Snort mailing list archives

Re: [Snort-sigs] [Emerging-Sigs] VRT on Suricata


From: "Crook, Parker" <Parker_Crook () reyrey com>
Date: Thu, 22 Jul 2010 12:21:31 -0400

Please guys, this discussion does not belong on *-sigs - and probably not > on snort-users for that matter.

I have to agree with Jamie's sentiment from earlier this morning.  I realize that after the article, a public 
renouncement had to be made on Sourcefire's part as the Stock market is a strange beast and reacts violently to the 
wind blowing, much less a statement like "Snort is dead".  We all know Snort is not dead.

With that in mind, attacking each other on the Snort User's & sigs lists is uncalled for at this point.  If you want to 
try to work together, can you please email each other directly or pick up the phone and let these mailing lists be for 
the users?

Thank you,
Parker

-----Original Message-----
From: Matt Jonkman [mailto:jonkman () jonkmans com]
Sent: Thursday, July 22, 2010 11:56 AM
To: Martin Roesch
Cc: snort-sigs () lists sourceforge net; Emerging-sigs () emergingthreats net; snort-users () lists sourceforge net
Subject: Re: [Snort-sigs] [Snort-users] [Emerging-Sigs] VRT on Suricata

On 7/21/10 4:21 PM, Martin Roesch wrote:
When you call Snort dead how is that not attacking it?  Was that just
Ellen Messmer editorializing or did you in fact say that?  It was
unclear in the article but when it was presented to me it was done in
the context of you making that claim.  The Computerworld article says
that your stated aim is to replace Snort because it's old technology.

No, I did not say Snort is dead. I make a living on it just like you do.
Reporters can start a fight between two nuns, as long as the nuns can't
hear what each actually says about the other. I'm disappointed you took
the bait. I'd recommend you know the reporter's motivation, and verify
what they imply before you lash out.

I won't even bother responding to the imaginary performance stats, or
calling us a waste of taxpayer money, etc etc. Those are infantile
tactics, and responding is even less mature. I expected better from the
CTO of a multi-million dollar company, frankly. I think it best if I
ignore that blog post and your related comments as they were emotional
reactions and may have been made based on an intentionally skewed
understanding of the situation. If you really feel those are the things
you ought to be saying as a representative of Sourcefire then please
correct me.

The OISF would very much like to cooperate with you and Sourcefire, and
the Snort developers, as we've been saying for a couple years now in
public and privately. It makes perfect sense to work together, and it's
an open and safe environment to share and collaborate for mutual benefit.

You cast dispersions on my and the foundation's intentions, so let me
reiterate what we are here for and what we're doing. We made the
foundation a 501c3 non-profit to achieve a VERY clear goal. Being a
501c3 legally prevents the foundation from commercializing the engine. I
go to jail if we do so. And worse, the IRS is the entity that enforces
our actions. Trust me, we will not be crossing that line.

Deployment, use and commercialization is left to community members,
consortium members, and supporters of the engine. ALL of them, not any
one, and no one has to have anyone's permission to do so.

If, and ONLY if, a company wants to make changes they cannot have
re-released via the GPL (i.e plug into a proprietary backend, work on a
secret hardware platform, etc. just like Snort) then they can obtain a
commercial license for a VERY small fee (usually paid in development
hours).

The foundation cannot legally compete with Sourcefire, nor does it have
any intentions of finding a way to do so. Sourcefire is perfectly
entitled to use the engine in a commercial product, just like anyone else.

Let me suggest that if you were to dedicate a small portion of your
Snort development resources to collaborating on Suricata you may in the
not too distant future end up with an engine that'll do what you
intended to pull off in Snort 3, and you'll do so while only bearing a
small fraction of the development load. That's the whole idea here,
collaborate in a safe environment, do something good for everyone.

There isn't commercial advantage in building new engines alone. The
money goes to management/forensics consoles, rules, and big fast boxes.
The engine is an after thought, and no one is interested in paying for
one over another. That's why this works, vendors and the community can
share resources to build the base platform then compete around it.

So, you imply you'll cooperate if we lay out our intentions. They've
been clear from the start, and we are legally bound to do things this
way. Do you have any questions or doubts about what we're doing here?

Does Sourcefire have any interest in cooperating or collaborating with
the foundation?

Matt


Let's be clear, you initiated this discussion in public, we responded
when the press started calling us and asking us for our thoughts.
When these things happen we usually blog about it so that we can point
to our blog posts instead of having to rehash the same arguments over
and over and so that we have a central point of discussion.  If the
phone hadn't started ringing here there would be no blog posts and no
reactions in the press.  We didn't attack Suricata, we showed the data
that we had and responded to criticisms vis a vis multithreading,
performance, IPv6, etc.  The editorializing that I provided regarding
the necessity of reimplementing the Snort detection model at taxpayer
expense when they already get it for free was, I think, justified.

We know your engine doesn't perform anywhere near Snort's performance
level at this time, maybe it will someday.  We know that the
multithreaded model you promote as the solution to performance
problems is actually one of the prime culprits for your current
performance issues.  We know that you've implemented the Snort
streaming model and detection model and that you detect attacks with
the Snort rule language which therefore defines the semantics of
detection that are available to you.  We also know that you don't
support the full Snort rules language or .SO rules which will hinder
your users from protecting themselves against the worst of the threats
that are out there today as well as making Suricata unsuitable for
classified computing environments and impossible to work with for
companies like Microsoft.

We're happy to let you do your thing at OISF and eagerly await seeing
actual innovation in your project that advances the state of the art
for detection and performance just as we're happy to stand quietly by
doing our own thing and pushing forward in our own way while you do
so.  If you wish to draw comparisons to Snort in the press then you
invite us to respond.  When you make baseless claims in the press
(Snort 3.0 is discontinued, Snort can't do IPv6, lack of
multithreading somehow makes it perform worse than Suricata, etc) you
invite response and comparison to the data we have.  If you don't want
us to respond then you should ignore us and let your code stand on its
own merits like Bro and Hank and Firestorm and the other open source
NIDS projects out there.  When you specifically state in public or
private that you're gunning for Snort/Sourcefire that lets us know
that we should take a look at what's being done so when the questions
come our way from press or analysts or customers or the OSS community
we have something fact-based to respond with.

The concept of peaceful coexistence only works if both parties are
honest about their intentions.  You say you want it in public but your
actions show that you have quite another thing in mind.  Until we hear
something to the contrary, we'll be operating on the principle that
you're yet another competitor.  If you want to just keep things
technical we're happy to leave it at that and talk about technology.


Marty


On Wed, Jul 21, 2010 at 12:09 PM, Matt Jonkman <jonkman () jonkmans com> wrote:
We're not really here to challenge SourceFire. We've hoped to have a
cooperative relationship all along, since we're both open-source projects.

Marty's comments are concerning. We haven't attacked Snort, we give
great credence to Snort as our collective roots. But we do have to
continue to push forward. The press brought out the snort is dead thread
as they always do, I only said we're not seeing major innovation in it,
or any ids of late. That's why we were funded to make it happen. We may
fail completely, but we're going to push things to the next step.

An open source project attacking another isn't unusual, but I certainly
never expected it here. And I never expected a sane person to say that
multi-threading isn't a viable tactic to scale. Cisco commented in one
of the articles that they're multi-threading and it's good for them, and
that they think suricata is promising. I'm going to go with Cisco as
having a more effective technical pedigree as they've got it working
commercially. SF is trying in Snort 3, but hasn't called it stable. That
doesn't mean it's not viable, just means their attempt didn't work.

As we've been doing form the beginning, we offer the olive branch of
cooperation to Sourcefire. We aren't looking to infringe on their sales
of big boxes to big companies. We want to continue to push the art.

If they prefer to just mud-sling then go for it, but we'll not be
returning the crap. You can't throw it without getting it all over
yourself.

Matt

On 7/21/10 11:54 AM, Paul Halliday wrote:
On Wed, Jul 21, 2010 at 10:16 AM, evilghost () packetmail net
<evilghost () packetmail net> wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1

Hi, not sure if anyone has had a chance to read the latest horseshit on the VRT blog but it seems SourceFire has 
elected to use the VRT blog as a way to sway those who might use
Suricata.  It's nice to see SourceFire attacking OISF, kind of reminds me when the snake-oil AV vendors spend time 
attacking each-other instead of actually doing something.

The only thing that surprised me was this latest round of worthless horseshit came from Matt Olney; I had more 
respect for that guy.  I never saw this coming, I thought Olney to be
more of a realist and less of a SoureFire apologist.  I guess everyone at some point has to defend the guy who 
signs their paycheck.

Give it a read http://vrt-sourcefire.blogspot.com/2010/07/innovation-you-keep-using-that-word.html

I may start a blog too, it looks like it could be really exciting.  I'd have some great content to share too.  
Remember folks, the best way to have a good security community is to
attack each-other's efforts.  Things like "And we didn't even cost you a million dollars" is the best way to spur 
collaborative efforts.

Today I've made it a point to write "VRT" on each piece of toilet paper before I use it.  I had quite a bit to 
drink last night, I suspect I'm going to be writing "VRT" a lot today.

- -evilghost


Perhaps the blog entry should be challenged with numbers instead of
words? If someone is on the fence this does very little to sway them.

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