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recursive DNS servers DDoS as a growing DDoS problem


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Date: Tue, 28 Feb 2006 13:05:22 +0200
From: Gadi Evron <ge@linuxbox.org.>
To: bugtraq@securityfocus.com
Subject: recursive DNS servers DDoS as a growing DDoS problem
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Hi guys.

We discussed recursive DNS servers before (servers which allow to query 
anything - including what they are not authoritative for, through them).

The attack currently in the wild is a lot bigger and more complicated 
than this, but to begin, here is an explanation (by metaphor) of that part:
Spoofed ICMP attacks have been around for a while. How many of us still 
get quite a bit of ICMP echo replies stopped at our borders? These 
replies come to us due to spoofed attacks using our addresses.

Now, imagine it - only bigger:
Smurf.

Introduce an amplification effect.

As bigger UDP packets will be fragmented by the servers, and UDP 
obviously does not do any handshake and can easily be spoofed...
The server receives a large packet, breaks it down to several fragments 
and moves the query on.
That's where the amplification effect _starts_.

Both the attacked server and the unwilling participant in the attack, 
the recursive servers, experience a serious DNS denial of service that 
keeps getting amplified considerably.

One of the problems is obviously the spoofing. Let us, metaphorically 
and WRONGLY treat it for a minute as the remote exploit.

The second part of this problem is the recursive server, which for the 
moment we will WRONGLY treat as the local exploit.

Obviously both need to be fixed. Which is easier I am not so sure.

In the past, most network operators refused to implement best practices 
such as BCP38 (go Fergie!) because they saw no reason for the hassle. 
Returning back to: "if it isn't being exploited right now, why should I 
worry about it?"

Well, it is being exploited now, and will be further exploited in the 
future. Combating spoofing on the Internet is indeed important and now 
becoming critical.

Removing the spoofing part for a second, the attack vector for this can 
easily be replaced, as one example, with a botnet.

A million Trojaned hosts sending in even one packet a minute would cause 
quite a buzz - and do. Now amplify the effect by the recursive servers 
and...

So, putting the spoofing aside, what do we do about our recursive servers?

There are some good URL's for that, here are some:
http://www.us-cert.gov/reading_room/DNS-recursion121605.pdf
http://cc.uoregon.edu/cnews/winter2006/recursive.htm
http://dns.measurement-factory.com/surveys/sum1.html

The recursive behaviour is necessary for some authoritative servers, but 
not for all. As a best practice for organizations, as an example, the 
server facing the world should not also be the one facing your 
organization (your users/clients). Limiting this ability to your network 
space is also a good idea.

If you would like to check for yourselves, here is a message from Duane 
Wessels [1] to the DNS-operations [2] mailing list where this is 
currently being discussed:
-----
If anyone has the need to test particular addresses for the
presence of open resolvers, please feel free to use this tool:

http://dns.measurement-factory.com/cgi-bin/openresolvercheck.pl

It will send a single "recursion desired" query to a target address.
If that query is forwarded to our authoritative server, the host
has an open resolver running at that address.
-----

Dan (DA MAN) Kaminsky and Mike Schiffman have done some impressive work 
on this subject, outlined in Dan's latest ShmooCon talk.
They found ~580K open resolvers:
http://deluvian.doxpara.com/, http://www.doxpara.com/

I suggest those of us who need more information or help go to the 
DNS-operations mailing list from OARC (see below) and ask the experts 
there, now that this is finally public.

Thanks,

        Gadi.


[1] Duane Wessels - DNS genius and among other accomplishments the 
author of dns top.
[2] DNS-operations - http://lists.oarci.net/mailman/listinfo/dns-operations

-- 
http://blogs.securiteam.com/

"Out of the box is where I live".
        -- Cara "Starbuck" Thrace, Battlestar Galactica.


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