DDoS Security Checklist

Introduction

Since the early days of the internet, DDoS had been a favorite weapon of cyber-criminals. Recently there was news about the biggest DDoS attack in history targeted towards Spamhaus, an anti-spam group. The attacks reportedly peaked at 300 Gb/s (gigabits per second) which is way over what had been seen earlier. Modern DDoS attacks are getting obscenely large for even big organizations to handle effectively.

(Read more:  CISO Guide for Denial-of-Service (DoS) Security)

What is DDoS?

DoS or Denial of Service is an attempt to make a machine or network resource unavailable to its intended users. When such a DoS is carried out by a large number of attack sources, it is called DDoS or Distributed Denial of Service.

Basic types are:

  • Consumption of computational resources
  • Disruption of configuration information
  • Disruption of state information
  • Disruption of physical network
  • Disruption of the communication media between the victim and its intended users.

How can I prevent DDoS?

While it would be incorrect to say that DDoS attacks can be prevented, the impact can be mitigated and even thwarted if your IT infrastructure is sufficiently hardened, distributed and secured. We have listed some of the preventive steps below:

  • Use rate-limiting in firewalls, routers, load balancers and other network perimeter devices.
  • Enable TCP SYN cookie protection.
  • Test your applications and deployment architecture for DoS vulnerabilities and fix them.
  • Conduct regular configuration audits of your perimeter devices.
  • Use updated software/firmware
  • Use updated Anti-virus and regularly check for malware, bots on your systems. (This way you are less likely to contribute to DDoS on others).
  • Use multiple ISPs or hosting providers for redundancy.
  • Maintain a backup site for quick switchover.
  • Install or configure network monitoring systems which can alert you as soon as any DDoS hits.
  • Check with your ISPs or hosting providers how they handle DDoS and be aware of financial implications in case you are hit with a massive DDoS.

(Watch more : South Asia's Cyber Security Landscape after the Snowden Revelations)

Help I am under DDoS!! What should I do?

Dealing with a DDoS underway is incredibly difficult. The first step should be to try to understand the type and source of the attack. Understanding the attack type greatly helps in effectively dealing with the attack. So of the things that you may consider are:

  • Blackholing and sinkholing
  • Enable rate-limiting in firewalls, routers, load balancers and other network perimeter devices.
  • Obtain a new IP address or range from your ISP or hosting provider if the attacker is targeting an IP address or range. If you have multiple ISPs then try switching your primary ISP.
  • Switch to something like Akamai, Cloudflare or Incapsula who have known expertise to handle DDoS.

What to do post the incident?

  • Conduct a root cause analysis and ensure that no other malicious activity was done on your servers other than DDoS.
  • If blackholing or sinkholing was done, restore the same.
  • If the preventive measures listed above are missing, you may consider implementing some of them to be better prepared.


    References:

http://publicintelligence.net/nsa-iad-ddos/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denial-of-service_attack

 

Original Blog:http://www.ivizsecurity.com/blog/penetration-testing/ddos-security-checklist/

 

 

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