`Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 16:08:06 -0500
>From: "Simson L. Garfinkel" <[email protected]>
Subject: Process-table attack
Wide-ranging attack works against almost any UNIX systems on the Internet
ABSTRACT:
The Process Table Attack is a [relatively] new kind of denial-of-service
attack that can be waged against numerous network services on a variety of
different UNIX systems. The attack is launched against network services
which fork() or otherwise allocate a new process for each incoming TCP/IP
connection. Although the standard UNIX operating system places limits on
the number of processes that any one user may launch, there are no limits on
the number of processes that the superuser can create other than the hard
limits imposed by the operating system. Since incoming TCP/IP connections
are usually handled by servers that run as root, it is possible to
completely fill a target machine's process table with multiple
instantiations of network servers. Properly executed, this attack prevents
any other command from being executed on the target machine.
DETAILS
In the book Practical UNIX and Internet Security, Gene Spafford and I
observed that the UNIX operating system originally contained few defenses to
protect it from a denial-of-service attack. This is changing. With the
growth of the Internet, there has been a concerted effort in recent years to
strengthen the operating system and its network services to these attacks.
Each time a network client makes a connection to a network server, a number
of resources on the server are consumed. The most important resources
consumed are memory, disk space, and CPU time. Some network services, such
as sendmail, now monitor system resources and will not accept incoming
network connections if accepting them would place the system in jeopardy.
One system resource that has escaped monitoring is the number of processes
that are currently running on a computer. Most versions of UNIX will only
allow a certain number of processes to be running at one time. Each process
takes up a slot in the system's process table. By filling this table, it is
possible to prevent the operating system from creating new processes, even
when other resources (such as memory, disk space, and CPU time) are widely
available.
The implementation of many network services leaves them open to a process
table attack ? that is, an attack in which the attacker fills up the target
computer's process table so that no new programs can be executed. The
design of some network protocols actually leads the programmer into making
these mistakes.
An example of such a protocol is the finger protocol (TCP port 79). The
protocol follows this sequence:
1. The client makes a connection to the server.
2. The server accepts the connection, and creates a process to service
the request.
3. The client sends a single line to the server consisting of the name
of the entity that the client wishes to finger.
4. The server performs the necessary database lookup and sends the
information back to the client.
5. The server closes the connection.
To launch a process table attack, the client need only open a connection to
the server and not send any information. As long as the client holds the
connection open, the server's process will occupy a slot in the server's
process table.
On most computers, finger is launched by inetd. The authors of inetd placed
several checks into the program's source code which must be bypassed in
order to initiate a successful process attack. If the inetd receives more
than 40 connections to a particular service within 1 minute, that service is
disabled for 10 minutes. The purpose of these checks was not to protect the
server against a process table attack, but to protect the server against
buggy code that might create many connections in rapid-fire sequence.
To launch a successful process table attack against a computer running inetd
and finger, the following sequence may be followed:
1. Open a connection to the target's finger port.
2. Wait for 4 seconds.
3. Repeat steps 1-2.
The attack program is not without technical difficulty. Many systems limit
the number TCP connections that may be initiated by a single process. Thus,
it may be necessary to launch the attack from multiple processes, perhaps
running on multiple computers.
We have tested a variety of network services on a variety of operating
systems. We believe that the UW imap and sendmail servers are also
vulnerable. The UW imap contains no checks for rapid-fire connections.
Thus, it is possible to shut down a computer by opening multiple connections
to the imap server in rapid succession. With sendmail the situation is
reversed. Normally, sendmail will not accept connections after the system
load has jumped above a predefined level. Thus, to initiate a successful
sendmail attack it is necessary to open the connections very slowly, so that
the process table keeps growing in size while the system load remains more
or less constant.
We have also seen a variety of problems on BSD-based machines being used as
the attacker. When the target machine freezes or crashes, the attacker
machine sometimes crashes as well. Apparently the TCP stack does not
gracefully handle hundreds of connections to the same port on the same
machine simultaneously going into the FIN_WAIT_2 state.
There are variants of this attack:
1. Use IP spoofing so that the incoming connections appear to come from
many different locations on the Internet. This makes tracking
considerably harder to do.
2. Begin the attack by sending 50 requests in rapid fire to the telnet,
rlogin and rsh ports on the target machine. This will cause inetd to
shut down those services on the target machine, which will deny
administrative access during the attack.
3. Instead of initiating a new connection every 4 seconds, initiate one
every minute or so. The attack slowly builds, making it more difficult
to detect on packet traces.
There are several ways to defend against the attack:
1. inetd and other programs should check to see the number of free slots
in the process table before accepting new connections. If there is less
than a predefined number of free slots, new connections should be
accepted.
2. Alternatively, if there are more than a preset number of network daemons
for the service running, incoming requests should be queued rather than
serviced.
3. Network services (such as finger) should implement timeouts. For
example, the statement alarm(30) could be inserted into the finger
daemon source code so that the program would stop running after 30
seconds of execution.
Simson L. Garfinkel, Sandstorm Enterprises, Inc. <www.sandstorm.net>
[Simson informed me over a year ago that he had discovered this attack
and had notified many relevant operating system vendors. To the best of
my knowledge, no one has addressed the problem in the intervening year.
We thus include this item in the hopes of spurring some action, or at
least awareness and public discussion. On the other hand, we of course
do not recommend conducting experiments to demonstrate this flaw on
other people's systems. PGN]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Tue, 23 Feb 1999 01:03:25 -0500
From: Andrew Hobgood <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Process table attack (from RISKS Digest)
> Subject: Process-table attack
>
> The Process Table Attack is a [relatively] new kind of denial-of-service
> attack that can be waged against numerous network services on a variety of
> different UNIX systems. The attack is launched against network services
This flaw isn't only limited to programs run from inetd (or other on-demand
forking servers). Over a year ago, I reported a DoS attack present in the
"comsat" daemon (used to notify users of incoming mail). That report can
be found at: http://geek-girl.com/bugtraq/1997_3/0398.html
Now, a simple way to avoid these kinds of denial of service attacks is to
watch for multiple connections to a port (especially ones with no data)
>from a single source (at an IDS or firewall level). You can then react
with logging the attempts, firewalling the connections, or even spoofing
connection resets to the local machine to clear out the connection table.
The major problem with that approach, however, is that some programs,
(the in.comsatd vulnerability, in particular) *look* like they're
performing normal activity when a denial of service attack is in progress.
Now, I'm sure that other programs exist that exhibit the same behavior,
and these provide an even more worrisome issue than the normal
forking-server family of daemons.
I hope this gets the gears rolling in some of the brighter minds out
there...
/Andrew Hobgood [http://web.strange.net | Kha0S on EFnet IRC (#LinuxOS)]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 09:40:17 -0800
From: Jan B. Koum <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Process table attack (from RISKS Digest)
On Sat, Feb 20, 1999 at 01:42:53PM -0800, Mark Boolootian <[email protected]> wrote:
> Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 16:08:06 -0500
> >From: "Simson L. Garfinkel" <[email protected]>
> Subject: Process-table attack
>
> Wide-ranging attack works against almost any UNIX systems on the Internet
>
> ABSTRACT:
>
> The Process Table Attack is a [relatively] new kind of denial-of-service
> attack that can be waged against numerous network services on a variety of
> different UNIX systems. The attack is launched against network services
> which fork() or otherwise allocate a new process for each incoming TCP/IP
> connection. Although the standard UNIX operating system places limits on
> the number of processes that any one user may launch, there are no limits on
> the number of processes that the superuser can create other than the hard
> limits imposed by the operating system. Since incoming TCP/IP connections
> are usually handled by servers that run as root, it is possible to
> completely fill a target machine's process table with multiple
> instantiations of network servers. Properly executed, this attack prevents
> any other command from being executed on the target machine.
I have not tested this, but I don't think this is true for at
least FreeBSD. You see, it has what is called login limits and you
can indeed put limits on root login user. From /etc/login.conf:
#root:\
# :cputime=infinity:\
# :datasize=infinity:\
# :stacksize=infinity:\
# :memorylocked=infinity:\
# :memoryuse=infinity:\
# :filesize=infinity:\
# :coredumpsize=infinity:\
# :openfiles=infinity:\
# :maxproc=infinity:\
# :memoryuse-cur=32M:\
# :maxproc-cur=64:\
# :openfiles-cur=1024:\
# :priority=0:\
# :requirehome@:\
# :umask=022:\
# :tc=auth-root-defaults:
As far as I know (and I am sure 2829 peole will correct me if I am not),
changing infinity to a numeric value should produce a desired result.
AGAIN: I have not tested this yet for root user - but I know that the
login limits do work for normal users.
-- Yan
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Tue, 23 Feb 1999 00:11:50 +0100
From: Dirk Moerenhout <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Process table attack (from RISKS Digest)
While you are certainly right about the possible implications of this it
looks as if you're lifting this higher than it is. You should not make an
elephant from a fly. This is a possible problem but wise
system-implementation can solve this easily enough.
> ...
> To launch a process table attack, the client need only open a connection to
> the server and not send any information. As long as the client holds the
> connection open, the server's process will occupy a slot in the server's
> process table.
This is true though a lot of services will time out after a while thus
shutting down the proces and freeing the slot again. Services that wait
hours without receiving a byte of data are badly coded.
> ...
> 1. Use IP spoofing so that the incoming connections appear to come from
> many different locations on the Internet. This makes tracking
> considerably harder to do.
Tracking would be harder yes. But don't you think it's pretty hard to get
a full spoofed 3WHS? AFAIK most Unices pass connects after the 3WHS. And
while it's easy to spoof a SYN, it's a lot harder to spoof the rest.
> 2. Begin the attack by sending 50 requests in rapid fire to the telnet,
> rlogin and rsh ports on the target machine. This will cause inetd to
> shut down those services on the target machine, which will deny
> administrative access during the attack.
The use of rlogin, rsh and telnet have long been depricated in favor of
ssh.
> 3. Instead of initiating a new connection every 4 seconds, initiate one
> every minute or so. The attack slowly builds, making it more difficult
> to detect on packet traces.
Ok, but there aren't that many services that don't time out when receving
either no data or invalid data. And if they don't they should.
> There are several ways to defend against the attack:
>
> 1. inetd and other programs should check to see the number of free slots
> in the process table before accepting new connections. If there is less
> than a predefined number of free slots, new connections should be
> accepted.
> 2. Alternatively, if there are more than a preset number of network daemons
> for the service running, incoming requests should be queued rather than
> serviced.
> 3. Network services (such as finger) should implement timeouts. For
> example, the statement alarm(30) could be inserted into the finger
> daemon source code so that the program would stop running after 30
> seconds of execution.
Stuff like this already exists in many daemons. This isn't really a case
of OS-problems but rather poorly implement services. Services that handle
connects in a sane way should not be an aid in performing this attack.
> Simson L. Garfinkel, Sandstorm Enterprises, Inc. <www.sandstorm.net>
Dirk Moerenhout
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 14:33:23 -0800
From: James Lockwood <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Process table attack (from RISKS Digest)
On Sat, 20 Feb 1999, Mark Boolootian wrote:
> The Process Table Attack is a [relatively] new kind of denial-of-service
> attack that can be waged against numerous network services on a variety of
> different UNIX systems. The attack is launched against network services
Although not without quirks, I recommend that anyone interested in
defending against this attack take a look at xinetd. It solves these
problems and others, and has been available for a number of years (I
started using it in 1993):
(xinetd README)
] Q. Why should I use it ?
] A. Because it is a lot better (IMHO) than inetd. Here are the reasons:
]
] 4) It can prevent denial-of-access attacks by
] a. placing limits on the number of servers for each service
] (avoids process table overflows)
] b. placing an upper bound on the number of processes it will fork
] c. placing limits on the size of log files it creates
> 2. Alternatively, if there are more than a preset number of network daemons
> for the service running, incoming requests should be queued rather than
> serviced.
This is the approach that xinetd takes:
(xinetd.conf manpage)
] instances determines the number of servers that can
] be simultaneously active for a service (the
] default is no limit). The value of this
] attribute can be either a number or UNLIM-
] ITED which means that there is no limit.
> 3. Network services (such as finger) should implement timeouts. For
> example, the statement alarm(30) could be inserted into the finger
> daemon source code so that the program would stop running after 30
> seconds of execution.
Or, better yet, a timeout option should be implemented in the inetd
daemon. I have added this to my local copy of xinetd 2.2.1 with the
following syntax:
timeout = 30 # 30-second timeout
timeoutsig = SIGINT # signal to send when timeout is hit
Modifications are fairly trivial, does anyone know if Jan Wedekind and
Chuck Murcko are still maintaining it?
> [Simson informed me over a year ago that he had discovered this attack
> and had notified many relevant operating system vendors. To the best of
> my knowledge, no one has addressed the problem in the intervening year.
Again, check out xinetd. It's not new and flashy (and it doesn't work
with TLI services) but is does the job well. I have found it to be
rock-solid.
-James
--
James D. Lockwood The (former) Getty Information Institute
System Administrator 1200 Getty Center Drive, Suite 300
[email protected] Los Angeles, CA 90049-1680
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 18:33:34 +0100
From: "Olle Segerdahl,D" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Process table attack (from RISKS Digest)
On Sat, 20 Feb 1999, Mark Boolootian wrote:
> The Process Table Attack is a [relatively] new kind of denial-of-service
> attack that can be waged against numerous network services on a variety of
> different UNIX systems. The attack is launched against network services
> which fork() or otherwise allocate a new process for each incoming TCP/IP
> connection. Although the standard UNIX operating system places limits on
> the number of processes that any one user may launch, there are no limits on
> the number of processes that the superuser can create other than the hard
> limits imposed by the operating system. Since incoming TCP/IP connections
> are usually handled by servers that run as root, it is possible to
> completely fill a target machine's process table with multiple
> instantiations of network servers. Properly executed, this attack prevents
> any other command from being executed on the target machine.
How is this DoS different from the Old "rescource exaustion" attacks?
Anyone remember the "octopus" ? (keeping multiple sendmail-connections and
depriving the machine of either memory or proc#:s, whichever came first.)
I don't think it's fair to say it's "a [relatively] new kind of denial-of-service attack"
/olle
--
Above views are my own unless explicitly stated otherwise.
God is real, until declared integer.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 16:06:35 -0500
From: Dug Song <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Process table attack (from RISKS Digest)
On Sat, 20 Feb 1999, Mark Boolootian forwarded:
> >From: "Simson L. Garfinkel" <[email protected]>
> Subject: Process-table attack
>
> Wide-ranging attack works against almost any UNIX systems on the Internet
interesting paper on a possible solution:
http://www.scout.cs.arizona.edu/scout/Papers/TR98-10.ps
see http://www.scout.cs.arizona.edu/scout/scout_scout.html for more info.
-d.
---
http://www.monkey.org/~dugsong/
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Tue, 23 Feb 1999 08:43:24 -0000
From: John Conover <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Subject: Denial of service process table attacks
The DNS process table attacks are mentioned at:
http://lwn.net/daily/ptable.html
I have been using tcpserver as a replacement for inetd for many
months. It is at:
ftp://koobera.math.uic.edu/www/ucspi-tcp.html
and allows limiting the *_number_* of concurrent processes forked out
of the inet facilities, as opposed to the *_rate_* of forked
processes.
Also, optionally, allows logging by port, with access control via a
fast database, by IP, and user.
I'm currently using it on httpd, ftp, faxd, smtp, telnet, pop3, and
the qmail daemons. Seems viable.
FWIW, FYI ...
John
--
John Conover, 631 Lamont Ct., Campbell, CA., 95008, USA.
VOX 408.370.2688, FAX 408.379.9602
[email protected], http://www2.inow.com/~conover/john.html
`