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485 lines
19 KiB
.. __ _ _ ___ _ |
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/ _|__ _(_) |_ ) |__ __ _ _ _ |
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| _/ _` | | |/ /| '_ \/ _` | ' \ |
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|_| \__,_|_|_/___|_.__/\__,_|_||_| |
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================================================================================ |
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Developing Filters |
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================================================================================ |
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Filters are tricky. They need to: |
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* work with a variety of the versions of the software that generates the logs; |
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* work with the range of logging configuration options available in the |
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software; |
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* work with multiple operating systems; |
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* not make assumptions about the log format in excess of the software |
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(e.g. do not assume a username doesn't contain spaces and use \S+ unless |
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you've checked the source code); |
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* account for how future versions of the software will log messages |
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(e.g. guess what would happen to the log message if different authentication |
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types are added); |
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* not be susceptible to DoS vulnerabilities (see Filter Security below); and |
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* match intended log lines only. |
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Please follow the steps from Filter Test Cases to Developing Filter Regular |
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Expressions and submit a GitHub pull request (PR) afterwards. If you get stuck, |
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you can push your unfinished changes and still submit a PR -- describe |
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what you have done, what is the hurdle, and we'll attempt to help (PR |
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will be automagically updated with future commits you would push to |
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complete it). |
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Filter Test Cases |
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================= |
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Purpose |
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------- |
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Start by finding the log messages that the application generates related to |
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some form of authentication failure. If you are adding to an existing filter |
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think about whether the log messages are of a similar importance and purpose |
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to the existing filter. If you were a user of Fail2Ban, and did a package |
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update of Fail2Ban that started matching new log messages, would anything |
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unexpected happen? Would the bantime/findtime for the jail be appropriate for |
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the new log messages? If it doesn't, perhaps it needs to be in a separate |
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filter definition, for example like exim filter aims at authentication failures |
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and exim-spam at log messages related to spam. |
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Even if it is a new filter you may consider separating the log messages into |
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different filters based on purpose. |
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Cause |
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----- |
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Are some of the log lines a result of the same action? For example, is a PAM |
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failure log message, followed by an application specific failure message the |
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result of the same user/script action? If you add regular expressions for |
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both you would end up with two failures for a single action. |
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Therefore, select the most appropriate log message and document the other log |
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message) with a test case not to match it and a description as to why you chose |
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one over another. |
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With the selected log lines consider what action has caused those log |
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messages and whether they could have been generated by accident? Could |
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the log message be occurring due to the first step towards the application |
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asking for authentication? Could the log messages occur often? If some of |
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these are true make a note of this in the jail.conf example that you provide. |
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Samples |
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------- |
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It is important to include log file samples so any future change in the regular |
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expression will still work with the log lines you have identified. |
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The sample log messages are provided in a file under testcases/files/logs/ |
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named identically as the corresponding filter (but without .conf extension). |
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Each log line should be preceded by a line with failJSON metadata (so the logs |
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lines are tested in the test suite) directly above the log line. If there is |
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any specific information about the log message, such as version or an |
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application configuration option that is needed for the message to occur, |
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include this in a comment (line beginning with #) above the failJSON metadata. |
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Log samples should include only one, definitely not more than 3, examples of |
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log messages of the same form. If log messages are different in different |
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versions of the application log messages that show this are encouraged. |
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Also attempt to inject an IP into the application (e.g. by specifying |
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it as a username) so that Fail2Ban possibly detects the IP |
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from user input rather than the true origin. See the Filter Security section |
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and the top example in testcases/files/logs/apache-auth as to how to do this. |
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One you have discovered that this is possible, correct the regex so it doesn't |
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match and provide this as a test case with "match": false (see failJSON below). |
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If the mechanism to create the log message isn't obvious provide a |
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configuration and/or sample scripts testcases/files/config/{filtername} and |
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reference these in the comments above the log line. |
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FailJSON metadata |
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----------------- |
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A failJSON metadata is a comment immediately above the log message. It will |
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look like:: |
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# failJSON: { "time": "2013-06-10T10:10:59", "match": true , "host": "93.184.216.119" } |
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Time should match the time of the log message. It is in a specific format of |
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Year-Month-Day'T'Hour:minute:Second. If your log message does not include a |
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year, like the example below, the year should be listed as 2005, if before Sun |
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Aug 14 10am UTC, and 2004 if afterwards. Here is an example failJSON |
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line preceding a sample log line:: |
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# failJSON: { "time": "2005-03-24T15:25:51", "match": true , "host": "198.51.100.87" } |
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Mar 24 15:25:51 buffalo1 dropbear[4092]: bad password attempt for 'root' from 198.51.100.87:5543 |
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The "host" in failJSON should contain the IP or domain that should be blocked. |
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For long lines that you do not want to be matched (e.g. from log injection |
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attacks) and any log lines to be excluded (see "Cause" section above), set |
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"match": false in the failJSON and describe the reason in the comment above. |
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After developing regexes, the following command will test all failJSON metadata |
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against the log lines in all sample log files:: |
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./fail2ban-testcases testSampleRegex |
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Developing Filter Regular Expressions |
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===================================== |
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Date/Time |
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--------- |
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At the moment, Fail2Ban depends on log lines to have time stamps. That is why |
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before starting to develop failregex, check if your log line format known to |
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Fail2Ban. Copy the time component from the log line and append an IP address to |
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test with following command:: |
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./fail2ban-regex "2013-09-19 02:46:12 1.2.3.4" "<HOST>" |
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Output of such command should contain something like:: |
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Date template hits: |
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|- [# of hits] date format |
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| [1] Year-Month-Day Hour:Minute:Second |
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Ensure that the template description matches time/date elements in your log line |
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time stamp. If there is no matched format then date template needs to be added |
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to server/datedetector.py. Ensure that a new template is added in the order |
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that more specific matches occur first and that there is no confusion between a |
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Day and a Month. |
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Filter file |
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----------- |
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The filter is specified in a config/filter.d/{filtername}.conf file. Filter file |
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can have sections INCLUDES (optional) and Definition as follows:: |
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[INCLUDES] |
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before = common.conf |
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after = filtername.local |
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[Definition] |
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failregex = .... |
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ignoreregex = .... |
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This is also documented in the man page jail.conf (section 5). Other definitions |
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can be added to make failregex's more readable and maintainable to be used |
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through string Interpolations (see http://docs.python.org/2.7/library/configparser.html) |
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General rules |
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------------- |
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Use "before" if you need to include a common set of rules, like syslog or if |
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there is a common set of regexes for multiple filters. |
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Use "after" if you wish to allow the user to overwrite a set of customisations |
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of the current filter. This file doesn't need to exist. |
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Try to avoid using ignoreregex mainly for performance reasons. The case when you |
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would use it is if in trying to avoid using it, you end up with an unreadable |
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failregex. |
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Syslog |
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------ |
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If your application logs to syslog you can take advantage of log line prefix |
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definitions present in common.conf. So as a base use:: |
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[INCLUDES] |
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before = common.conf |
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[Definition] |
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_daemon = app |
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failregex = ^%(__prefix_line)s |
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In this example common.conf defines __prefix_line which also contains the |
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_daemon name (in syslog terms the service) you have just specified. _daemon |
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can also be a regex. |
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For example, to capture following line _daemon should be set to "dovecot":: |
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Dec 12 11:19:11 dunnart dovecot: pop3-login: Aborted login (tried to use disabled plaintext auth): rip=190.210.136.21, lip=113.212.99.193 |
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and then ``^%(__prefix_line)s`` would match "Dec 12 11:19:11 dunnart dovecot: |
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". Note it matches the trailing space(s) as well. |
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Substitutions (AKA string interpolations) |
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----------------------------------------- |
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We have used string interpolations in above examples. They are useful for |
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making the regexes more readable, reuse generic patterns in multiple failregex |
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lines, and also to refer definition of regex parts to specific filters or even |
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to the user. General principle is that value of a _name variable replaces |
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occurrences of %(_name)s within the same section or anywhere in the config file |
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if defined in [DEFAULT] section. |
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Regular Expressions |
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------------------- |
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Regular expressions (failregex, ignoreregex) assume that the date/time has been |
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removed from the log line (this is just how fail2ban works internally ATM). |
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If the format is like '<date...> error 1.2.3.4 is evil' then you need to match |
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the <> at the start so regex should be similar to '^<> error <HOST> is evil$' using |
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<HOST> where the IP/domain name appears in the log line. |
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The following general rules apply to regular expressions: |
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* ensure regexes start with a ^ and are as restrictive as possible. E.g. do not |
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use .* if \d+ is sufficient; |
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* use functionality of Python regexes defined in the standard Python re library |
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http://docs.python.org/2/library/re.html; |
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* make regular expressions readable (as much as possible). E.g. |
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(?:...) represents a non-capturing regex but (...) is more readable, thus |
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preferred. |
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If you have only a basic knowledge of regular repressions we advise to read |
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http://docs.python.org/2/library/re.html first. It doesn't take long and would |
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remind you e.g. which characters you need to escape and which you don't. |
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Developing/testing a regex |
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-------------------------- |
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You can develop a regex in a file or using command line depending on your |
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preference. You can also use samples you have already created in the test cases |
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or test them one at a time. |
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The general tool for testing Fail2Ban regexes is fail2ban-regex. To see how to |
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use it run:: |
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./fail2ban-regex --help |
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Take note of -l heavydebug / -l debug and -v as they might be very useful. |
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.. TIP:: |
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Take a look at the source code of the application you are developing |
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failregex for. You may see optional or extra log messages, or parts there |
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of, that need to form part of your regex. It may also reveal how some |
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parts are constrained and different formats depending on configuration or |
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less common usages. |
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.. TIP:: |
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For looking through source code - http://sourcecodebrowser.com/ . It has |
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call graphs and can browse different versions. |
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.. TIP:: |
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Some applications log spaces at the end. If you are not sure add \s*$ as |
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the end part of the regex. |
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If your regex is not matching, http://www.debuggex.com/?flavor=python can help |
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to tune it. fail2ban-regex -D ... will present Debuggex URLs for the regexs |
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and sample log files that you pass into it. |
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In general use when using regex debuggers for generating fail2ban filters: |
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* use regex from the ./fail2ban-regex output (to ensure all substitutions are |
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done) |
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* replace <HOST> with (?&.ipv4) |
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* make sure that regex type set to Python |
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* for the test data put your log output with the date/time removed |
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When you have fixed the regex put it back into your filter file. |
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Please spread the good word about Debuggex - Serge Toarca is kindly continuing |
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its free availability to Open Source developers. |
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Finishing up |
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------------ |
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If you've added a new filter, add a new entry in config/jail.conf. The theory |
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here is that a user will create a jail.local with [filtername]\nenable=true to |
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enable your jail. |
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So more specifically in the [filter] section in jail.conf: |
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* ensure that you have "enabled = false" (users will enable as needed); |
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* use "filter =" set to your filter name; |
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* use a typical action to disable ports associated with the application; |
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* set "logpath" to the usual location of application log file; |
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* if the default findtime or bantime isn't appropriate to the filter, specify |
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more appropriate choices (possibly with a brief comment line). |
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Submit github pull request (See "Pull Requests" above) for |
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github.com/fail2ban/fail2ban containing your great work. |
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Filter Security |
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=============== |
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Poor filter regular expressions are susceptible to DoS attacks. |
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When a remote user has the ability to introduce text that would match filter's |
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failregex, while matching inserted text to the <HOST> part, they have the |
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ability to deny any host they choose. |
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So the <HOST> part must be anchored on text generated by the application, and |
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not the user, to an extent sufficient to prevent user inserting the entire text |
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matching this or any other failregex. |
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Ideally filter regex should anchor at the beginning and at the end of log line. |
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However as more applications log at the beginning than the end, anchoring the |
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beginning is more important. If the log file used by the application is shared |
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with other applications, like system logs, ensure the other application that use |
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that log file do not log user generated text at the beginning of the line, or, |
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if they do, ensure the regexes of the filter are sufficient to mitigate the risk |
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of insertion. |
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Examples of poor filters |
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------------------------ |
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1. Too restrictive |
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We find a log message:: |
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Apr-07-13 07:08:36 Invalid command fial2ban from 1.2.3.4 |
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We make a failregex:: |
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^Invalid command \S+ from <HOST> |
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Now think evil. The user does the command 'blah from 1.2.3.44' |
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The program diligently logs:: |
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Apr-07-13 07:08:36 Invalid command blah from 1.2.3.44 from 1.2.3.4 |
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And fail2ban matches 1.2.3.44 as the IP that it ban. A DoS attack was successful. |
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The fix here is that the command can be anything so .* is appropriate:: |
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^Invalid command .* from <HOST> |
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Here the .* will match until the end of the string. Then realise it has more to |
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match, i.e. "from <HOST>" and go back until it find this. Then it will ban |
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1.2.3.4 correctly. Since the <HOST> is always at the end, end the regex with a $:: |
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^Invalid command .* from <HOST>$ |
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Note if we'd just had the expression:: |
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^Invalid command \S+ from <HOST>$ |
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Then provided the user put a space in their command they would have never been |
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banned. |
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2. Unanchored regex can match other user injected data |
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From the Apache vulnerability CVE-2013-2178 |
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( original ref: https://vndh.net/note:fail2ban-089-denial-service ). |
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An example bad regex for Apache:: |
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failregex = [[]client <HOST>[]] user .* not found |
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Since the user can do a get request on:: |
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GET /[client%20192.168.0.1]%20user%20root%20not%20found HTTP/1.0 |
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Host: remote.site |
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Now the log line will be:: |
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[Sat Jun 01 02:17:42 2013] [error] [client 192.168.33.1] File does not exist: /srv/http/site/[client 192.168.0.1] user root not found |
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As this log line doesn't match other expressions hence it matches the above |
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regex and blocks 192.168.33.1 as a denial of service from the HTTP requester. |
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3. Over greedy pattern matching |
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From: https://github.com/fail2ban/fail2ban/pull/426 |
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An example ssh log (simplified):: |
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Sep 29 17:15:02 spaceman sshd[12946]: Failed password for user from 127.0.0.1 port 20000 ssh1: ruser remoteuser |
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As we assume username can include anything including spaces its prudent to put |
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.* here. The remote user can also exist as anything so lets not make assumptions again:: |
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failregex = ^%(__prefix_line)sFailed \S+ for .* from <HOST>( port \d*)?( ssh\d+)?(: ruser .*)?$ |
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So this works. The problem is if the .* after remote user is injected by the |
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user to be 'from 1.2.3.4'. The resultant log line is:: |
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Sep 29 17:15:02 spaceman sshd[12946]: Failed password for user from 127.0.0.1 port 20000 ssh1: ruser from 1.2.3.4 |
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Testing with:: |
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fail2ban-regex -v 'Sep 29 17:15:02 Failed password for user from 127.0.0.1 port 20000 ssh1: ruser from 1.2.3.4' '^ Failed \S+ for .* from <HOST>( port \d*)?( ssh\d+)?(: ruser .*)?$' |
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.. TIP:: I've removed the bit that matches __prefix_line from the regex and log. |
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Shows:: |
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1) [1] ^ Failed \S+ for .* from <HOST>( port \d*)?( ssh\d+)?(: ruser .*)?$ |
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1.2.3.4 Sun Sep 29 17:15:02 2013 |
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It should of matched 127.0.0.1. So the first greedy part of the greedy regex |
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matched until the end of the string. The was no "from <HOST>" so the regex |
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engine worked backwards from the end of the string until this was matched. |
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The result was that 1.2.3.4 was matched, injected by the user, and the wrong IP |
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was banned. |
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The solution here is to make the first .* non-greedy with .*?. Here it matches |
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as little as required and the fail2ban-regex tool shows the output:: |
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fail2ban-regex -v 'Sep 29 17:15:02 Failed password for user from 127.0.0.1 port 20000 ssh1: ruser from 1.2.3.4' '^ Failed \S+ for .*? from <HOST>( port \d*)?( ssh\d+)?(: ruser .*)?$' |
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1) [1] ^ Failed \S+ for .*? from <HOST>( port \d*)?( ssh\d+)?(: ruser .*)?$ |
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127.0.0.1 Sun Sep 29 17:15:02 2013 |
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So the general case here is a log line that contains:: |
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(fixed_data_1)<HOST>(fixed_data_2)(user_injectable_data) |
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Where the regex that matches fixed_data_1 is gready and matches the entire |
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string, before moving backwards and user_injectable_data can match the entire |
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string. |
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Another case |
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------------ |
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ref: https://www.debuggex.com/r/CtAbeKMa2sDBEfA2/0 |
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A webserver logs the following without URL escaping:: |
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[error] 2865#0: *66647 user "xyz" was not found in "/file", client: 1.2.3.1, server: www.host.com, request: "GET ", client: 3.2.1.1, server: fake.com, request: "GET exploited HTTP/3.3", host: "injected.host", host: "www.myhost.com" |
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regex:: |
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failregex = ^ \[error\] \d+#\d+: \*\d+ user "\S+":? (?:password mismatch|was not found in ".*"), client: <HOST>, server: \S+, request: "\S+ .+ HTTP/\d+\.\d+", host: "\S+" |
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The .* matches to the end of the string. Finds that it can't continue to match |
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", client ... so it moves from the back and find that the user injected web URL:: |
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", client: 3.2.1.1, server: fake.com, request: "GET exploited HTTP/3.3", host: "injected.host |
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In this case there is a fixed host: "www.myhost.com" at the end so the solution |
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is to anchor the regex at the end with a $. |
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If this wasn't the case then first .* needed to be made so it didn't capture |
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beyond <HOST>. |
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4. Application generates two identical log messages with different meanings |
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If the application generates the following two messages under different |
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circumstances:: |
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client <IP>: authentication failed |
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client <USER>: authentication failed |
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Then it's obvious that a regex of ``^client <HOST>: authentication |
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failed$`` will still cause problems if the user can trigger the second |
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log message with a <USER> of 123.1.1.1. |
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Here there's nothing to do except request/change the application so it logs |
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messages differently. |
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