Suricata/Snort master SID disablesid.conf
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Hi Asterix,
Thanks for the updated suppression list! It makes things work a lot better on my home network.
I noticed your last post says you moved the list over to SID Mgmt and stopped using the suppression list. Can you explain in detail how to do this? I'm a noob and I understood the whole suppression list and how to set it up, etc., but I have no idea what disablesid.conf is, where to edit it, etc.
Any help you could provide would be greatly appreciated.
See attached screenshot. Basically you go in SID Mgmt tab, enable "Enable Automatic SID State Management"and add/create a disabledsid.conf file. Once you have that added, go down below to the interface you are running Snort on (usually WAN) and reference the disabledsid.conf file under the Disable SID File column. SID State order should be "Disable,Enable"..so it will processing all the sids which are to be disabled first and then jump on to any specific sids you may have specified to be turned on using an enablesid.conf file (you can name the files what ever you feel like). Also ensure you go back to the WAN interface and remove the suppression list selected under "Alert Suppression and Filtering" as you don't need it anymore. All your suppressed sids are now disabled to begin with so they will not be processed, hence no more alerts on them.
Also why is using this method better than the suppression list?
Thanks!
As I stated in the my previous post "This disables all the unneeded rules first before enabling the rest of the rules on Snort startup".. so Snort does not reference/process the disabled rules against the traffic saving some CPU time. Also since the rules are disabled before Snort starts, it saves some RAM and snort startup times are reduced…depending on how many rules you are loading and how many have been disabled of course.
In the case of suppression list, the rules are still being referenced/processed and the alerts being generated are just suppressed. So there is still activity in the background but since you set it up to ignore the alerts (suppress) they are not being shown in the logs.
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As I stated in the my previous post "This disables all the unneeded rules first before enabling the rest of the rules on Snort startup"..
Sweet, doing a fresh load on new hardware so very timely too.
Thanks!
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Thank you Asterix, well done!
I encountered only to "problems":
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if I download a list, it contains a lot of html code (I'm using Firefox v. 50.1.0)
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If I download all bunch of lists in gzip, the resulted file is corrupted (unpacking program: WinRAR v. 5.40 64-bit)
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I encountered only to "problems":
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if I download a list, it contains a lot of html code (I'm using Firefox v. 50.1.0)
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If I download all bunch of lists in gzip, the resulted file is corrupted (unpacking program: WinRAR v. 5.40 64-bit)
Not sure what list you are referring to. If you mean the list above, just copy paste it directly into pfSense. https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php?topic=56267.msg665288#msg665288
On another note, after moving to Suricata a couple of days ago I am noticing more FPs which I first suppressed then moved to disablesid.conf. This may be due to the fact that I restructured my entire network from L2 to L3. So pfSense lan now acts just as a transit interface and is servicing clients outside its network (with the help of gateways and static routes).
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I'm talking about the little icon that shows the description "download this SID mods list file"in the SID mgmt section: if you open the downloaded file it's not a text file
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I'm talking about the little icon that shows the description "download this SID mods list file"in the SID mgmt section: if you open the downloaded file it's not a text file
This may a lingering bug from the Bootstrap conversion, or it might be peculiar to Firefox. Have you another browser to try such as Chrome or Internet Explorer? If it persists with other browsers, I will look at getting it fixed in the next Snort package update.
In the meantime, you can download the files outside of the GUI using something like WinSCP on Windows to perform a secure copy (SSH) operation. The files live in the /var/db/suricata/sidmods directory on the firewall.
Bill
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It's the same with Google Chrome; moreover the "Download" button (which is supposed to download all the lists in a single bzip file) generates a corrupted archive.
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The download button seems to work normally here with Suricata at least. The individual files have HTML crap appended.
@bmeeks: You might try something like this, I recall that was working pretty well: https://github.com/pfsense/pfsense-packages/blob/master/config/tftp2/tftp_files.php#L52
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The download button seems to work normally here with Suricata at least. The individual files have HTML crap appended.
@bmeeks: You might try something like this, I recall that was working pretty well: https://github.com/pfsense/pfsense-packages/blob/master/config/tftp2/tftp_files.php#L52
Thanks! I will put looking into this problem on todo list for Snort. This may be caused by some changes to the underlying web server in newer pfSense versions. I have not touched that particular code in Snort for a very long time (well before the change in the web server engine on the firewall).
Bill
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I'm running into a strange issue when using a disablesid.conf file, contents included below, the SIDs are not being disabled, I still see them triggering alerts, and when I check the rules in the snort interface I see "{$textse}"; " preceding SIDs that were specified in servers-disablesid.conf. See attachment
I've tried removing all of the comments in the conf file and rebuilding without luck. Has anyone else run into this?
# servers-disablesid.conf # DELETED NETBIOS SMB D$ share access 1:536 # INDICATOR-SHELLCODE x86 NOOP 1:648 # DELETED SHELLCODE x86 0x90 unicode NOOP 1:653 # INDICATOR-SHELLCODE x86 inc ebx NOOP 1:1390 # POLICY-SOCIAL Yahoo IM ping 1:2452 # BROWSER-PLUGINS QuickTime Object ActiveX clsid access 1:8375 # FILE-EXECUTABLE download of executable content 1:11192 # FILE-OTHER PCRE character class heap buffer overflow attempt 1:12286 # BROWSER-IE Microsoft Internet Explorer malformed iframe buffer overflow attempt 1:15147 # FILE-EXECUTABLE Portable Executable binary file magic detected 1:15306 # INDICATOR-OBFUSCATION obfuscated javascript excessive fromCharCode - potential attack 1:15362 # FILE-EXECUTABLE download of executable content 1:16313 # BROWSER-IE Microsoft Internet Explorer userdata behavior memory corruption attempt 1:16482 # FILE-OTHER BitDefender Internet Security script code execution attempt 1:17458 # BROWSER-FIREFOX Mozilla multiple location headers malicious redirect attempt 1:20583 # FILE-MULTIMEDIA Adobe Flash Player MP4 sequence parameter set parsing overflow attempt 1:23098 # FILE-EXECUTABLE Armadillo v1.71 packer file magic detected 1:23256 # FILE-FLASH Adobe Flash Player Action InitArray stack overflow attempt 1:24889 # ET P2P BitTorrent peer sync 1:2000334 # ET POLICY PE EXE or DLL Windows file download 1:2000419 # ET POLICY Unusual number of DNS No Such Name Responses 1:2003195 # ET P2P possible torrent download 1:2007727 # ET TFTP Outbound TFTP Read Request 1:2008120 # ET SCAN Sipvicious Scan 1:2008578 # ET WEB_CLIENT Possible HTTP 403 XSS Attempt (External Source) 1:2010516 # ET WEB_CLIENT Possible HTTP 500 XSS Attempt (External Source) 1:2010525 # ET POLICY Suspicious inbound to MSSQL port 1433 1:2010935 # ET POLICY Suspicious inbound to mySQL port 3306 1:2010937 # ET SCAN Sipvicious User-Agent Detected (friendly-scanner) 1:2011716 # ET POLICY Windows-Based OpenSSL Tunnel Outbound 1:2012078 # ET DELETED Possible Call with No Offset TCP Shellcode 1:2012086 # ET SHELLCODE Possible Call with No Offset UDP Shellcode 1:2012087 # ET SHELLCODE Possible Call with No Offset TCP Shellcode 1:2012088 # ET SHELLCODE Possible Call with No Offset UDP Shellcode 1:2012089 # ET POLICY Protocol 41 IPv6 encapsulation potential 6in4 IPv6 tunnel active 1:2012141 # ET SHELLCODE Common 0a0a0a0a Heap Spray String 1:2012252 # ET INFO DYNAMIC_DNS Query to *.dyndns. Domain 1:2012758 # ET POLICY curl User-Agent Outbound 1:2013028 # ET POLICY Python-urllib/ Suspicious User Agent 1:2013031 # ET DELETED Excessive Use of HeapLib Objects Likely Malicious Heap Spray Attempt 1:2013222 # ET POLICY Executable served from Amazon S3 1:2013414 # ET POLICY GNU/Linux APT User-Agent Outbound likely related to package management 1:2013504 # ET INFO JAVA - Java Archive Download 1:2014472 # ET INFO EXE - OSX Disk Image Download 1:2014518 # ET INFO EXE - Served Attached HTTP 1:2014520 # ET POLICY Outdated Windows Flash Version IE 1:2014726 # ET P2P BitTorrent - Torrent File Downloaded 1:2014734 # ET INFO Packed Executable Download 1:2014819 # ET INFO PDF Using CCITTFax Filter 1:2015561 # ET INFO EXE IsDebuggerPresent (Used in Malware Anti-Debugging) 1:2015744 # ET INFO Suspicious Windows NT version 7 User-Agent 1:2015820 # ET INFO JAVA - ClassID 1:2016360 # ET POLICY Unsupported/Fake FireFox Version 2. 1:2016877 # ET INFO SUSPCIOUS Non-standard base64 charset used for encoding 1:2017364 # ET POLICY PE EXE or DLL Windows file download HTTP 1:2018959 # ET POLICY SSLv3 outbound connection from client vulnerable to POODLE attack 1:2019416 # ET INFO WinHttp AutoProxy Request wpad.dat Possible BadTunnel 1:2022913 # NOT FOUND IN RULES 1:2100366 1:2100368 1:2100651 1:2101390 1:2101424 1:2102314 1:2103134 1:2103192 # ET DROP Dshield Block Listed Source group 1 1:2402000 # ET CINS Active Threat Intelligence Poor Reputation IP TCP group 23 1:2403344 # NOT FOUND IN RULES 1:2406003 1:2406067 1:2406069 1:2406424 # ET COMPROMISED Known Compromised or Hostile Host Traffic TCP group 26 1:2500050 # ET COMPROMISED Known Compromised or Hostile Host Traffic TCP group 29 1:2500056 # NOT FOUND IN RULES 1:2520199 1:2520205 1:100000230 # FILE-IMAGE libpng malformed chunk denial of service attempt 3:14772 # PROTOCOL-DNS TMG Firewall Client long host entry exploit attempt 3:19187 # PROTOCOL-DNS potential dns cache poisoning attempt - mismatched txid 3:21355 # HI_CLIENT_DOUBLE_DECODE 119:2 # HI_CLIENT_BARE_BYTE 119:4 # HI_CLIENT_IIS_UNICODE 119:7 # HI_CLIENT_NON_RFC_CHAR 119:14 # HI_CLIENT_UNKNOWN_METHOD 119:31 # HI_CLIENT_SIMPLE_REQUEST 119:32 # HI_CLIENT_UNESCAPED_SPACE_IN_URI 119:33 # HI_SERVER_INVALID_STATCODE 120:2 # HI_SERVER_NO_CONTLEN 120:3 # HI_SERVER_UTF_NORM_FAIL 120:4 # HI_SERVER_DECOMPR_FAILED 120:6 # HI_CLISRV_MSG_SIZE_EXCEPTION 120:8 # HI_SERVER_JS_OBFUSCATION_EXCD 120:9 # HI_SERVER_JS_EXCESS_WS 120:10 # HI_SERVER_JS_EXCESS_WS 122:19 # PSNG_UDP_FILTERED_PORTSCAN 122:21 # PSNG_UDP_FILTERED_DECOY_PORTSCAN 122:22 #PSNG_UDP_PORTSWEEP_FILTERED 122:23 # PSNG_ICMP_PORTSWEEP_FILTERED 122:26 # FRAG3_IPV6_BAD_FRAG_PKT 123:10 # SMTP_RESPONSE_OVERFLOW 124:3 # FTPP_FTP_INVALID_CMD 125:2 # SSL_INVALID_CLIENT_HELLO 137:1 # NOT FOUND IN RULES 138:2 138:3 138:4 138:5 138:6 # IMAP_UNKNOWN_CMD 141:1
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I encountered a similar problem with SID Mgmt: it is not disabling rules # 2000419 and # 2018959 (ET POLICY PE EXE or DLL Windows file download); I had to exclude them manually.
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Here is the simpler list for disablesid.conf. Did a random check and found them disabled. No more suppression list for now.
Thanks for the list!
I was wondering though, do you have the same list with comments?
Just wondering what all has been disabled here… -
Asterix, thank you for posting your work on the lsit. Nice job!
Most Snort recommendations are to make it inward-looking (LAN) instead of outward-looking (WAN). The inward-looking (LAN) configuration allows you to detect misbehaving internal LAN clients. The outward-looking (WAN) configuration might show you some interesting information, but it's not really actionable.
Comments?
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I'm running into a strange issue when using a disablesid.conf file, contents included below, the SIDs are not being disabled, I still see them triggering alerts, and when I check the rules in the snort interface I see "{$textse}"; " preceding SIDs that were specified in servers-disablesid.conf. See attachment
I've tried removing all of the comments in the conf file and rebuilding without luck. Has anyone else run into this?
# servers-disablesid.conf # DELETED NETBIOS SMB D$ share access 1:536 # INDICATOR-SHELLCODE x86 NOOP 1:648 # DELETED SHELLCODE x86 0x90 unicode NOOP 1:653 # INDICATOR-SHELLCODE x86 inc ebx NOOP 1:1390 # POLICY-SOCIAL Yahoo IM ping 1:2452 # BROWSER-PLUGINS QuickTime Object ActiveX clsid access 1:8375 # FILE-EXECUTABLE download of executable content 1:11192 # FILE-OTHER PCRE character class heap buffer overflow attempt 1:12286 # BROWSER-IE Microsoft Internet Explorer malformed iframe buffer overflow attempt 1:15147 # FILE-EXECUTABLE Portable Executable binary file magic detected 1:15306 # INDICATOR-OBFUSCATION obfuscated javascript excessive fromCharCode - potential attack 1:15362 # FILE-EXECUTABLE download of executable content 1:16313 # BROWSER-IE Microsoft Internet Explorer userdata behavior memory corruption attempt 1:16482 # FILE-OTHER BitDefender Internet Security script code execution attempt 1:17458 # BROWSER-FIREFOX Mozilla multiple location headers malicious redirect attempt 1:20583 # FILE-MULTIMEDIA Adobe Flash Player MP4 sequence parameter set parsing overflow attempt 1:23098 # FILE-EXECUTABLE Armadillo v1.71 packer file magic detected 1:23256 # FILE-FLASH Adobe Flash Player Action InitArray stack overflow attempt 1:24889 # ET P2P BitTorrent peer sync 1:2000334 # ET POLICY PE EXE or DLL Windows file download 1:2000419 # ET POLICY Unusual number of DNS No Such Name Responses 1:2003195 # ET P2P possible torrent download 1:2007727 # ET TFTP Outbound TFTP Read Request 1:2008120 # ET SCAN Sipvicious Scan 1:2008578 # ET WEB_CLIENT Possible HTTP 403 XSS Attempt (External Source) 1:2010516 # ET WEB_CLIENT Possible HTTP 500 XSS Attempt (External Source) 1:2010525 # ET POLICY Suspicious inbound to MSSQL port 1433 1:2010935 # ET POLICY Suspicious inbound to mySQL port 3306 1:2010937 # ET SCAN Sipvicious User-Agent Detected (friendly-scanner) 1:2011716 # ET POLICY Windows-Based OpenSSL Tunnel Outbound 1:2012078 # ET DELETED Possible Call with No Offset TCP Shellcode 1:2012086 # ET SHELLCODE Possible Call with No Offset UDP Shellcode 1:2012087 # ET SHELLCODE Possible Call with No Offset TCP Shellcode 1:2012088 # ET SHELLCODE Possible Call with No Offset UDP Shellcode 1:2012089 # ET POLICY Protocol 41 IPv6 encapsulation potential 6in4 IPv6 tunnel active 1:2012141 # ET SHELLCODE Common 0a0a0a0a Heap Spray String 1:2012252 # ET INFO DYNAMIC_DNS Query to *.dyndns. Domain 1:2012758 # ET POLICY curl User-Agent Outbound 1:2013028 # ET POLICY Python-urllib/ Suspicious User Agent 1:2013031 # ET DELETED Excessive Use of HeapLib Objects Likely Malicious Heap Spray Attempt 1:2013222 # ET POLICY Executable served from Amazon S3 1:2013414 # ET POLICY GNU/Linux APT User-Agent Outbound likely related to package management 1:2013504 # ET INFO JAVA - Java Archive Download 1:2014472 # ET INFO EXE - OSX Disk Image Download 1:2014518 # ET INFO EXE - Served Attached HTTP 1:2014520 # ET POLICY Outdated Windows Flash Version IE 1:2014726 # ET P2P BitTorrent - Torrent File Downloaded 1:2014734 # ET INFO Packed Executable Download 1:2014819 # ET INFO PDF Using CCITTFax Filter 1:2015561 # ET INFO EXE IsDebuggerPresent (Used in Malware Anti-Debugging) 1:2015744 # ET INFO Suspicious Windows NT version 7 User-Agent 1:2015820 # ET INFO JAVA - ClassID 1:2016360 # ET POLICY Unsupported/Fake FireFox Version 2. 1:2016877 # ET INFO SUSPCIOUS Non-standard base64 charset used for encoding 1:2017364 # ET POLICY PE EXE or DLL Windows file download HTTP 1:2018959 # ET POLICY SSLv3 outbound connection from client vulnerable to POODLE attack 1:2019416 # ET INFO WinHttp AutoProxy Request wpad.dat Possible BadTunnel 1:2022913 # NOT FOUND IN RULES 1:2100366 1:2100368 1:2100651 1:2101390 1:2101424 1:2102314 1:2103134 1:2103192 # ET DROP Dshield Block Listed Source group 1 1:2402000 # ET CINS Active Threat Intelligence Poor Reputation IP TCP group 23 1:2403344 # NOT FOUND IN RULES 1:2406003 1:2406067 1:2406069 1:2406424 # ET COMPROMISED Known Compromised or Hostile Host Traffic TCP group 26 1:2500050 # ET COMPROMISED Known Compromised or Hostile Host Traffic TCP group 29 1:2500056 # NOT FOUND IN RULES 1:2520199 1:2520205 1:100000230 # FILE-IMAGE libpng malformed chunk denial of service attempt 3:14772 # PROTOCOL-DNS TMG Firewall Client long host entry exploit attempt 3:19187 # PROTOCOL-DNS potential dns cache poisoning attempt - mismatched txid 3:21355 # HI_CLIENT_DOUBLE_DECODE 119:2 # HI_CLIENT_BARE_BYTE 119:4 # HI_CLIENT_IIS_UNICODE 119:7 # HI_CLIENT_NON_RFC_CHAR 119:14 # HI_CLIENT_UNKNOWN_METHOD 119:31 # HI_CLIENT_SIMPLE_REQUEST 119:32 # HI_CLIENT_UNESCAPED_SPACE_IN_URI 119:33 # HI_SERVER_INVALID_STATCODE 120:2 # HI_SERVER_NO_CONTLEN 120:3 # HI_SERVER_UTF_NORM_FAIL 120:4 # HI_SERVER_DECOMPR_FAILED 120:6 # HI_CLISRV_MSG_SIZE_EXCEPTION 120:8 # HI_SERVER_JS_OBFUSCATION_EXCD 120:9 # HI_SERVER_JS_EXCESS_WS 120:10 # HI_SERVER_JS_EXCESS_WS 122:19 # PSNG_UDP_FILTERED_PORTSCAN 122:21 # PSNG_UDP_FILTERED_DECOY_PORTSCAN 122:22 #PSNG_UDP_PORTSWEEP_FILTERED 122:23 # PSNG_ICMP_PORTSWEEP_FILTERED 122:26 # FRAG3_IPV6_BAD_FRAG_PKT 123:10 # SMTP_RESPONSE_OVERFLOW 124:3 # FTPP_FTP_INVALID_CMD 125:2 # SSL_INVALID_CLIENT_HELLO 137:1 # NOT FOUND IN RULES 138:2 138:3 138:4 138:5 138:6 # IMAP_UNKNOWN_CMD 141:1
We had the same issue my friend. Some of the GID and SID defined in SID Mgmt doesn't work. I tested 1 rule 1:2008289 to enable and disable it using the SID Mgmt disable-sid.conf it doesn't change at all.
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I appreciate the tips, but with a new pfSense and Snort installation, I think I'm still missing something fundamental here: Why are we adding rules like 119:2 — rules marked "not-suspicious" — to the suppression list at all?
Unless I'm completely misunderstanding something, this and similar rules are inserted by one of the preprocessors, and have already been annotated as rules that don't on their own imply suspicious traffic when triggered, so why is Snort adding firewall rules when they're triggered? Is there no option to simply have Snort not add firewall rules when traffic triggers a rule marked "not-suspicious"?
I ask, because after a couple weeks of running Snort with the default "connectivity" IPS rule set as well as some of the more targeted ET rulesets, the only problems I've had are with rules marked "not-suspicious" or "unknown". It seems like an unnecessary hassle to manually add these rules to a suppression list when they're already marked as something that doesn't directly imply problematic traffic.
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Is there an update to this Snort's master suppress list? I'm still getting many false positives even after entering this suppression list. For example, it still blocks many normal websites, such as www.cnn.com. In fact, I added www.cnn.com's IP address in the Pass List but it still blocks the CNN website. Why is this?
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Which snort alerts is cnn.com triggering for you? I don't get any, just tried.
Also, you should be able to see which rules are the culprit from the snort alerts.
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Here is my current/updated list from disablesid.conf. I switched to suricata last year so your experience with these in snort may vary.
1:536
1:648
1:653
1:1390
1:2452
1:8375
1:11192
1:12286
1:15147
1:15306
1:15362
1:16313
1:16482
1:17458
1:20583
1:23098
1:23256
1:24889
1:2000334
1:2000418-1:2000419
1:2002878
1:2003195
1:2007727
1:2008120
1:2008578
1:2008989
1:2010516
1:2010525
1:2010935
1:2010937
1:2011716
1:2012078
1:2012086-1:2012089
1:2012141
1:2012252
1:2012758
1:2013028
1:2013031
1:2013222
1:2013414
1:2013504
1:2014472
1:2014518
1:2014520
1:2014726
1:2014734
1:2014819
1:2015561
1:2015744
1:2015820
1:2016360
1:2016877
1:2017364
1:2018959
1:2019416
1:2022913
1:2100366
1:2100368
1:2100651
1:2101390
1:2101424
1:2102314
1:2103134
1:2103192
1:2200075
1:2210000
1:2210007
1:2210020
1:2210036
1:2210042
1:2210044
1:2210045
1:2210050
1:2210054
1:2221028
1:2230010
1:2402000
1:2403323
1:2403344
1:2406003
1:2406067
1:2406069
1:2406424
1:2500050
1:2500056
1:2520199
1:2520205
1:2522614
1:2522618
1:100000230
3:14772
3:19187
3:21355
119:2
119:4
119:7
119:14
119:31-119:33
120:2-120:4
120:6
120:8-120:10
122:19
122:21-122:23
122:26
123:10
124:3
125:2
137:1
138:2-138:6
141:1 -
I appreciate the tips, but with a new pfSense and Snort installation, I think I'm still missing something fundamental here: Why are we adding rules like 119:2 — rules marked "not-suspicious" — to the suppression list at all?
Unless I'm completely misunderstanding something, this and similar rules are inserted by one of the preprocessors, and have already been annotated as rules that don't on their own imply suspicious traffic when triggered, so why is Snort adding firewall rules when they're triggered? Is there no option to simply have Snort not add firewall rules when traffic triggers a rule marked "not-suspicious"?
I ask, because after a couple weeks of running Snort with the default "connectivity" IPS rule set as well as some of the more targeted ET rulesets, the only problems I've had are with rules marked "not-suspicious" or "unknown". It seems like an unnecessary hassle to manually add these rules to a suppression list when they're already marked as something that doesn't directly imply problematic traffic.
I had some time during the Christmas break and upgraded from 2.3.2 to 2.4.2-RELEASE-p1 and experienced this same problem. At first it seemed like non-HTTPS sites were affected so I thought it might be a Squid cache issue but then I found I was able to load many other HTTP sites. It was tough to identify as Snort seemed to continue running for quite a while after being stopped, but it was obvious when I finally looked at the alerts page. I tried re-installing snort and was unable to get the disablesid list to function. I also tried redoing this setting and was unsuccessful there as well. I've added my list to the suppress list for the time being and will leave it there unless I notice performance issues.
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I did some awk/sed scripting and added descriptions for most of the disabled SIDs in Asterix' master list above.
Attached here in case anyone else finds it useful. The SIDs without descriptions were not present in the latest VRT and ET rulesets I have.
# disabled SIDs, https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php?topic=56267.75 1:536 # "DELETED NETBIOS SMB D$ share access" 1:648 # "INDICATOR-SHELLCODE x86 NOOP" 1:653 # "DELETED SHELLCODE x86 0x90 unicode NOOP" 1:1390 # "INDICATOR-SHELLCODE x86 inc ebx NOOP" 1:2452 # "POLICY-SOCIAL Yahoo IM ping" 1:8375 # "BROWSER-PLUGINS QuickTime Object ActiveX clsid access" 1:11192 # "FILE-EXECUTABLE download of executable content" 1:12286 # "FILE-OTHER PCRE character class heap buffer overflow attempt" 1:15147 # "BROWSER-IE Microsoft Internet Explorer malformed iframe buffer overflow attempt" 1:15306 # "FILE-EXECUTABLE Portable Executable binary file magic detected" 1:15362 # "INDICATOR-OBFUSCATION obfuscated javascript excessive fromCharCode - potential attack" 1:16313 # "FILE-EXECUTABLE download of executable content" 1:16482 # "BROWSER-IE Microsoft Internet Explorer userdata behavior memory corruption attempt" 1:17458 # "FILE-OTHER BitDefender Internet Security script code execution attempt" 1:20583 # "BROWSER-FIREFOX Mozilla multiple location headers malicious redirect attempt" 1:23098 # "FILE-MULTIMEDIA Adobe Flash Player MP4 sequence parameter set parsing overflow attempt" 1:23256 # "FILE-EXECUTABLE Armadillo v1.71 packer file magic detected" 1:24889 # "FILE-FLASH Adobe Flash Player Action InitArray stack overflow attempt" 1:2000334 # "ET P2P BitTorrent peer sync" 1:2000418 # "ET POLICY Executable and linking format (ELF) file download" 1:2000419 # "ET POLICY PE EXE or DLL Windows file download" 1:2002878 # "ET POLICY iTunes User Agent" 1:2003195 # "ET POLICY Unusual number of DNS No Such Name Responses" 1:2007727 # "ET P2P possible torrent download" 1:2008120 # "ET TFTP Outbound TFTP Read Request" 1:2008578 # "ET SCAN Sipvicious Scan" 1:2008989 # "ET POLICY Internal Host Retrieving External IP via showmyip.com - Possible Infection" 1:2010516 # "ET WEB_CLIENT Possible HTTP 403 XSS Attempt (External Source)" 1:2010525 # "ET WEB_CLIENT Possible HTTP 500 XSS Attempt (External Source)" 1:2010935 # "ET POLICY Suspicious inbound to MSSQL port 1433" 1:2010937 # "ET POLICY Suspicious inbound to mySQL port 3306" 1:2011716 # "ET SCAN Sipvicious User-Agent Detected (friendly-scanner)" 1:2012078 # "ET POLICY Windows-Based OpenSSL Tunnel Outbound" 1:2012086 # "ET DELETED Possible Call with No Offset TCP Shellcode" 1:2012087 # "ET SHELLCODE Possible Call with No Offset UDP Shellcode" 1:2012088 # "ET SHELLCODE Possible Call with No Offset TCP Shellcode" 1:2012089 # "ET SHELLCODE Possible Call with No Offset UDP Shellcode" 1:2012141 # "ET POLICY Protocol 41 IPv6 encapsulation potential 6in4 IPv6 tunnel active" 1:2012252 # "ET SHELLCODE Common 0a0a0a0a Heap Spray String" 1:2012758 # "ET INFO DYNAMIC_DNS Query to *.dyndns. Domain" 1:2013028 # "ET POLICY curl User-Agent Outbound" 1:2013031 # "ET POLICY Python-urllib/ Suspicious User Agent" 1:2013222 # "ET DELETED Excessive Use of HeapLib Objects Likely Malicious Heap Spray Attempt" 1:2013414 # "ET POLICY Executable served from Amazon S3" 1:2013504 # "ET POLICY GNU/Linux APT User-Agent Outbound likely related to package management" 1:2014472 # "ET INFO JAVA - Java Archive Download" 1:2014518 # "ET INFO EXE - OSX Disk Image Download" 1:2014520 # "ET INFO EXE - Served Attached HTTP" 1:2014726 # "ET POLICY Outdated Flash Version M1" 1:2014734 # "ET P2P BitTorrent - Torrent File Downloaded" 1:2014819 # "ET INFO Packed Executable Download" 1:2015561 # "ET INFO PDF Using CCITTFax Filter" 1:2015744 # "ET INFO EXE IsDebuggerPresent (Used in Malware Anti-Debugging)" 1:2015820 # "ET INFO Suspicious Windows NT version 7 User-Agent" 1:2016360 # "ET INFO JAVA - ClassID" 1:2016877 # "ET POLICY Unsupported/Fake FireFox Version 2." 1:2017364 # "ET INFO SUSPCIOUS Non-standard base64 charset used for encoding" 1:2018959 # "ET POLICY PE EXE or DLL Windows file download HTTP" 1:2019416 # "ET POLICY SSLv3 outbound connection from client vulnerable to POODLE attack" 1:2022913 # "ET INFO WinHttp AutoProxy Request wpad.dat Possible BadTunnel" 1:2100366 # 1:2100368 # 1:2100651 # 1:2101390 # 1:2101424 # 1:2102314 # 1:2103134 # 1:2103192 # 1:2200075 # 1:2210000 # 1:2210007 # 1:2210020 # 1:2210036 # 1:2210042 # 1:2210044 # 1:2210045 # 1:2210050 # 1:2210054 # 1:2221028 # 1:2230010 # 1:2402000 # "ET DROP Dshield Block Listed Source group 1" 1:2403323 # "ET CINS Active Threat Intelligence Poor Reputation IP UDP group 12" 1:2403344 # "ET CINS Active Threat Intelligence Poor Reputation IP TCP group 23" 1:2406003 # 1:2406067 # 1:2406069 # 1:2406424 # 1:2500050 # "ET COMPROMISED Known Compromised or Hostile Host Traffic TCP group 26" 1:2500056 # "ET COMPROMISED Known Compromised or Hostile Host Traffic TCP group 29" 1:2520199 # 1:2520205 # 1:2522614 # "ET TOR Known Tor Relay/Router (Not Exit) Node TCP Traffic group 308" 1:2522618 # "ET TOR Known Tor Relay/Router (Not Exit) Node TCP Traffic group 310" 1:100000230 # 3:14772 # "FILE-IMAGE libpng malformed chunk denial of service attempt" 3:19187 # "PROTOCOL-DNS TMG Firewall Client long host entry exploit attempt" 3:21355 # "PROTOCOL-DNS potential dns cache poisoning attempt - mismatched txid" 119:2 # "HI_CLIENT_DOUBLE_DECODE" 119:4 # "HI_CLIENT_BARE_BYTE" 119:7 # "HI_CLIENT_IIS_UNICODE" 119:14 # "HI_CLIENT_NON_RFC_CHAR" 119:31 # "HI_CLIENT_UNKNOWN_METHOD" 119:32 # "HI_CLIENT_SIMPLE_REQUEST" 119:33 # "HI_CLIENT_UNESCAPED_SPACE_IN_URI" 120:2 # "HI_SERVER_INVALID_STATCODE" 120:3 # "HI_SERVER_NO_CONTLEN" 120:4 # "HI_SERVER_UTF_NORM_FAIL" 120:6 # "HI_SERVER_DECOMPR_FAILED" 120:8 # "HI_CLISRV_MSG_SIZE_EXCEPTION" 120:9 # "HI_SERVER_JS_OBFUSCATION_EXCD" 120:10 # "HI_SERVER_JS_EXCESS_WS" 122:19 # "PSNG_UDP_PORTSWEEP" 122:21 # "PSNG_UDP_FILTERED_PORTSCAN" 122:22 # "PSNG_UDP_FILTERED_DECOY_PORTSCAN" 122:23 # "PSNG_UDP_PORTSWEEP_FILTERED" 122:26 # "PSNG_ICMP_PORTSWEEP_FILTERED" 123:10 # "FRAG3_IPV6_BAD_FRAG_PKT" 124:3 # "SMTP_RESPONSE_OVERFLOW" 125:2 # "FTPP_FTP_INVALID_CMD" 137:1 # "SSL_INVALID_CLIENT_HELLO" 138:2 # "SENSITIVE-DATA Credit Card Numbers" 138:3 # "SENSITIVE-DATA U.S. Social Security Numbers (with dashes)" 138:4 # "SENSITIVE-DATA U.S. Social Security Numbers (w/out dashes)" 138:5 # "SENSITIVE-DATA Email Addresses" 138:6 # "SENSITIVE-DATA U.S. Phone Numbers" 141:1 # "IMAP_UNKNOWN_CMD" #END disabled SIDs from PFSense Forum