Suricata custom rule alerts but won't block
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@bmeeks hmailserver is a super simple, free windows mail server that you could use for the test, if it's the mail server you're lacking. I use windows live mail for the mail client.
I don't think so. The remote IP is the public IP from a client who's computers I'm authorized to work on and maintain. I have remote access to his network. So occasionally I will use one of his workstations to hit back at my network for testing purposes. Pretty certain his public IP is not on any pass lists on my pfsense box.
My suricata pass list is empty. And his public IP is not listed anywhere in any of my firewall rules. Is there another place I'm not aware of?
Here's an example of a rule that both alerts and blocks the offending remote IP:
alert tcp $EXTERNAL_NET any -> any 25 (msg:"SMTP AUTH LOGON brute force attempt"; content:"AUTH LOGIN"; nocase; threshold:type threshold, track by_src, count 3, seconds 60; classtype:suspicious-login; sid:1000002; rev:1;) -
you can check your passlist from console, i don't know where in the gui is this options but anyway it's inside
/usr/local/etc/suricata/suricata_PIDOFSURICATA_INTERFACE/passlist
just noticed now that i have ip like 8.8.8.8 inside it that i don't remember i ever put ..
edit .. ok could be that one time was a DNS configured for pfsense but it was removed long time ago.. -
@RedDelPaPa said in Suricata custom rule alerts but won't block:
Here's an example of a rule that both alerts and blocks the offending remote IP:
alert tcp $EXTERNAL_NET any -> any 25 (msg:"SMTP AUTH LOGON brute force attempt"; content:"AUTH LOGIN"; nocase; threshold:type threshold, track by_src, count 3, seconds 60; classtype:suspicious-login; sid:1000002; rev:1;)Your rule above that alerts and blocks is basically proving my point about a Pass List. Suricata (and Snort) generates a default Pass List that includes all of the IP subnets defined on the firewall interfaces with the exception of the WAN. For the WAN, the default Pass List only includes the actual WAN IP address. The default Pass List also includes your DNS Server(s), your default gateway and any defined Virtual IPs. You can see the contents of the default Pass List by going to the INTERFACE SETTTINGS tab for the interface you are running Suricata on and then scrolling down to click the View List button beside the Pass List drop-down selector. The content (IP addresses and subnet) of the default Pass List will display in a modal dialog.
Your SMTP server will most definitely be defined in that default Pass List (by the inclusion of the firewall locally-attached network where it resides). So that presence on the Pass List will prevent the the mail server from being blocked. Also, depending on exactly how the remote client's traffic comes back to the firewall (over a VPN, for example), it might also wind up being included on a Pass List as VPN addresses are also added to the default Pass List.
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@kiokoman said in Suricata custom rule alerts but won't block:
you can check your passlist from console, i don't know where in the gui is this options but anyway it's inside
/usr/local/etc/suricata/suricata_PIDOFSURICATA_INTERFACE/passlist
just noticed now that i have ip like 8.8.8.8 inside it that i don't remember i ever put ..
edit .. ok could be that one time was a DNS configured for pfsense but it was removed long time ago..The passlist file is only updated when Suricata is stopped and restarted or when a ccnfiguration change is made in the Suricata GUI and saved. If you were to edit the DNS servers listed under the SETUP > GENERAL screen in pfSense, but then did nothing to Suricata's configuration, then your DNS server change would not be reflected until you restarted Suricata.
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@bmeeks Yes I thought of that one already. I disabled his vpn connection to me before testing. And his public IP is definitely not on any pass lists.
I'm confused as to why the last rule I posted works, but the first one I posted does not.
If the last rule works, then clearly his public IP is not on a pass list?
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@bmeeks just followed your directions and checked the suricata default pass list. His public IP is not on it.
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@RedDelPaPa said in Suricata custom rule alerts but won't block:
@bmeeks Yes I thought of that one already. I disabled his vpn connection to me before testing. And his public IP is definitely not on any pass lists.
I'm confused as to why the last rule I posted works, but the first one I posted does not.
If the last rule works, then clearly his public IP is not on a pass list?
Are you sure that previous rule you posted is actually firing properly? For example, I would not expect your mail server to be responding on port 25 necessarily. The client should have initiated the TCP connection by having port 25 as the destination but having a random high port in the message for the SMTP server to reply back on. But to be honest I've never done a packet analysis is an email server's conversations with a client.
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@bmeeks yes that last one i posted works on LOGIN AUTH being sent from the client to the server.
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@RedDelPaPa said in Suricata custom rule alerts but won't block:
@bmeeks yes that last one i posted works on LOGIN AUTH being sent from the client to the server.
I'm talking about the original rule you posted in your first message. This one:
alert tcp $SMTP_SERVERS 25 -> $EXTERNAL_NET any (msg:"Custom SMTP AUTH LOGON brute force attempt"; flow:from_server,established; content:"Authentication failed"; offset:54; nocase; threshold:type threshold, track by_dst, count 3, seconds 60; classtype:suspicious-login; sid:1000001; rev:3;)
Have you tried the rule above with "any" for the source port instead of "25"?
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@RedDelPaPa said in Suricata custom rule alerts but won't block:
There is no context to the rule in this image. Is this your custom rule? If so, it is not matching what you originally posted at the start of this thread.
If the rule above is meant to be what I just suggested a few seconds ago, I meant chaning the port to "any" not the IP address. So like this:
alert tcp $SMTP_SERVERS any -> $EXTERNAL_NET any (msg:"Custom SMTP AUTH LOGON brute force attempt"; flow:from_server,established; content:"Authentication failed"; offset:54; nocase; threshold:type threshold, track by_dst, count 3, seconds 60; classtype:suspicious-login; sid:1000001; rev:3;)
And one other point, unless you have specifically populated the SMTP_SERVERS variable on the VARIABLES tab, it will default to $HOME_NET which will be the entirety of all the locally-attached firewall subnets (as explained previously for the default pass list).
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@bmeeks no i have not.. doesn't the email server respond back on the port the client is connected to? I always thought it did.. Keep in mind that rule is the same as the default rule with a slight mod to the content.
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You need to be sure the relevant variables are properly populated for your servers. In this case, that means your SMTP server. The package just uses defaults for all variables that resolve to be the same as HOME_NET. HOME_NET is the sum total of all the protected networks, so that means every single subnet defined on your firewall interfaces, plus the WAN IP, the default gateway, configured DNS servers, Virtual IPs and VPN addresses.
If you want a more restrictive setup, then create a firewall alias containing your mail server and then assign that alias to SMTP_SERVERS on the VARIABLES tab, save the change and then restart Suricata on the interface so it will pick up the change.
You also need to be sure that you are not duplicating a rule SID. You can't have two SIDs the same, and I don't think Suricata will warn you about that in the current version.
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The fact your bottom rule works tells you that blocking is working fine. You have a rule content issue and/or a pass list content issue. It might be time for you to do a packet capture to see what is actually going back and forth on the wire.
Blocking is totally unaware of the content of a rule. It simply looks at the IP addresses in the packet, and if the IP address is not on a pass list (or covered by the default pass list), then it is blocked.
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@bmeeks I don't understand what you mean by populating variables.
Would being configured wrong cause it to still alert but not block?
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@RedDelPaPa said in Suricata custom rule alerts but won't block:
@bmeeks I don't understand what you mean by populating variables.
Would being configured wrong cause it to still alert but not block?
No, it won't impact blocking or not blocking. It can impact when the rule triggers, though. The default value for SMTP_SERVERS would be a ton of network space defined on your firewall.
You appear to have a case where traffic you think should get a block is actually covered in the pass list defined for the interface. If you have not changed the pass list from the value of "default", then I'm telling you that pass list is rather large as it will encompass all the locally-attached networks plus VPNs. It might be that during your testing responses that you think would be your client's public IP might actually be showing up to Suricata as being wrapped with a locally-attached network (the VPN tunnel, for example). That's why you might want to capture the traffic to examine the IP headers.
The default pass list is more than just individual IP addresses. It includes entire subnets as defined on the pfSense local interfaces.
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@bmeeks But I told you that the rule that doesn't work alerts, and writes to the log. But it won't block.
As stated earlier, VPN is down and disabled for testing.
The suricata log file logs his public IP when it alerts. It just won't block it.
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@RedDelPaPa said in Suricata custom rule alerts but won't block:
@bmeeks But I told you that the rule that doesn't work alerts, and writes to the log. But it won't block.
As stated earlier, VPN is down and disabled for testing.
The suricata log file logs his public IP when it alerts. It just won't block it.
Okay. I'm looking at something now in the custom blocking plugin source code that might be at play. If you want to help troubleshoot, do these steps:
Use the rule that you said is alerting but not blocking, and try it using two different settings for "Which IP to Block" on the INTERFACE SETTINGS tab. Each time you change this parameter, you will need to restart Suricata on the interface so it picks up the change.
Change that option to block just the DST IP address (change the setting from BOTH to DST). Save the change and restart Suricata. Then test your rule. It should alert and block the remote client (the one with the public IP of your customer).
If the above test works, that validates what I think I see in the source code of the blocking module.
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@bmeeks One more question for you if you don't mind that's off topic.
How does the suppress list work? Obviously if I click suppress and add IP in the log, it will suppress and whitelist that IP to do whatever activity that IP was doing. But If I just click suppress, say, I get a ton of different IP's attacking voip and SIP which I don't use. If I just click to suppress that action without adding the IP, will suricata continue to block that activity without logging it?