHELLCODE x86 setgid 0
            1200 INDICATOR-COMPROMISE Invalid URL
            1201 INDICATOR-COMPROMISE 403 Forbidden
            1292 INDICATOR-COMPROMISE directory listing
            1390 INDICATOR-SHELLCODE x86 inc ebx NOOP
            1394 INDICATOR-SHELLCODE x86 inc ecx NOOP
            1437 FILE-IDENTIFY Microsoft Windows Media download detected
            1841 FILE-OTHER Oracle Javascript URL host spoofing attempt
            1846 POLICY-MULTIMEDIA vncviewer Java applet download attempt
            1852 SERVER-WEBAPP robots.txt access
            1986 POLICY-SOCIAL Microsoft MSN outbound file transfer request
            1988 POLICY-SOCIAL Microsoft MSN outbound file transfer accept
            1989 POLICY-SOCIAL Microsoft MSN outbound file transfer rejected
            1990 POLICY-SOCIAL Microsoft MSN user search
            1991 POLICY-SOCIAL Microsoft MSN login attempt
            2180 PUA-P2P BitTorrent announce request
            2181 PUA-P2P BitTorrent transfer
            2707 FILE-IMAGE JPEG parser multipacket heap overflow
            3463 SERVER-WEBAPP awstats access
            25518 OS-OTHER Apple iPod User-Agent detected
            25519 OS-OTHER Apple iPad User-Agent detected
            25520 OS-OTHER Apple iPhone User-Agent detected
            25521 OS-OTHER Android User-Agent detected
            25522 OS-OTHER Nokia User-Agent detected
            25523 OS-OTHER Samsung User-Agent detected
            25524 OS-OTHER Kindle User-Agent detected
            25525 OS-OTHER Nintendo User-Agent detected

            *IPS Policy - Security > all except
            4152 BROWSER-PLUGINS Microsoft Windows Media Player 6.4 ActiveX object access
            19436 BROWSER-IE Microsoft Internet Explorer CStyleSheetRule array memory corruption attempt

            Suppression List:
            #GLOBAL

            gen_id 1

            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 536
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 648
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 653
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 1390
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 2452
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 11192
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 15306
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 16313
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 17458
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 20583
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 23098
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 2000334
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 2008120
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 2010516
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 20122758
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 2014518
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 2014520
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 2100366
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 2100368
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 2100651
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 2101390
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 2101424
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 2102314
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 2103134
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 2500056
            suppress gen_id 1, sig_id 100000230
            suppress gen_id 3, sig_id 14772
            #(http_inspect) DOUBLE DECODING ATTACK
            suppress gen_id 119, sig_id 2
            #(http_inspect) BARE BYTE UNICODE ENCODING
            suppress gen_id 119, sig_id 4
            #(http_inspect) IIS UNICODE CODEPOINT ENCODING
            suppress gen_id 119, sig_id 7
            #(http_inspect) NON-RFC DEFINED CHAR [**]
            suppress gen_id 119, sig_id 14
            #(http_inspect) UNKNOWN METHOD
            suppress gen_id 119, sig_id 31
            #(http_inspect) SIMPLE REQUEST
            suppress gen_id 119, sig_id 32
            #(http_inspect) NO CONTENT-LENGTH OR TRANSFER-ENCODING IN HTTP RESPONSE
            suppress gen_id 120, sig_id 2
            #(http_inspect) NO CONTENT-LENGTH OR TRANSFER-ENCODING IN HTTP RESPONSE
            suppress gen_id 120, sig_id 3
            #(http_inspect) HTTP RESPONSE HAS UTF CHARSET WHICH FAILED TO NORMALIZE
            suppress gen_id 120, sig_id 4
            #(http_inspect) HTTP RESPONSE GZIP DECOMPRESSION FAILED
            suppress gen_id 120, sig_id 6
            #(http_inspect) INVALID CONTENT-LENGTH OR CHUNK SIZE
            suppress gen_id 120, sig_id 8
            #(http_inspect) JAVASCRIPT OBFUSCATION LEVELS EXCEEDS 1
            suppress gen_id 120, sig_id 9

            Unknown

            suppress gen_id 120, sig_id 10
            #(smtp) Attempted response buffer overflow: 1448 chars
            suppress gen_id 124, sig_id 3
            #(ftp_telnet) Invalid FTP Command
            suppress gen_id 125, sig_id 2
            #(ssp_ssl) Invalid Client HELLO after Server HELLO Detected
            suppress gen_id 137, sig_id 1
            #(IMAP) Unknown IMAP4 command
            suppress gen_id 141, sig_id 1

            I did the above and I'm getting this error in my System Logs and Snort isn't starting:

            FATAL ERROR: /usr/local/etc/snort/snort_63694_igb0/rules/snort.rules(5021) byte_test rule option cannot extract more than 4 bytes without valid string prefix.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • bmeeksB
              bmeeks
              last edited by

              @djseto:

              I did the above and I'm getting this error in my System Logs and Snort isn't starting:

              FATAL ERROR: /usr/local/etc/snort/snort_63694_igb0/rules/snort.rules(5021) byte_test rule option cannot extract more than 4 bytes without valid string prefix.

              Have you searched this sub-forum using the error message text?  If you do, you should encounter this recent thread with your answer:
              https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php?topic=130993.msg722272#msg722272.

              Bill

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • B
                bimmerdriver
                last edited by

                OP, thank you for providing this guide.

                I have some questions.

                @bmeeks:

                16.  Click the Preprocessors tab.

                17.  Scroll down into the General Preprocessor Settings area and then check (or enable) all of the preprocessors listed in that section EXCEPT the Sensitive Data preprocessor.  It can cause a lot of alerts and is best used after you gain some experience with Snort.

                It's not clear which section of preprocessors you are talking about. There is no General Preprocessor Settings area.

                @bmeeks:

                19.  Now click on the Categories tab.  This is where we will choose a threat detection policy and associated rules.

                20.  If you followed my advice for Snort VRT rules, this page is easy.  Just click the check box for "Use IPS Policy" and then select "Connectivity" in the drop-down.  Click Save and you're done!  Once you gain some experience with Snort, you can come back and choose one of the other two more restrictive policies.  I personally run "Balanced", but it will require some tuning if run in blocking mode.

                What is the difference between Connectivity and Balanced. The description does not explain the difference.

                Connectivity blocks most major threats with few or no false positives. Balanced is a good starter policy.
                It is speedy, has good base coverage level, and covers most threats of the day. It includes all rules in Connectivity.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • M
                  Mr. Jingles
                  last edited by

                  @bimmerdriver:

                  OP, thank you for providing this guide.

                  I have some questions.

                  @bmeeks:

                  16.  Click the Preprocessors tab.

                  17.  Scroll down into the General Preprocessor Settings area and then check (or enable) all of the preprocessors listed in that section EXCEPT the Sensitive Data preprocessor.  It can cause a lot of alerts and is best used after you gain some experience with Snort.

                  It's not clear which section of preprocessors you are talking about. There is no General Preprocessor Settings area.

                  @bmeeks:

                  19.  Now click on the Categories tab.  This is where we will choose a threat detection policy and associated rules.

                  20.  If you followed my advice for Snort VRT rules, this page is easy.  Just click the check box for "Use IPS Policy" and then select "Connectivity" in the drop-down.  Click Save and you're done!  Once you gain some experience with Snort, you can come back and choose one of the other two more restrictive policies.  I personally run "Balanced", but it will require some tuning if run in blocking mode.

                  What is the difference between Connectivity and Balanced. The description does not explain the difference.

                  Connectivity blocks most major threats with few or no false positives. Balanced is a good starter policy.
                  It is speedy, has good base coverage level, and covers most threats of the day. It includes all rules in Connectivity.

                  First: what bimmer do you drive? I have an E39, and a F01  :) Which one do you have? Engine? Automatic gear or manual? Color? Most important Options? In Bimmer world, we are One Big Family  :-*

                  1. The General Preprocessor Settings indeed is gone. My guess is it is now 'Basic configuration settings', and a lot of other settings that used to be in 'General settings'. I think you could accept the defaults. 'Sensititive data' is now a separate setting all together: unflag it.
                  2. "Connectivity" versus "balanced" is described: one is more restrictive than the other. It is really nothing more than this: in one setting more categories and rules are enabled than in the other, by default. If you wish to know which ones, enable one settings, and then inspect the rules-tab to find out. It is just a helpful default suggestion from Bill, nothing more. He didn't write a tutorial for stuff you can easily see yourself by simply enabling the setting  ;)

                  6 and a half billion people know that they are stupid, agressive, lower life forms.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • B
                    bimmerdriver
                    last edited by

                    @Mr.:

                    First: what bimmer do you drive? I have an E39, and a F01  :) Which one do you have? Engine? Automatic gear or manual? Color? Most important Options? In Bimmer world, we are One Big Family  :-*

                    I drive an E46, specifically 2002 M3 MT coupe with a lot of mods. Using your family analogy, your F01 is the stately father and my E46 is the kid that gets into a lot of trouble. E39 and F01 is an interesting combo. What are their year / model? An E39 M5 would be a nice alternate to an F01.

                    @Mr.:

                    1. The General Preprocessor Settings indeed is gone. My guess is it is now 'Basic configuration settings', and a lot of other settings that used to be in 'General settings'. I think you could accept the defaults. 'Sensititive data' is now a separate setting all together: unflag it.
                    2. "Connectivity" versus "balanced" is described: one is more restrictive than the other. It is really nothing more than this: in one setting more categories and rules are enabled than in the other, by default. If you wish to know which ones, enable one settings, and then inspect the rules-tab to find out. It is just a helpful default suggestion from Bill, nothing more. He didn't write a tutorial for stuff you can easily see yourself by simply enabling the setting  ;)

                    Okay, that's what I thought.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • M
                      maniak
                      last edited by

                      @bmeeks:

                      8.  Click the Snort Interfaces tab and then click the plus "+" icon to add a Snort interface.

                      9.  On the If Settings tab, click the Enable checkbox.

                      10.  In the drop-down, choose the interface.  The WAN interface is the default and is a good first choice.

                      11.  In the Description textbox, enter a name (WAN again, is fine here).

                      I have several OpenVPN clients that run as interfaces. Should I add them also in Snort interfaces or is it enough with just WAN?

                      Thanks for this great post. I followed your post and also watched this tutorial https://youtu.be/-GgqYq5-EBg

                      Thanks again!

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • QinnQ
                        Qinn
                        last edited by Qinn

                        New to Snort I follow this one https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-GgqYq5-EBg&feature=youtu.be and setup accordingly only one interface eg the WAN.
                        Strange enough I only see one source ip address (LAN) in the Alerts tab. I have 10 subnets, with many users using the internet, what am I overlooking?

                        For instance in PFBlockerNG-develop I am see enough of the IP's of the subnets.

                        Cheers Qinn

                        Hardeware: Intel(R) Celeron(R) J4125 CPU @ 2.00GHz 102 GB mSATA SSD (ZFS)
                        Firmware: Latest-stable-pfSense CE (amd64)
                        Packages: pfBlockerNG devel-beta (beta tester) - Avahi - Notes - Ntopng - PIMD/udpbroadcastrelay - Service Watchdog - System Patches

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                        • bmeeksB
                          bmeeks @Qinn
                          last edited by bmeeks

                          @qinn said in Quick Snort Setup Instructions for New Users:

                          New to Snort I follow this one https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-GgqYq5-EBg&feature=youtu.be and setup accordingly only one interface eg the WAN.
                          Strange enough I only see one source ip address (LAN) in the Alerts tab. I have 10 subnets, with many users using the internet, what am I overlooking?

                          For instance in PFBlockerNG-develop I am see enough of the IP's of the subnets.

                          Cheers Qinn

                          When you run Snort on the WAN, it sees inbound traffic from the Internet before the NAT rules are unwound. So every packet has the public WAN IP address of your firewall as the destination. Only after NAT is unwound will the actual LAN IP address be present.

                          For this reason I recommend users run Snort on the LAN and not the WAN. When you run it on the LAN, it sees packets after NAT has been unwound so the IP addresses map directly to your LAN hosts.

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                          • QinnQ
                            Qinn
                            last edited by

                            @bmeeks first thank you for the advice. I have changed it from WAN to WLAN (a private VLAN subnet for an AP) which has internet access and roughly 20 nodes, smartphones, desktops, Sonos etc.
                            In 2 hours time there were 10 alerts => (http_inspect) NO CONTENT-LENGTH OR TRANSFER-ENCODING IN HTTP RESPONSE

                            I have only enabled "Snort will use rules from one of three pre-defined IPS policies in the Snort Subscriber rules" and IPS Policy Selection checked.

                            Hardeware: Intel(R) Celeron(R) J4125 CPU @ 2.00GHz 102 GB mSATA SSD (ZFS)
                            Firmware: Latest-stable-pfSense CE (amd64)
                            Packages: pfBlockerNG devel-beta (beta tester) - Avahi - Notes - Ntopng - PIMD/udpbroadcastrelay - Service Watchdog - System Patches

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                            • bmeeksB
                              bmeeks @Qinn
                              last edited by

                              @qinn said in Quick Snort Setup Instructions for New Users:

                              @bmeeks first thank you for the advice. I have changed it from WAN to WLAN (a private VLAN subnet for an AP) which has internet access and roughly 20 nodes, smartphones, desktops, Sonos etc.
                              In 2 hours time there were 10 alerts => (http_inspect) NO CONTENT-LENGTH OR TRANSFER-ENCODING IN HTTP RESPONSE

                              I have only enabled "Snort will use rules from one of three pre-defined IPS policies in the Snort Subscriber rules" and IPS Policy Selection checked.

                              The HTTP_INSPECT preprocessor rules will fire frequently and these days are mostly false positives. Most admins disable several of the HTTP_INSPECT rules. Search the IDS/IPS sub-forum here for suggestions on Snort Suppression Lists to find rules that most users suggest either suppressing or disabling.

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                              • QinnQ
                                Qinn @bmeeks
                                last edited by

                                @bmeeks now I reread my reply, I realize I wasn't clear, I should have emphasized that I only had these ten alerts in 2 hours and that seems rather meager. I would have expected to see loads of alerts, as approximately 20 users (smartphones, desktops, Sonos etc.) are on this subnet.

                                Hardeware: Intel(R) Celeron(R) J4125 CPU @ 2.00GHz 102 GB mSATA SSD (ZFS)
                                Firmware: Latest-stable-pfSense CE (amd64)
                                Packages: pfBlockerNG devel-beta (beta tester) - Avahi - Notes - Ntopng - PIMD/udpbroadcastrelay - Service Watchdog - System Patches

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                                • bmeeksB
                                  bmeeks @Qinn
                                  last edited by

                                  @qinn, it depends totally on which precise rules are enabled and what the traffic on your network actually consists of. The goal in IDS/IPS is to get no or very few alerts and blocks. That means your network is relatively secure and clients are following the rules ... ☺ .

                                  I don't mean that to say you should never get alerts, though. Just that you don't want to be receiving hundreds per hour. Once blocking is enabled that might drive you crazy as an admin. Within the IPS Polices, the Snort team has selected rules that provide security without a ton of false positive alerts.

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