(RESOLVED!!!) WARNING!! Emerging Threats Dshield rule set is now empty inside Snort and on Emerging Threats official website
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@jonathanlee said in WARNING!! Emerging Threats Dshield rule set is now empty inside Snort and on Emerging Threats official website:
@bmeeks I wonder if Snort has a URL option that you can use inside of the custom area.
No, Snort does not currently have a custom URL option like Suricata.
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@steveits Yes I emailed the yesterday, they may have disabled that ruleset for some unknown reason. If not, I did email them that it is blank, they might have moved it to pro.
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They have just replied, they are looking into the issue,
I guess it was not the intention to disable that feed. I am glad they are looking into it. I wonder what happened? Some rulesets have been blank for some time now I started wondering about it when the alarms stopped coming in.
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This is officially resolved per Emerging Threats Support ETA next release
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@jonathanlee Nice !
Curious, why not use pfblocker for the IP blocking you need? -
@michmoor I like Snort's IDS (Intrusion Detection System) and IPS (Intrusion Prevention System) software. I had snort software as a kid when it was a wireless scanner software much like Wireshark, it has much improved over the days of the late 90s early 2000s. It use to be called AirSnort!!
Anyway fast forward to today. I like that it will scan and use emerging threats and has auto updated rule sets. I use Squid Proxy it just works well, it even stops Nmap scans cold in their tracks. I have never used pfblocker, with HTTPS over 443 DoH all over the place total reliance on a DNS based version kind of worries me. With use of Squid it uses HTTP headers so you can see if something is port jumping to a new DoH server. Plus I have it working with HTTPS for SSL so Clam Av works for HTTP and HTTPS on it. It did take me some time to get to working with the configuration, however it blocks and protects now. I can see in the logs huge lists of items blocked or viruses stopped over the proxy.
I have never used pfBlocker why do you like that one? Got any screen shots?
(Image: 50 items over the last 1 hour blocked)
(Image: Caches UDP scans even)
(Image: ClamAV viruses caught last couple days over HTTPS)
Yes they have some false positives, again that means it is working. The fine tuning takes some time. I have never seen pfBlocking yet, I should check it out.
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For just plain IP blocking, a package such as pfBlockerNG-devel is more efficient than Snort or Suricata. For content inspection, you must use an IDS/IPS package. But remember that end-to-end encryption can severely cripple an IDS/IPS. That being said, some features of IDS/IPS are still useable to some degree -- for example, the OpenAppID feature of Snort.
And if you do MITM SSL termination, then an IDS/IPS can be very useful for payload inspection. But there is quite a bit of extra work involved with MITM setup.
I will say, that for IP-only rules, Suricata can also be quite efficient. That's because when it identifies and sorts rules based on that criteria, there is very limited packet inspection. It simply checks the IP address and makes a quick decision. So, for IP-only rules, Suricata will be nearly as efficient as the firewall itself. An IP-only rule is one where there is no payload content matching specified in the rule.
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@bmeeks I agree the MITM setup took me some time to get it to work with all the certificates.
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@jonathanlee I'd say pfBlocker has three main elements:
1a) IPv4 and IPv6 feeds
1b) geoIP lists by country
2) DNS block listsIP lists that are enabled have options:
geo:
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@steveits thanks for sharing that looks like amazing software. I have never seen that package installed or screenshots of it until today. Again I hear about it in the discussion posts all the time. Thanks for sharing.
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@steveits Palo Alto does country blocks also.
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Suricata offers GeoIP rules support. It can download and use the GeoLite2 geo-location database from MaxMind (the same DB used by pfBlockerNG-devel).
However, in Suricata, you must create your own GeoIP rules unless you happen to find a packaged set online someplace. I've never seen one, though. But Suricata does have full support for GeoIP. Here is a link to the documentation: https://suricata.readthedocs.io/en/suricata-6.0.0/rules/header-keywords.html#geoip.
Snort does not have a GeoIP option.
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@bmeeks said in (RESOLVED NEXT RELEASE) WARNING!! Emerging Threats Dshield rule set is now empty inside Snort and on Emerging Threats official website:
And if you do MITM SSL termination, then an IDS/IPS can be very useful for payload inspection. But there is quite a bit of extra work involved with MITM setup.
I have a MITM configureation in play right now. Just confused as to which point the IPS engine(suricata in my case) can see the payload. What i mean is this, when i perform a pcap on pfsense itself in the GUI, i still see traffic with TLS encryption. So clearly the pcap engine happens before the TLS decryption process. But does Suricata see the decrypted payload?
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@michmoor said in (RESOLVED NEXT RELEASE) WARNING!! Emerging Threats Dshield rule set is now empty inside Snort and on Emerging Threats official website:
@bmeeks said in (RESOLVED NEXT RELEASE) WARNING!! Emerging Threats Dshield rule set is now empty inside Snort and on Emerging Threats official website:
And if you do MITM SSL termination, then an IDS/IPS can be very useful for payload inspection. But there is quite a bit of extra work involved with MITM setup.
I have a MITM configureation in play right now. Just confused as to which point the IPS engine(suricata in my case) can see the payload. What i mean is this, when i perform a pcap on pfsense itself in the GUI, i still see traffic with TLS encryption. So clearly the pcap engine happens before the TLS decryption process. But does Suricata see the decrypted payload?
No, the default network plumbing of FreeBSD and pfSense puts Suricata immediately after the NIC driver. So, that means it sees the traffic before the MITM interception occurs. Same as you see with PCAP. Using Suricata with MITM on pfSense requires you to do special custom network routing/plumbing on the host. It is not something that is available out of the box for now.
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@bmeeks Gotcha. Thanks for that tidbit as one of the primary reasons i went down the MITM track was to test the IPS functionality.
I would assume this is probably the case for other packages like ntopng where it can do app identification but most likely not involving Squid or Suricata in the mix so for apps it cant identify..it cant identify. -
@michmoor I am running an ARM processor on a 2100 MAX I have always wondered about it's usage of multithreading within its DNA. If your using SSL intercept the firewall itself runs the certificates, again you can also issue the SSL certs from inside of the Squid software and import them back into the Pfsense software. To my understanding Snort uses only one thread inside of the Pfsense software package; however Snort has multithreading functionality within some versions. Anyway Snort has appID options like Palo Alto does and they function but it eats memory. I can only "speculate" APP ID uses the certificates stored on the firewall.
it's stateful inspection too.
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@michmoor Snort is not even listed within the sockets when it runs.
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@jonathanlee I would caution that OpenAppID is not really like PaloAlto so don’t assume you’re getting those feature like quality for free.
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Snort's OpenAppID is NOT seeing decrypted data. It simply analyzes the unencrypted SNI header in certain traffic types to guess at the application. Once encrypted SNI (ESNI) becomes a regular thing, OpenAppID is going to have some issues identifying applications.
And today neither Snort nor Suricata, by default, will see unencrypted SSL traffic on pfSense even when MITM is present with something like HA-Proxy. The network plumbing on FreeBSD by default puts the IDS/IPS immediately after the NIC driver, so all traffic seen there is still encrypted. You would have to utilize multiple NIC ports and set up custom routing outside of the package GUI for either Snort or Suricata in order to have them see the unencrypted traffic available with MITM.
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@michmoor Noted: My firewall is not a enterprise class system like some PaloAlto's mine is just a home system, my streaming services never skip a beat now with pfSense running :) a smaller system is all I need. We went over so many PaloAlto options during class it can make your head spin they have so many options. I wonder with all the new whitebox software being installed right on the network cards if maybe something like a large Ciena router could also manage security options right on the router itself. Cisco started doing a firewall and router all in some years ago, it was cutting edge at the time to combine them.