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    Suricata Getting Updates

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved IDS/IPS
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    • NollipfSenseN
      NollipfSense @bmeeks
      last edited by NollipfSense

      @bmeeks said in Suricata Getting Updates:

      @NollipfSense said in Suricata Getting Updates:

      Bill, I understand however, it does only when updating feed, never during regular network transactions. On that bug page Andy provided, it mentioned adding sysctl dev.netmap.admode = 1...what's admode?

      Don't know. It has nothing to do with Suricata the application. All sysctl settings are kernel related and affect all applications running on the OS. You can Google the setting to see what it does.

      The fact you see those messages only during updates is indicative that the Thunderbolt driver is doing weird things as the traffic load through it increases. There will be a brief spike in network traffic as Suriata downloads the rules signature tarballs. Also, during the automatic Suricata restart that follows the rules signature update, the interface will be cycled (i.e., netmap operation will be terminated and then restarted).

      Bill, I had done a search right after my prior posting and found this man page: https://www.unix.com/man-page/freebsd/4/netmap/
      It seems that it had something to do with ring size...I am still trying to make sense of it all...also, admode has to do with using Netmap in native mode and sysctl dev.netmap.admode = 1 would be forcing natmap into that mode. Also, I am wondering whether I am actually using Netmap or a generic version of netmap.

      pfSense+ 23.09 Lenovo Thinkcentre M93P SFF Quadcore i7 dual Raid-ZFS 128GB-SSD 32GB-RAM PCI-Intel i350-t4 NIC, -Intel QAT 8950.
      pfSense+ 23.09 VM-Proxmox, Dell Precision Xeon-W2155 Nvme 500GB-ZFS 128GB-RAM PCIe-Intel i350-t4, Intel QAT-8950, P-cloud.

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

        @NollipfSense said in Suricata Getting Updates:

        Bill, I had done a search right after my prior posting and found this man page: https://www.unix.com/man-page/freebsd/4/netmap/
        It seems that it had something to do with ring size...I am still trying to make sense of it all...also, admode has to do with using Netmap in native mode and sysctl dev.netmap.admode = 1 would be forcing natmap into that mode. Also, I am wondering whether I am actually using Netmap or a generic version of netmap.

        Netmap is a type of kernel device. It is available for FreeBSD and Linux operating systems. It is a way for a user-mode application to create a highspeed pathway for accessing network packets as they flow to and from the NIC driver layer. It uses a series of circular buffers called rings to store data received from the NIC and data ready for transmit to the NIC. There is no "generic netmap" versus "Netmap". There is just the netmap device. Perhaps you are confusing emulation mode and native mode. In emulation mode the netmap device can usually work with NIC drivers that don't directly support netmap operation. However, emulation mode is slower than native mode; so it is rarely used. In the case of Suricata, netmap in emulation mode will likely adversely impact network performance as compared to netmap in native mode. That particular sysctl setting you are asking about controls whether or not netmap is forced to emulation mode or allowed to use native mode.

        NollipfSenseN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • NollipfSenseN
          NollipfSense @bmeeks
          last edited by

          @bmeeks said in Suricata Getting Updates:

          @NollipfSense said in Suricata Getting Updates:

          Bill, I had done a search right after my prior posting and found this man page: https://www.unix.com/man-page/freebsd/4/netmap/
          It seems that it had something to do with ring size...I am still trying to make sense of it all...also, admode has to do with using Netmap in native mode and sysctl dev.netmap.admode = 1 would be forcing natmap into that mode. Also, I am wondering whether I am actually using Netmap or a generic version of netmap.

          Netmap is a type of kernel device. It is available for FreeBSD and Linux operating systems. It is a way for a user-mode application to create a highspeed pathway for accessing network packets as they flow to and from the NIC driver layer. It uses a series of circular buffers called rings to store data received from the NIC and data ready for transmit to the NIC. There is no "generic netmap" versus "Netmap". There is just the netmap device. Perhaps you are confusing emulation mode and native mode. In emulation mode the netmap device can usually work with NIC drivers that don't directly support netmap operation. However, emulation mode is slower than native mode; so it is rarely used. In the case of Suricata, netmap in emulation mode will likely adversely impact network performance as compared to netmap in native mode. That particular sysctl setting you are asking about controls whether or not netmap is forced to emulation mode or allowed to use native mode.

          Thank you Bill for taking time to explain, and that's why the creator kept emphasizing in post on Github to leave it in native mode. I have contacted that person and awaiting a response. In my case, it seems that it wants to remain in native mode whenever it updates and need to restart.

          pfSense+ 23.09 Lenovo Thinkcentre M93P SFF Quadcore i7 dual Raid-ZFS 128GB-SSD 32GB-RAM PCI-Intel i350-t4 NIC, -Intel QAT 8950.
          pfSense+ 23.09 VM-Proxmox, Dell Precision Xeon-W2155 Nvme 500GB-ZFS 128GB-RAM PCIe-Intel i350-t4, Intel QAT-8950, P-cloud.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • NollipfSenseN
            NollipfSense
            last edited by

            Bill, I received a response from the Netmap creator and I will need your help. He doesn't believe Netmap is working or at least, not in native mode and is in emulated mode; so, he wants me to see:

            • whether Netmap is in Suricata configuration file
            • trace system call in dev/netmap, ioctl(NIOCREGIF), ioctl(NIOCCTRL), etc..

            How do I do it...is Suricata.yaml the configuration file? Also how to check what mode Suricata is in? This seems to suggest native mode:

            Shell Output - sysctl -a | grep netmap
            netmap: loaded module
            netmap: loaded module
            255.614367 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
            255.616438 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
            660.148513 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
            685.365819 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
            685.367894 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
            012.950971 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
            038.259726 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
            038.261782 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
            410.784723 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
            436.134532 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
            436.136610 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
            device netmap
            dev.netmap.ixl_rx_miss_bufs: 0
            dev.netmap.ixl_rx_miss: 0
            dev.netmap.iflib_rx_miss_bufs: 0
            dev.netmap.iflib_rx_miss: 0
            dev.netmap.iflib_crcstrip: 1
            dev.netmap.bridge_batch: 1024
            dev.netmap.default_pipes: 0
            dev.netmap.priv_buf_num: 4098
            dev.netmap.priv_buf_size: 2048
            dev.netmap.buf_curr_num: 163840
            dev.netmap.buf_num: 163840
            dev.netmap.buf_curr_size: 4608
            dev.netmap.buf_size: 4608
            dev.netmap.priv_ring_num: 4
            dev.netmap.priv_ring_size: 20480
            dev.netmap.ring_curr_num: 200
            dev.netmap.ring_num: 200
            dev.netmap.ring_curr_size: 36864
            dev.netmap.ring_size: 36864
            dev.netmap.priv_if_num: 1
            dev.netmap.priv_if_size: 1024
            dev.netmap.if_curr_num: 100
            dev.netmap.if_num: 100
            dev.netmap.if_curr_size: 1024
            dev.netmap.if_size: 1024
            dev.netmap.generic_rings: 1
            dev.netmap.generic_ringsize: 1024
            dev.netmap.generic_mit: 100000
            dev.netmap.admode: 0
            dev.netmap.fwd: 0
            dev.netmap.flags: 0
            dev.netmap.adaptive_io: 0
            dev.netmap.txsync_retry: 2
            dev.netmap.no_pendintr: 1
            dev.netmap.mitigate: 1
            dev.netmap.no_timestamp: 0
            dev.netmap.verbose: 0
            dev.netmap.ix_rx_miss_bufs: 0
            dev.netmap.ix_rx_miss: 0
            dev.netmap.ix_crcstrip: 0

            pfSense+ 23.09 Lenovo Thinkcentre M93P SFF Quadcore i7 dual Raid-ZFS 128GB-SSD 32GB-RAM PCI-Intel i350-t4 NIC, -Intel QAT 8950.
            pfSense+ 23.09 VM-Proxmox, Dell Precision Xeon-W2155 Nvme 500GB-ZFS 128GB-RAM PCIe-Intel i350-t4, Intel QAT-8950, P-cloud.

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

              @NollipfSense: the Suricata package makes absolutely zero determination about the netmap device mode. All it does is open the device and use it. The kernel settings (which is a pfSense thing, not a Suricata thing) determine the netmap device mode (native or emulation). When you enable Inline IPS Mode in the GUI, then the netmap device is used.

              Examine the suricata.yaml file for the interface and you will see it does not set the mode. You can find the applicable suricata.yaml file for an interface by looking in the appropriate sub-directory under /usr/local/etc/suricata. There will be a sub-directory under there for each configured Suricata interface. It will have a UUID string along with the NIC device name in the sub-directory name, and you can use that NIC device name to help you find the correct sub-directory.

              DO NOT attempt to use the /usr/local/etc/suricata.yaml file! That is just a dummy file installed by the binary package and it is not used at all on pfSense. The correct suricata.yaml file for each interface is found in a sub-directory underneath as I described above. Each time you save a change in the GUI, or stop and start Suricata from the GUI, a new suricata.yaml file is created and written to the interface configuration sub-directory.

              NollipfSenseN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • NollipfSenseN
                NollipfSense @bmeeks
                last edited by

                @bmeeks From the log, it seems that the kernel wants to use emulated mode but a native mode was restored. As you correctly stated it doesn't seem there is any reference in Suricata of mode it’s in...here is what I found:

                Shell Output - cat /var/log/system.log | grep netmap
                Jul 7 13:24:50 NollipfSense kernel: netmap: loaded module
                Jul 9 00:30:55 NollipfSense kernel: 255.614367 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
                Jul 9 00:30:55 NollipfSense kernel: 255.616438 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
                Jul 10 00:31:00 NollipfSense kernel: 660.148513 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
                Jul 10 00:31:25 NollipfSense kernel: 685.365819 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
                Jul 10 00:31:25 NollipfSense kernel: 685.367894 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
                Jul 11 00:30:12 NollipfSense kernel: 012.950971 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
                Jul 11 00:30:38 NollipfSense kernel: 038.259726 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
                Jul 11 00:30:38 NollipfSense kernel: 038.261782 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
                Jul 12 00:30:10 NollipfSense kernel: 410.784723 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
                Jul 12 00:30:36 NollipfSense kernel: 436.134532 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0
                Jul 12 00:30:36 NollipfSense kernel: 436.136610 [ 760] generic_netmap_dtor Restored native NA 0

                Home /usr/local/etc/suricata Close
                ..
                suricata_23163_bge0
                classification.config
                3.12 KiB
                classification.config.sample
                4.07 KiB
                community-rules.tar.gz.md5
                0.03 KiB
                emerging.rules.tar.gz.md5
                0.03 KiB
                reference.config
                1.22 KiB
                reference.config.sample
                1.34 KiB
                suricata.yaml
                73.02 KiB
                suricata.yaml.sample
                73.02 KiB
                threshold.config
                1.61 KiB
                threshold.config.sample
                1.61 KiB

                Home /usr/local/etc/suricata/suricata_23163_bge0 Close
                ..
                rules
                classification.config
                3.12 KiB
                passlist
                0.00 KiB
                reference.config
                1.22 KiB
                sid-msg.map
                3475.40 KiB
                suricata.yaml
                11.46 KiB
                threshold.config
                0.00 KiB

                %YAML 1.1

                max-pending-packets: 1024

                Runmode the engine should use.

                runmode: autofp

                If set to auto, the variable is internally switched to 'router' in IPS

                mode and 'sniffer-only' in IDS mode.

                host-mode: auto

                Specifies the kind of flow load balancer used by the flow pinned autofp mode.

                autofp-scheduler: active-packets

                Daemon working directory

                daemon-directory: /usr/local/etc/suricata/suricata_23163_bge0

                default-packet-size: 1514

                The default logging directory.

                default-log-dir: /var/log/suricata/suricata_bge023163

                global stats configuration

                stats:
                enabled: no
                interval: 10
                #decoder-events: true
                decoder-events-prefix: "decoder.event"
                #stream-events: false

                Configure the type of alert (and other) logging.

                outputs:

                alert-pf blocking plugin

                • alert-pf:
                  enabled: no
                  kill-state: yes
                  block-drops-only: no
                  pass-list: /usr/local/etc/suricata/suricata_23163_bge0/passlist
                  block-ip: BOTH
                  pf-table: snort2c

                a line based alerts log similar to Snort's fast.log

                • fast:
                  enabled: yes
                  filename: alerts.log
                  append: yes
                  filetype: regular

                alert output for use with Barnyard2

                • unified2-alert:
                  enabled: no
                  filename: unified2.alert
                  limit: 32mb
                  sensor-id: 0
                  xff:
                  enabled: no

                • http-log:
                  enabled: yes
                  filename: http.log
                  append: yes
                  extended: yes
                  filetype: regular

                • pcap-log:
                  enabled: no
                  filename: log.pcap
                  limit: 32mb
                  max-files: 1000
                  mode: normal

                • tls-log:
                  enabled: no
                  filename: tls.log
                  extended: yes

                • tls-store:
                  enabled: no
                  certs-log-dir: certs

                • stats:
                  enabled: yes
                  filename: stats.log
                  append: no
                  totals: yes
                  threads: no
                  #null-values: yes

                • syslog:
                  enabled: no
                  identity: suricata
                  facility: local1
                  level: notice

                • drop:
                  enabled: no
                  filename: drop.log
                  append: yes
                  filetype: regular

                • file-store:
                  version: 2
                  enabled: no
                  log-dir: files
                  force-magic: no
                  #force-hash: [md5]
                  #waldo: file.waldo

                • file-log:
                  enabled: no
                  filename: files-json.log
                  append: yes
                  filetype: regular
                  force-magic: no
                  #force-hash: [md5]

                • eve-log:
                  enabled: no
                  filetype: regular
                  filename: eve.json
                  redis:
                  server: 127.0.0.1
                  port: 6379
                  mode: list
                  key: "suricata"
                  identity: "suricata"
                  facility: local1
                  level: notice
                  xff:
                  enabled: no
                  mode: extra-data
                  deployment: reverse
                  header: X-Forwarded-For
                  types:
                  - alert:
                  payload: yes # enable dumping payload in Base64
                  payload-buffer-size: 4kb # max size of payload buffer to output in eve-log
                  payload-printable: yes # enable dumping payload in printable (lossy) format
                  packet: yes # enable dumping of packet (without stream segments)
                  http-body: yes # enable dumping of http body in Base64
                  http-body-printable: yes # enable dumping of http body in printable format
                  tagged-packets: yes # enable logging of tagged packets for rules using the 'tag' keyword
                  - http:
                  extended: yes
                  custom: [accept, accept-charset, accept-datetime, accept-encoding, accept-language, accept-range, age, allow, authorization, cache-control, connection, content-encoding, content-language, content-length, content-location, content-md5, content-range, content-type, cookie, date, dnt, etags, from, last-modified, link, location, max-forwards, origin, pragma, proxy-authenticate, proxy-authorization, range, referrer, refresh, retry-after, server, set-cookie, te, trailer, transfer-encoding, upgrade, vary, via, warning, www-authenticate, x-authenticated-user, x-flash-version, x-forwarded-proto, x-requested-with]
                  - dns:
                  version: 2
                  query: yes
                  answer: yes
                  - tls:
                  extended: yes
                  - dhcp:
                  extended: no
                  - files:
                  force-magic: no
                  - ssh
                  - nfs
                  - smb
                  - krb5
                  - ikev2
                  - tftp
                  - smtp:
                  extended: yes
                  custom: [bcc, received, reply-to, x-mailer, x-originating-ip]
                  md5: [subject]
                  - drop:
                  alerts: yes
                  flows: all

                Magic file. The extension .mgc is added to the value here.

                magic-file: /usr/share/misc/magic

                GeoLite2 IP geo-location database file path and filename.

                geoip-database: /usr/local/share/suricata/GeoLite2/GeoLite2-Country.mmdb

                Specify a threshold config file

                threshold-file: /usr/local/etc/suricata/suricata_23163_bge0/threshold.config

                detect-engine:

                • profile: high
                • sgh-mpm-context: auto
                • inspection-recursion-limit: 3000
                • delayed-detect: no

                Suricata is multi-threaded. Here the threading can be influenced.

                threading:
                set-cpu-affinity: no
                detect-thread-ratio: 1.0

                Luajit has a strange memory requirement, it's 'states' need to be in the

                first 2G of the process' memory.

                'luajit.states' is used to control how many states are preallocated.

                State use: per detect script: 1 per detect thread. Per output script: 1 per

                script.

                luajit:
                states: 128

                Multi pattern algorithm

                The default mpm-algo value of "auto" will use "hs" if Hyperscan is

                available, "ac" otherwise.

                mpm-algo: auto

                Single pattern algorithm

                The default of "auto" will use "hs" if available, otherwise "bm".

                spm-algo: auto

                Defrag settings:

                defrag:
                memcap: 33554432
                hash-size: 65536
                trackers: 65535
                max-frags: 65535
                prealloc: yes
                timeout: 60

                Flow settings:

                flow:
                memcap: 33554432
                hash-size: 65536
                prealloc: 10000
                emergency-recovery: 30
                prune-flows: 5

                This option controls the use of vlan ids in the flow (and defrag)

                hashing.

                vlan:
                use-for-tracking: true

                Specific timeouts for flows.

                flow-timeouts:
                default:
                new: 30
                established: 300
                closed: 0
                emergency-new: 10
                emergency-established: 100
                emergency-closed: 0
                tcp:
                new: 60
                established: 3600
                closed: 120
                emergency-new: 10
                emergency-established: 300
                emergency-closed: 20
                udp:
                new: 30
                established: 300
                emergency-new: 10
                emergency-established: 100
                icmp:
                new: 30
                established: 300
                emergency-new: 10
                emergency-established: 100

                stream:
                memcap: 512000000
                checksum-validation: no
                inline: auto
                prealloc-sessions: 32768
                midstream: false
                async-oneside: false
                max-synack-queued: 5
                reassembly:
                memcap: 67108864
                depth: 1048576
                toserver-chunk-size: 2560
                toclient-chunk-size: 2560

                Host table is used by tagging and per host thresholding subsystems.

                host:
                hash-size: 4096
                prealloc: 1000
                memcap: 33554432

                Host specific policies for defragmentation and TCP stream reassembly.

                host-os-policy:
                bsd: [0.0.0.0/0]

                Logging configuration. This is not about logging IDS alerts, but

                IDS output about what its doing, errors, etc.

                logging:

                This value is overriden by the SC_LOG_LEVEL env var.

                default-log-level: info
                default-log-format: "%t - <%d> -- "

                Define your logging outputs.

                outputs:

                • console:
                  enabled: yes
                • file:
                  enabled: yes
                  filename: /var/log/suricata/suricata_bge023163/suricata.log
                • syslog:
                  enabled: no
                  facility: off
                  format: "[%i] <%d> -- "

                IPS Mode Configuration

                Netmap

                netmap:

                • interface: default
                  threads: auto
                  copy-mode: ips
                  disable-promisc: no
                  checksum-checks: auto
                • interface: bge0
                  copy-iface: bge0+
                • interface: bge0+
                  copy-iface: bge0

                legacy:
                uricontent: enabled

                default-rule-path: /usr/local/etc/suricata/suricata_23163_bge0/rules
                rule-files:

                • suricata.rules

                classification-file: /usr/local/etc/suricata/suricata_23163_bge0/classification.config
                reference-config-file: /usr/local/etc/suricata/suricata_23163_bge0/reference.config

                Holds variables that would be used by the engine.

                vars:

                Holds the address group vars that would be passed in a Signature.

                address-groups:
                HOME_NET: "[10.10.10.1/32,68.226.180.1/32,68.226.181.34/32,127.0.0.1/32,192.168.1.0/24,208.67.220.220/32,208.67.222.222/32,::1/128,fe80::aa60:b6ff:fe23:1134/128,fe80::ca2a:14ff:fe57:d2dc/128]"
                EXTERNAL_NET: "[!10.10.10.1/32,!68.226.180.1/32,!68.226.181.34/32,!127.0.0.1/32,!192.168.1.0/24,!208.67.220.220/32,!208.67.222.222/32,!::1/128,!fe80::aa60:b6ff:fe23:1134/128,!fe80::ca2a:14ff:fe57:d2dc/128]"
                DNS_SERVERS: "$HOME_NET"
                SMTP_SERVERS: "$HOME_NET"
                HTTP_SERVERS: "$HOME_NET"
                SQL_SERVERS: "$HOME_NET"
                TELNET_SERVERS: "$HOME_NET"
                DNP3_SERVER: "$HOME_NET"
                DNP3_CLIENT: "$HOME_NET"
                MODBUS_SERVER: "$HOME_NET"
                MODBUS_CLIENT: "$HOME_NET"
                ENIP_SERVER: "$HOME_NET"
                ENIP_CLIENT: "$HOME_NET"
                FTP_SERVERS: "$HOME_NET"
                SSH_SERVERS: "$HOME_NET"
                AIM_SERVERS: "64.12.24.0/23,64.12.28.0/23,64.12.161.0/24,64.12.163.0/24,64.12.200.0/24,205.188.3.0/24,205.188.5.0/24,205.188.7.0/24,205.188.9.0/24,205.188.153.0/24,205.188.179.0/24,205.188.248.0/24"
                SIP_SERVERS: "$HOME_NET"

                Holds the port group vars that would be passed in a Signature.

                port-groups:
                FTP_PORTS: "21"
                HTTP_PORTS: "80"
                ORACLE_PORTS: "1521"
                SSH_PORTS: "22"
                SHELLCODE_PORTS: "!80"
                DNP3_PORTS: "20000"
                FILE_DATA_PORTS: "$HTTP_PORTS,110,143"
                SIP_PORTS: "5060,5061,5600"

                Set the order of alerts based on actions

                action-order:

                • pass
                • drop
                • reject
                • alert

                IP Reputation

                Limit for the maximum number of asn1 frames to decode (default 256)

                asn1-max-frames: 256

                engine-analysis:
                rules-fast-pattern: yes
                rules: yes

                #recursion and match limits for PCRE where supported
                pcre:
                match-limit: 3500
                match-limit-recursion: 1500

                Holds details on the app-layer. The protocols section details each protocol.

                app-layer:
                protocols:
                dcerpc:
                enabled: yes
                dhcp:
                enabled: yes
                dnp3:
                enabled: yes
                detection-ports:
                dp: 20000
                dns:
                global-memcap: 16777216
                state-memcap: 524288
                request-flood: 500
                tcp:
                enabled: yes
                detection-ports:
                dp: 53
                udp:
                enabled: yes
                detection-ports:
                dp: 53
                ftp:
                enabled: yes
                http:
                enabled: yes
                memcap: 67108864
                ikev2:
                enabled: yes
                imap:
                enabled: detection-only
                krb5:
                enabled: yes
                modbus:
                enabled: yes
                request-flood: 500
                detection-ports:
                dp: 502
                stream-depth: 0
                msn:
                enabled: detection-only
                nfs:
                enabled: yes
                ntp:
                enabled: yes
                tls:
                enabled: yes
                detection-ports:
                dp: 443
                ja3-fingerprints: off
                encrypt-handling: default
                smb:
                enabled: yes
                detection-ports:
                dp: 139, 445
                smtp:
                enabled: yes
                mime:
                decode-mime: no
                decode-base64: yes
                decode-quoted-printable: yes
                header-value-depth: 2000
                extract-urls: yes
                body-md5: no
                inspected-tracker:
                content-limit: 100000
                content-inspect-min-size: 32768
                content-inspect-window: 4096
                ssh:
                enabled: yes
                tftp:
                enabled: yes

                ###########################################################################

                Configure libhtp.

                libhtp:
                default-config:
                personality: IDS
                request-body-limit: 4096
                response-body-limit: 4096
                double-decode-path: no
                double-decode-query: no
                uri-include-all: no

                coredump:
                max-dump: unlimited

                Suricata user pass through configuration

                So, it might be a kernel thing after Suricata obtains its feed.

                pfSense+ 23.09 Lenovo Thinkcentre M93P SFF Quadcore i7 dual Raid-ZFS 128GB-SSD 32GB-RAM PCI-Intel i350-t4 NIC, -Intel QAT 8950.
                pfSense+ 23.09 VM-Proxmox, Dell Precision Xeon-W2155 Nvme 500GB-ZFS 128GB-RAM PCIe-Intel i350-t4, Intel QAT-8950, P-cloud.

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

                  @NollipfSense: I have said before, you are attempting to use netmap with a NIC driver that does not have official netmap support in FreeBSD. Since pfSense is fundamentally FreeBSD, then that means your NIC driver does not officially support netmap on pfSense either. If you really want to use Inline IPS Mode on this hardware, then go buy yourself a genuine Intel NIC that can use the em or igb driver. Those drivers officially support netmap on FreeBSD.

                  If you are unwilling to do that, then expect continued issues and bumps in the road with running Suricata using Inline IPS Mode on an unsupported NIC.

                  NollipfSenseN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • NollipfSenseN
                    NollipfSense @bmeeks
                    last edited by

                    @bmeeks You can tell I am a little stubborn... If the only issue happens when Suricata updates nightly, I might live with that especially since it doesn't crash and bring down pfSense. Suricata supports Mac and FreeBSD, and I am using Mac hardware. Netmap is so efficient that it should be in there best interest to support other hardware that Mac and FreeBSD support natively.

                    Thank you for taking time to help...much appreciated.

                    pfSense+ 23.09 Lenovo Thinkcentre M93P SFF Quadcore i7 dual Raid-ZFS 128GB-SSD 32GB-RAM PCI-Intel i350-t4 NIC, -Intel QAT 8950.
                    pfSense+ 23.09 VM-Proxmox, Dell Precision Xeon-W2155 Nvme 500GB-ZFS 128GB-RAM PCIe-Intel i350-t4, Intel QAT-8950, P-cloud.

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

                      @NollipfSense said in Suricata Getting Updates:

                      @bmeeks You can tell I am a little stubborn... If the only issue happens when Suricata updates nightly, I might live with that especially since it doesn't crash and bring down pfSense. Suricata supports Mac and FreeBSD, and I am using Mac hardware. Netmap is so efficient that it should be in there best interest to support other hardware that Mac and FreeBSD support natively.

                      Thank you for taking time to help...much appreciated.

                      I think you misunderstand what netmap actually is. It is not a commercial piece of software or a standalone open-source application. It is a kernel module for FreeBSD and Linux just like all of the dozens of other available kernel modules. Netmap defines a way for hardware drivers to interact with the kernel and user-space applications. It is up to the individual hardware driver developers to modify their own code to work with netmap's API (application programming interface). So Intel modified several of their NIC drivers to work with netmap and so did a few other vendors, but Broadcom has not yet elected to do that. It's up to Broadcom to fix the bge driver for netmap, or perhaps if the Broadcom driver software is open-source, some other volunteer developer will step up and add the necessary modifications.

                      NollipfSenseN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • NollipfSenseN
                        NollipfSense @bmeeks
                        last edited by

                        @bmeeks said in Suricata Getting Updates:

                        @NollipfSense said in Suricata Getting Updates:

                        @bmeeks You can tell I am a little stubborn... If the only issue happens when Suricata updates nightly, I might live with that especially since it doesn't crash and bring down pfSense. Suricata supports Mac and FreeBSD, and I am using Mac hardware. Netmap is so efficient that it should be in there best interest to support other hardware that Mac and FreeBSD support natively.

                        Thank you for taking time to help...much appreciated.

                        I think you misunderstand what netmap actually is. It is not a commercial piece of software or a standalone open-source application. It is a kernel module for FreeBSD and Linux just like all of the dozens of other available kernel modules. Netmap defines a way for hardware drivers to interact with the kernel and user-space applications. It is up to the individual hardware driver developers to modify their own code to work with netmap's API (application programming interface). So Intel modified several of their NIC drivers to work with netmap and so did a few other vendors, but Broadcom has not yet elected to do that. It's up to Broadcom to fix the bge driver for netmap, or perhaps if the Broadcom driver software is open-source, some other volunteer developer will step up and add the necessary modifications.

                        Oh...so, it's the other way around...I had found this in my quest to resolve and might contact the BGE driver developer if the email is current:
                        https://nxmnpg.lemoda.net/4/bge

                        Wondered whether he is on Github?

                        pfSense+ 23.09 Lenovo Thinkcentre M93P SFF Quadcore i7 dual Raid-ZFS 128GB-SSD 32GB-RAM PCI-Intel i350-t4 NIC, -Intel QAT 8950.
                        pfSense+ 23.09 VM-Proxmox, Dell Precision Xeon-W2155 Nvme 500GB-ZFS 128GB-RAM PCIe-Intel i350-t4, Intel QAT-8950, P-cloud.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • NollipfSenseN
                          NollipfSense
                          last edited by

                          @NollipfSense said in Suricata Getting Updates:

                          Shell Output - sysctl -a | grep netmap

                          Hey Bill, I shared the above output with the Netmap creator and he reiterated that it's operating in emulated mode. So, my thinking is I will get a thunderbolt to pcie enclosure and install an Intel i350 NIC I already have. I might wait till pfSense 2.5 release though.

                          pfSense+ 23.09 Lenovo Thinkcentre M93P SFF Quadcore i7 dual Raid-ZFS 128GB-SSD 32GB-RAM PCI-Intel i350-t4 NIC, -Intel QAT 8950.
                          pfSense+ 23.09 VM-Proxmox, Dell Precision Xeon-W2155 Nvme 500GB-ZFS 128GB-RAM PCIe-Intel i350-t4, Intel QAT-8950, P-cloud.

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

                            @NollipfSense said in Suricata Getting Updates:

                            @NollipfSense said in Suricata Getting Updates:

                            Shell Output - sysctl -a | grep netmap

                            Hey Bill, I shared the above output with the Netmap creator and he reiterated that it's operating in emulated mode. So, my thinking is I will get a thunderbolt to pcie enclosure and install an Intel i350 NIC I already have. I might wait till pfSense 2.5 release though.

                            My understanding is that when the hardware driver from the vendor does not support netmap, then the netmap device will usually switch to emulation mode. That mode is a kind of software kluge to let traffic pass, but it can harm performance since the true capabilities of netmap are not available.

                            So in the case of your Broadcom NIC in that Apple server, it does not support netmap so the device driver within the FreeBSD kernel switches to emulation mode. Suricata itself has nothing to do with that, though.

                            I'm not sure what you plan to do will make any difference since the Intel NIC will likely still be seen on the Thunderbolt device bus. Why don't you just get a Netgate appliance to run Suricata and pfSense on? Or else repurpose some other piece of hardware. Almost every computer geek I know has at least one or two spare PC-type machines laying around.

                            NollipfSenseN 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • NollipfSenseN
                              NollipfSense @bmeeks
                              last edited by NollipfSense

                              @bmeeks said in Suricata Getting Updates:

                              @NollipfSense said in Suricata Getting Updates:

                              @NollipfSense said in Suricata Getting Updates:

                              Shell Output - sysctl -a | grep netmap

                              Hey Bill, I shared the above output with the Netmap creator and he reiterated that it's operating in emulated mode. So, my thinking is I will get a thunderbolt to pcie enclosure and install an Intel i350 NIC I already have. I might wait till pfSense 2.5 release though.

                              My understanding is that when the hardware driver from the vendor does not support netmap, then the netmap device will usually switch to emulation mode. That mode is a kind of software kluge to let traffic pass, but it can harm performance since the true capabilities of netmap are not available.

                              So in the case of your Broadcom NIC in that Apple server, it does not support netmap so the device driver within the FreeBSD kernel switches to emulation mode. Suricata itself has nothing to do with that, though.

                              I'm not sure what you plan to do will make any difference since the Intel NIC will likely still be seen on the Thunderbolt device bus. Why don't you just get a Netgate appliance to run Suricata and pfSense on? Or else repurpose some other piece of hardware. Almost every computer geek I know has at least one or two spare PC-type machines laying around.

                              It's too late for Netgate appliance since I already invested in the Mac Mini server for pfSense 2.5. I had gotten an Hp Pavilion a6242n to learn the firewall OS. I had noticed when attached the Intel NIC to the HP PCie slot, the OS recognized it (Intel82576) as well as the other one on the motherboard. I am a Mac person and preferred using Apple hardware; and so, the recent switch. The plan should work as it would be seeing the Intel hardware and driver (dual Intel i350 NIC) on the PCie as well as the one broadcom Ethernet port separately. Meanwhile, I switch to Legacy mode.

                              pfSense+ 23.09 Lenovo Thinkcentre M93P SFF Quadcore i7 dual Raid-ZFS 128GB-SSD 32GB-RAM PCI-Intel i350-t4 NIC, -Intel QAT 8950.
                              pfSense+ 23.09 VM-Proxmox, Dell Precision Xeon-W2155 Nvme 500GB-ZFS 128GB-RAM PCIe-Intel i350-t4, Intel QAT-8950, P-cloud.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • NollipfSenseN
                                NollipfSense @bmeeks
                                last edited by

                                @bmeeks Hi Bill, just a note to update you that I had gotten the Akitio thunderbolt 2 PCie enclosure and added the Intel i350NIC I had...now running Suricata inline mode on the Mac Mini server converted to pfSense box, no problem...persistency is the key to success! During this process, I learned that it was Intel in collaboration with Apple who had created the thunderbolt interface; so, intuitively, the interface would work with Intel's NIC. I am one happy camper here!

                                pfSense+ 23.09 Lenovo Thinkcentre M93P SFF Quadcore i7 dual Raid-ZFS 128GB-SSD 32GB-RAM PCI-Intel i350-t4 NIC, -Intel QAT 8950.
                                pfSense+ 23.09 VM-Proxmox, Dell Precision Xeon-W2155 Nvme 500GB-ZFS 128GB-RAM PCIe-Intel i350-t4, Intel QAT-8950, P-cloud.

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

                                  @NollipfSense said in Suricata Getting Updates:

                                  @bmeeks Hi Bill, just a note to update you that I had gotten the Akitio thunderbolt 2 PCie enclosure and added the Intel i350NIC I had...now running Suricata inline mode on the Mac Mini server converted to pfSense box, no problem...persistency is the key to success! During this process, I learned that it was Intel in collaboration with Apple who had created the thunderbolt interface; so, intuitively, the interface would work with Intel's NIC. I am one happy camper here!

                                  I confess to be rather surprised the Intel NIC in the Thunderbolt interface worked. Apple is not known for being big on interoperability with other vendors.

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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