Quick Snort Setup Instructions for New Users
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I went to my defined WAN interface in snort -> Wan Rules -> selected from drop down GPLv2 rules and pressed on enable all rules in the current category as they were all greyed out before that and seemed inactive - is this necessary step and what it actually means if I leave all of them greyed out and what it means if I enable them.
Also in point
20. If you followed my advice for Snort VRT rules, this page is easy. Just click the check box for "Use IPS Policy" and then select "Connectivity" in the drop-down. Click Save and you're done! Once you gain some experience with Snort, you can come back and choose one of the other two more restrictive policies. I personally run "Balanced", but it will require some tuning if run in blocking mode.
If I only registered an account (without a paid subscription) to get access to GPL rules should I tick or leave the "Use IPS Policy" box unticked?
If I have mail server, DNS, DHCP and SQL server on my LAN should I define the names in WAN Variables and if yes what is the correct syntax? Can it be IP or is it a FQN
Thank you for explaining any of the above.
seb
If you registered at Snort.org for the free account, that entitles you to the full Snort VRT rules download. The only caveat is they are 30 days older than the rules the paid subscribers get. As for the GPLv2 Community Rules, generally only a few of them will be enabled by default. You can turn on the ones of interest to you. If you don't want the headache of figuring out which Community Rules you want or need, then an easier approach in my view is to enable and use the Emerging Threats rules instead. They stay pretty current and are arranged in categories that give clues as to what the rules are doing.
You can use the IPS Policy with the Snort VRT rules whether you have a paid or free account. The only difference in paid versus free is the age of the rules. As I mentioned, the paid subscribers get current updates. The free account registered users get the new rules 30 days after the paid users. It's a 30-day rolling sort of thing. But the same IPS policies are available in both sets of rules.
If you have Mail, DNS and other specific servers on your network, you can certainly define their IP addresses for Snort. This makes Snort's job a bit easier. By default, it assumes all the IP addresses in your network are all of the potential servers. So this means it sort of inspects all traffic for all IPs for everything. You can narrow this down by defining where some services are located (that is, which IP addresses host those services on your HOME_NET networks). Armed with that information, Snort won't waste time looking for HTTP web exploits against a DNS or DHCP server. It does this by matching the IP address in the target to the values you define in the variables.
To define servers or ports on the VARIABLES tab, you must first create a corresponding Alias under Firewall…Alias from the pfSense menu. Type a descriptive name for the Alias, such as DNS_Servers, and then enter the IP addresses of all of your DNS servers. Repeat the process to create Aliases for any other servers. Now go to the VARIABLES tab in Snort and scroll down to the server description. Start typing the name of the Alias you defined earlier. It should auto-complete in the Alias form field. Click SAVE when done.
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Thank you Bill,
It was late and I was tried yesterday :) I found the cause of the problem and basically I just need a restart for my OINK to work and to be able to download the definitions…
Thank you for clarifying other things and advice. Much appreciated as the whole guide :)
Seb
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hi!
is it possible to run snort-inline?
actually if not then i wouldnt call it an IPS.
regards
Karl
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hi!
is it possible to run snort-inline?
actually if not then i wouldnt call it an IPS.
regards
Karl
Snort is kinda-sorta "inline" on pfSense. It can insert blocks into the firewall. It is not 100% technically inline like it would be in a classic pure IPS.
Bill
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My SNORT will produce a lot alerts but only few blocks (ATM it runs only on WAN interface). Before adding pfblocker and running Snort in "Use IPS Policy" (I run it in security mode) it was blocking a lot more.
I dont have any custom whitelist and my Suppress contains only of google ip(s).
Any ideas?
Thanks
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… Before adding pfblocker and running Snort in "Use IPS Policy" (I run it in security mode) it was blocking a lot more.
I dont have any custom whitelist and my Suppress contains only of google ip(s).
Any ideas?
Thanks
It could be that pfBlocker is preempting Snort and putting blocks in place. I don't think the blocks of a particular IP address will be duplicated.
Also, you did not post the version of pfSense you are running. If it is 2.1, then a problem with the filter_reload() function within that version of pfSense periodically clears the Snort block table. So Snort is possibly blocking the IP, then the pfSense filter_reload() function comes along and clears the table. When you look at the BLOCKED tab in Snort, it is actually reading the current entries from the snort2c block table that pfSense maintains. The table may have been recently cleansed by the filter_reload() routine.
However, even considering the above, protection afforded by Snort is still there. On the next offending packet from one of those formerly blocked IP addresses, Snort will insert a fresh block.
Bill
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Thank you OP for the guide. I have some basic questions about setting up Snort. In the guide it said click the green arrow in the Snort column on the Interface tab so it turns red. But the tooltip says green is enabled and red is stopped, am I confused? Also, why does my Block column say DISABLED when though Snort is enabled?
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Thank you OP for the guide. I have some basic questions about setting up Snort. In the guide it said click the green arrow in the Snort column on the Interface tab so it turns red. But the tooltip says green is enabled and red is stopped, am I confused? Also, why does my Block column say DISABLED when though Snort is enabled?
The arrow color was recently changed to be more in "sync" with the rest of the interface. It used to be press the green to start, press the red to stop. The problem was that it showed a red arrow on the status tab while snort was running, which was different with all the rest of the interface (green means OK).
The reason it says that, is that we cannot change old posts on this forum.To clarrify myself:
Green means snort IS running, you click it to STOP it.
Red means snort is NOT running, you click it to START it. -
Also, why does my Block column say DISABLED when though Snort is enabled?
Did you tell Snort to block offenders? (Interface -> block offenders).
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@Hollander:
Also, why does my Block column say DISABLED when though Snort is enabled?
Did you tell Snort to block offenders? (Interface -> block offenders).
Now it says blocked, thank you.
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@Hollander:
Also, why does my Block column say DISABLED when though Snort is enabled?
Did you tell Snort to block offenders? (Interface -> block offenders).
Now it says blocked, thank you.
You're most welcome ;D
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I just wanted to thank you for this guide. I just set up a PFSense install on an old Dell PowerEdge2850 server. This helped me more than I can say. The old network admins left no documentation behind, so when I had to rebuild PFS from scratch, I was a little out of my depth. This certainly made setting up snort more than a little easier. Especially since I really didn't even know where to start. Thanks a million.
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If anyone winds up without any blocked items over time in their Blocked tab despite loads of alerts, check your "Status: System logs: General" tab and look for any services reporting FILTER reloads or reconfigurations. Since filter reloads cause the block table to clear, misconfigured or broken services can cause the Blocked tab to appear consistently empty.
Rob…
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Good day !
I have 2 WAN Interfaces and was trying to set up rules according to this forum. Making a setup for 1 interface took me around 1,5 hour. The question is - Is there any facility to simply copy the ruleset between interfaces ?
Thank you in advance. -
Good day !
I have 2 WAN Interfaces and was trying to set up rules according to this forum. Making a setup for 1 interface took me around 1,5 hour. The question is - Is there any facility to simply copy the ruleset between interfaces ?
Thank you in advance.Not currently, but another user requested something similar. I have that sort of feature on my TODO list. I was thinking along the lines of being able to create "templates" with rules, preprocessors, variables, and some other parameters all configurable. You could save and name the templates, then apply one to any interface on demand. Would that work for you?
Bill
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I have the community rules box checked, but when I go to the tab to update, the button is greyed out. Am I doing something wrong? If I select the emerging threat box, I am able to click the update button, but with just community rules checked, I am not.
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Thank you beemks ! Yes, I think it worked for me. Does it means what Snort consider Autogenerated Supress list as "top list" ?
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Thank you beemks ! Yes, I think it worked for me. Does it means what Snort consider Autogenerated Supress list as "top list" ?
The auto-generated list will have the name of the interface followed by a random number (UUID).
Bill
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I don't want to discount Bill's efforts on this thread. It is absolutely the best place to start.
That said, I've recently introduced pfSense and the Snort package to a few friends who are long time, big time, professional security hawks looking for a solution at home a bit more elegant than running generations old (but affordable) dedicated firewall hardware. I believe the best "find" I have come across and directed my friends to is the "fine tuning" post started by user "jflsakfja" as this thread:
https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php/topic,64674.0.html
This user requested the ability some time ago at the start of that thread to be able to edit his post in this sticky rather than having to continuously add to an existing thread. I, for one, would like this be reconsidered by the mods as the above thread is slowly being buried as time passes. I can only surmise the lack of updates as anticipated by "jflsakfja" could be because of a lack of response (evidenced by lack of edits here as of this date) to that request. Or perhaps because I've pushed him/her for more information…? If not at least maybe this post can serve as a jump point for folks looking for or could benefit from that information.
I'd like to see his/her updates continue as the schema introduced by this user may not be the absolute best way of setting up Snort and pfBlocker but its the best I've come across and certainly has made my system more efficient and less troublesome. Judging by recent posts in the Packages area, it seems many others could benefit from this schema as well.... if they knew about it.
Respectfully submitted,
Rick -
Is there any way to log the packets that trigger a snort alert? Mainly I want to see HTTP header and request associated with the alert.
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Is there any way to log the packets that trigger a snort alert? Mainly I want to see HTTP header and request associated with the alert.
The new 2.9.6.0 version of Snort offers increased packet/file capture abilities according to the post on the Snort.org web site. I am working now on readying that version for the next Snort package update. I will investigate what is offered in the new binary and see what I can reasonably incorporate into the GUI.
I had a similar request from some folks in the new Suricata BETA package thread where the wish was a clickable link from the alert on the ALERTS tab to a view of the packets that triggered the alert. I am mulling over in my head the best way to accomplish that without bogging down the firewall CPU searching through hundreds of megabytes of packet capture files. In general its better to offload such tasks to an external system.
Bill
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@jflsakfja:
The Missing Part to Quick Snort Setup Instructions for New Users
In tab "Rules", under "Category" select:
(–- means blank table at time of writing)Hello,
does this mean I have to enable ALL when it's written all? Jesus, that would take ages as you can only enable one at a time … Especially GPLv2 has like 85% disabled by default ... Holy, I have 3x WAN, I'd never find the time for that.
I don't really understand enabled/disabled here. For your example with "2000419" (which occurs right after I started snort with default settings) the rule is faded/greyed out - means it is disabled by default, right? So why does it generate an alert?
Edit: Whoa I couldn't use that whole package for 3x WAN, it uses 42% of 2027 MB for 1 WAN already o.O
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@jflsakfja:
The Missing Part to Quick Snort Setup Instructions for New Users
In tab "Rules", under "Category" select:
(–- means blank table at time of writing)Hello,
does this mean I have to enable ALL when it's written all? Jesus, that would take ages as you can only enable one at a time … Especially GPLv2 has like 85% disabled by default ... Holy, I have 3x WAN, I'd never find the time for that.
I don't really understand enabled/disabled here. For your example with "2000419" (which occurs right after I started snort with default settings) the rule is faded/greyed out - means it is disabled by default, right? So why does it generate an alert?
Edit: Whoa I couldn't use that whole package for 3x WAN, it uses 42% of 2027 MB for 1 WAN already o.O
There is an "Enable All Rules in the Current Category" button on the RULES tab for a Snort interface. So select the GPLv2 Community Rules in the drop-down, then click the "Enable All Rules in the Current Category" button (it is a plus "+" icon).
The answer to your second question about a "disabled rule" apparently causing an alert is as follows. Many Snort rules either fire, or look for previously fired, internal triggers called flowbits. Google the terms "snort flowbits" to find some web sites with more detailed explanations. In order for some rules to fire an alert, they need to see flowbits set by some other rules. The Auto-Flowbits feature of Snort will walk through all of your enabled rules looking any flowbit dependencies. If it finds a needed flowbit is only set by a currently disabled rule, then it will auto-enable that rule (unless you have explicitly manually disabled it). So the short answer is the alert is coming from a rule that the auto-flowbits process toggled from "default disabled" to "default enabled" behind the scenes. If you really do not want an alert for that rule, simply add it's GID:SID to the Suppression List.
Bill
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Hi Bill,
You said in a couple of your posts that to work around NAT and knowing the origin of an internal threat you'd also enable snort on the LAN interface.
You suggested leaving snort also looking at the WAN interface but with a lot less rules than the LAN and handling everything else on the LAN (I'm assuming you also mean setting both WAN and LAN snort configurations to look at both source and destination).
I can understand the logic of moving it to the LAN since otherwise in a NAT environment you can't see which client is generating threat alerts, but what is the reason behind leaving some of the rules on the WAN and not moving everything to the LAN?
Also another question: my pfSense setup consists of 3 LANs, if I were to setup snort with the vast majority/all the rules on the LAN, would I need to have one setup for each interface? Which in turn would mean 3x as much RAM usage, and manually setting each of the interfaces manually? Is there one way to apply the same config to all LANs through without the increase in memory?
EDIT
Forgot to say my pfSense is a VM running on ESXi 5.5 Update 1, so is this something I can change by configuring promiscuous mode on the VM network?
Thank you.
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Hi Bill,
You said in a couple of your posts that to work around NAT and knowing the origin of an internal threat you'd also enable snort on the LAN interface.
You suggested leaving snort also looking at the WAN interface but with a lot less rules than the LAN and handling everything else on the LAN (I'm assuming you also mean setting both WAN and LAN snort configurations to look at both source and destination).
I can understand the logic of moving it to the LAN since otherwise in a NAT environment you can't see which client is generating threat alerts, but what is the reason behind leaving some of the rules on the WAN and not moving everything to the LAN?
Also another question: my pfSense setup consists of 3 LANs, if I were to setup snort with the vast majority/all the rules on the LAN, would I need to have one setup for each interface? Which in turn would mean 3x as much RAM usage, and manually setting each of the interfaces manually? Is there one way to apply the same config to all LANs through without the increase in memory?
EDIT
Forgot to say my pfSense is a VM running on ESXi 5.5 Update 1, so is this something I can change by configuring promiscuous mode on the VM network?
Thank you.
It is true there is no necessary technical advantage running Snort with split rules (some on WAN and most on LAN, for example). It is more of a preference thing. Depends primarily on the network design you have and what you want to protect in what ways.
As for a VMware environment with multiple LANs, I don't know of a way short of running Snort on each LAN interface. I have not, though, played with promiscuous mode in VMware. I don't know if that would be a solution or not.
Bill
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Well I'm torn between the two setups in my case.
If I set it up on the WAN, I only need to set it up once and it will work for all interfaces. However I lose the ability to see which client generated the alert or, in my case, which LAN it came from which makes it even harder. Also I lose the ability to have different per LAN settings
If I set it up on the LAN I can solve all of the problems listed above, but I will have to configure it separately on each of the LANs and it will be a RAM hungry beast.
I was looking at the different performance methods and based on the description decided to try AC-SPLIT. For a VMware environment, would this be preferable to AC-BNFA when trying to optimise for performance while attempting to keep the memory down?
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Well I'm torn between the two setups in my case.
If I set it up on the WAN, I only need to set it up once and it will work for all interfaces. However I lose the ability to see which client generated the alert or, in my case, which LAN it came from which makes it even harder. Also I lose the ability to have different per LAN settings
If I set it up on the LAN I can solve all of the problems listed above, but I will have to configure it separately on each of the LANs and it will be a RAM hungry beast.
I was looking at the different performance methods and based on the description decided to try AC-SPLIT. For a VMware environment, would this be preferable to AC-BNFA when trying to optimise for performance while attempting to keep the memory down?
Everything I've ever seen posted from the Snort VRT guys seems to point to AC-BNFA being the best choice 99% of the time. It you are trying to keep decent performance but optimize RAM usage, I would stick with AC-BNFA.
Depending on how many rules you choose, Snort can run in 2GB of RAM. Most folks find it works better with 4GB, though, with the more typical choice of enabled rules.
Bill
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I read somewhere that AC-BNFA-NQ should provide better performance than AC-BNFA and it also appears to be the default in Snort now, as mentioned here: http://manual.snort.org/node16.html
Currently I have Snort running on a single interface as AC-BNFA-NQ with:
- Snort VRT free Registered User
- Snort Community Ruleset
- ETOpen
with 90% of all rules enabled, on a box with 2GB of RAM and the RAM usage never goes above 35% (it is also running pfBlocker, OpenVPN client + server, Squid + LightSquid, HAVP)…
Are you saying AC-BNFA would be better even?
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I read somewhere that AC-BNFA-NQ should provide better performance than AC-BNFA and it also appears to be the default in Snort now, as mentioned here: http://manual.snort.org/node16.html
Currently I have Snort running on a single interface as AC-BNFA-NQ with:
- Snort VRT free Registered User
- Snort Community Ruleset
- ETOpen
with 90% of all rules enabled, on a box with 2GB of RAM and the RAM usage never goes above 35% (it is also running pfBlocker, OpenVPN client + server, Squid + LightSquid, HAVP)…
Are you saying AC-BNFA would be better even?
No, it is no better in terms of memory consumption. The NQ means "not queued" if I am recalling correctly, and has some relation to overall performance. The NQ settings are popular now.
Bill
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Is there any way to log the packets that trigger a snort alert? Mainly I want to see HTTP header and request associated with the alert.
The new 2.9.6.0 version of Snort offers increased packet/file capture abilities according to the post on the Snort.org web site. I am working now on readying that version for the next Snort package update. I will investigate what is offered in the new binary and see what I can reasonably incorporate into the GUI.
I had a similar request from some folks in the new Suricata BETA package thread where the wish was a clickable link from the alert on the ALERTS tab to a view of the packets that triggered the alert. I am mulling over in my head the best way to accomplish that without bogging down the firewall CPU searching through hundreds of megabytes of packet capture files. In general its better to offload such tasks to an external system.
Bill
I really hope you'll be able to incorporate full packet capture offloaded to an external system. That would be ideal. I see your reservations and challenges about doing it all on the fw box. Although I believe any of us wanting to do full packet capture are already using barnyard2 sending to an external system. Thanks for all your hard work - I really appreciate it, as I'm sure others do as well :)
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I am having an issue trying to install snort on my new box. The PBI seems to be missing. Here is what I am seeing…
Beginning package installation for snort .
Downloading package configuration file... done.
Saving updated package information... done.
Downloading snort and its dependencies...
Checking for package installation...
Downloading https://files.pfsense.org/packages/amd64/8/All/snort-2.9.6.0-amd64.pbi ... could not download from there or http://files.pfsense.org/packages/amd64/8/All//snort-2.9.6.0-amd64.pbi.
of snort-2.9.6.0-amd64 failed!I peeked in https://files.pfsense.org/packages/amd64/8/All/ and didn't see the package, just older installs. Was there a reason 2.9.6.0 was pulled?
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I am having an issue trying to install snort on my new box.
And you are having issues with the search box on the forum as well?
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I am having an issue trying to install snort on my new box.
And you are having issues with the search box on the forum as well?
Search was used many times and all I came across was that it is available on the servers via IPv6 and not IPv4. If you knew a quick fix, you could have posted it thus having a thread to show in search when others like myself run in to this. It's my understanding that is how the search feature works…
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Sigh, how about you stop flooding this thread with completely off-topic junk.
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Someone found a workaround for it in this thread at the end. https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php?topic=74486.15
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Noob issue with creating Alias/Whitelist….
I am having an issue creating a Passlist (whitelist). I click on the "Pass List Tab" and lists "passlist_36480", then Edit (e) with a set of check boxes, and an Alias box at the bottom.
To add my own to the White/Passlist, I am guessing I add a file name to the Alias Box: But I get an error message when adding a file name, whether it as created in the "Ip List" or not: The following input errors were detected: A valid alias must be provided
I follow the Alias button, and there is no (+) Add button. I tried different syntax in the file name, adding a "IP List" but have not been able to create or add. I saw the pictures listed before in this thread about Editing a Alias, but not about creating one.
What simple idiot step am I missing? Thanks.
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Noob issue with creating Alias/Whitelist….
I am having an issue creating a Passlist (whitelist). I click on the "Pass List Tab" and lists "passlist_36480", then Edit (e) with a set of check boxes, and an Alias box at the bottom.
To add my own to the White/Passlist, I am guessing I add a file name to the Alias Box: But I get an error message when adding a file name, whether it as created in the "Ip List" or not: The following input errors were detected: A valid alias must be provided
I follow the Alias button, and there is no (+) Add button. I tried different syntax in the file name, adding a "IP List" but have not been able to create or add. I saw the pictures listed before in this thread about Editing a Alias, but not about creating one.
What simple idiot step am I missing? Thanks.
Firewall/aliasses. Create one first.
It is good to see more noobs on this board; for over a year I've been feeling so lonely ;D
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RE Selecting Rule Sets:
Under "WAN Categories", I have the IPS Ruleset:Connectivity and Flowbits boxes checked.
Do I just ignore the "Rulesets Snort will load at Startup" below this? So is this an ALTERNATIVE or ADDITION, or do I have to check the Rulesets to use UNDER the IPS Ruleset: Connectivity?
Thanks for the noob clarification.
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@Hollander:
Firewall/aliasses. Create one first.
It is good to see more noobs on this board; for over a year I've been feeling so lonely ;D
I will probably make your week.
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RE Selecting Rule Sets:
Under "WAN Categories", I have the IPS Ruleset:Connectivity and Flowbits boxes checked.
Do I just ignore the "Rulesets Snort will load at Startup" below this? So is this an ALTERNATIVE or ADDITION, or do I have to check the Rulesets to use UNDER the IPS Ruleset: Connectivity?
Thanks for the noob clarification.
When you select an IPS Policy, that will load a preset collection of Snort VRT rules. The VRT rule authors decide which particular rules are associated with a given IPS Policy. But this only applies to Snort VRT rules. Emerging Threats is a completely separate and unrelated set of rules. So when you use an IPS Policy, individual selections for Snort VRT rule categories are disabled, but you are free to select ET rules categories (if you have Emerging Threats rules enabled for download under GLOBAL SETTINGS) that will be added to your automatic Snort VRT collection coming from the chosen policy. So when using a policy, the checkboxes further down below are optional and will add more rules to those that are part of the policy.
Bill