Hi,

Just a general note on the UDP 80 style DoS attacks.

I'm not entirely certain that UDP 80 attacks are always related to the 
gameserver bug that you're citing below.

We have seen in the wild php scripts that are hard coded to use UDP 80 to 
deliver DoS attacks towards their targets.

Basically it's just GET /script.php?ip.of.victim and instant UDP 80 flood, I've 
also seen perl versions of the same script.. most notably UDP.PL

What would be interesting is to see just how much UDP 80 traffic exists on the 
Internet at any given moment.

I don't know if Arbor's ATLAS really tracks traffic in that way but it would be 
interesting to get a semi-global view of just how many PPS/BPS are being wasted 
on these types of floods.

Maybe even as a research paper =)

-Drew


-----Original Message-----
From: Fredrik Holmqvist / I2B [mailto:fred...@i2b.se] 
Sent: Sunday, February 05, 2012 6:47 PM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: UDP port 80 DDoS attack

Hi.

We had a customer that was attacked by the same "game server feature".
We received aprox 10 Gbit of traffic against the customer.

The attacker sends spoofed packets to the game server with the target IP as 
"source", the gameserver sends replies back via UDP to the target host. The 
attacker sends a couple of hundred packets per second and thus generating a 10 
Mbit UDP flood.

There is fixes/workarounds for the game servers, just a matter of the admin 
taking care of it.
See: http://rankgamehosting.ru/index.php?showtopic=1320

The "attacking" IPs aren't spoofed, so just compile a list and send e-mails to 
each provider.

We had 1000+ IPs gathered and sent 100+ abuse e-mails, only received reply from 
less than 20%.
Sad that people care so little about mitigating DDoS/UDP/ICMP floods.


On Sun, 5 Feb 2012 18:36:13 -0500, Ray Gasnick III 
<rgasn...@milestechnologies.com> wrote:
> We just saw a huge flux of traffic occur this morning that spiked one 
> of our upstream ISPs gear and killed the layer 2 link on another 
> becuase of a DDoS attack on UDP port 80.
> 
> 
> 
> Wireshark shows this appears to be from a compromised game server 
> (call of duty) with source IPs in a variety of different prefixes.
> 
> 
> 
> Only solution thus far was to dump the victim IP address in our block 
> into the BGP Black hole community with one of our 2 providers and 
> completely stop advertising to the other.
> 
> 
> 
> Anybody see this recently and have any tips on mitigation,  reply on 
> or off list.
> 
> 
> 
> Thank You,
> 
> Ray Gasnick III
> CISSP, Technology Specialist: Network Security & Infrastructure Miles 
> Technologies 
> www.milestechnologies.com<http://www.milestechnologies.com/>
> 
> Phone: (856) 439-0999 x127
> Direct: (856) 793-3821
> How am I doing?  Email my manager at
> itmana...@milestechnologies.com<mailto:itmana...@milestechnologies.com
> >
> 
> Computer Networking – IT Support – Business Software – Website Design 
> – Online Marketing & PR

--
Fredrik Holmqvist
I2B (Internet 2 Business)
070-740 5033


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