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Denial of Service Cheat Sheet
Last revision (mm/dd/yy): 03/21/2017
Introduction
This article is focused on providing clear, simple, actionable defense guidance for preventing denial of service in your web applications. Denial of Service attacks are very common due to two factors :
- The significant prevalence of cloud and web services
- Easy to get testing tools to cause denial of service attacks.
Because it's very simple to launch the DOS attack, any web services don't have Anti-DOS defenses mitigation in place will be vulnerable to DOS attacks.
To avoid and mitigate DOS attack, both developers and operations engineering will need to have layered of defenses in place:
a) Service: When the service is built, it's developed with anti-DOS in mind such Input validation, Resource handling, Size or Length validation.
b) Web Host: Every Web server such Apache, NginX or Linux host provides the configuration of connection. Properly configure these network configuration may also help to mitigate the DOS attacks.
c) Infrastructure: Signature-based or behavior detection firewalls, load balance, fail-over, cloud anti-DDoS service
This objective of the article is to provide a list of common techniques for preventing DOS attack regardless of technology and platforms.
Coding Defenses
Web Services Defenses
General web services protection against DOS can be listed as 3 main category
- Max connection per IP address
- Max size of every HTTP request
- Timeout value of each HTTP request connection
NginX secure configuration
1. Max Connection
# Connection limit configurations limit_conn ip_limit_zone 64;
http://nginx.org/en/docs/http/ngx_http_core_module.html
2. Request Size
Limit the size of http request to mitigate the buffer overflow attack
client_body_buffer_size 100K; client_header_buffer_size 1k; client_max_body_size 100k; large_client_header_buffers 2 1k;
3. Connection Timeout
Define the connection timeout value.
client_body_timeout 10; client_header_timeout 10; keepalive_timeout 5 5; keepalive_requests 100; send_timeout 10;
Apache secure configuration
1. Max Connection
#Define the max Http requests connection is allowed per TCP connection.
MaxKeepAliveRequests 100
# Reuses the same TCP port per client connection.
KeepAlive On
#Timeout value per connection to free up the server resources.
2. Request Size
#Limit the size of request Body (100K)
LimitRequestBody 102400
http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.4/mod/core.html#limitrequestbody
3. Connection Timeout
#Define the general timeout value of every connection.
Timeout 10
http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.4/mod/core.html#timeout
KeepAliveTimeout 15
http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.4/mod/core.html#keepalive
Network Infrastructure Defenses
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Authors and Primary Editors
Tony Hsu - hsiang_chih[at]yahoo.com