Snort mailing list archives

Unable to receive alerts


From: "Sadanapalli, Pradeep Kumar (MED, TCS)" <Pradeep.Sadanapalli () med ge com>
Date: Fri, 28 Feb 2003 13:43:14 -0600

Hi Friends,
I am a snort newbie. I am running redhat linux 8.0 on my dell latitude
C610.
I want to run Snort as an IDS and would like to be alerted about the
network traffic on my network interface.

I am using a Lucent Wireless Network Card.

I installed snort-1.9.0 as below.

cp snort-1.9.0.tar.gz /home/pradeep/
cp libcap-0.7.1.tar.gz /home/pradeep

cd /home/pradeep

tar -xzf libpcap-0.7.1.tar.gz 
cd libpcap-0.7.1
./configure
make 
make install

cd ..

tar -xzf snort-1.9.0.tar.gz
cd snort-1.9.0
./configure
make
make install

mkdir /etc/snort
cp etc/snort.conf /etc/snort/snort.conf
mkdir /var/log/snort
mkdir /IDS
cp -ax rules /IDS/rules

I am pasting below my snort.conf and snortd script for reference.

/etc/rc.d/init.d/snortd start

When I execute "dmesg |tail -1"
it says "device eth1 entered promiscous mode"

I am losing network connection i.e I am even unable to ping to any other
computer in the network.
So I am not receiving any alerts . /var/log/snort/alert is always
remaining empty.

Please someone help what is going wrong?
Thanks in advance for all your help..


Pradeep


****************SNORTD******************

#!/bin/sh
#
# snortd         Start/Stop the snort IDS daemon.
#
# chkconfig: 2345 40 60
# description:  snort is a lightweight network intrusion detection tool
\
#               that currently detects more than 1100 host and network \
#               vulnerabilities, portscans, backdoors, and more.
# processname: snort
# config: /etc/snort/snort.conf

# Source function library.
. /etc/rc.d/init.d/functions

# Specify your network interface here
INTERFACE=eth1
LOGDIR=/var/log/snort/
CONFIGFILE=/etc/snort/snort.conf
SNORTBINARY=/usr/local/bin/snort

RETVAL=0

start() {
        echo -n $"Starting snort: "
        daemon $SNORTBINARY -A fast -b -l /var/log/snort -d -D -i
$INTERFACE -c $CONFIGFILE
        RETVAL=$?
        [ $RETVAL -eq 0 ] && touch /var/lock/subsys/snortd
        echo
        echo -n $"(log to " $LOGDIR " with configfile " $CONFIGFILE ")"
        echo 
}

stop() {
        echo -n $"Stopping snort: "
        killproc snort
        RETVAL=$?
        rm -f /var/lock/subsys/snortd
        echo
}

dostatus() {
        status snort
        RETVAL=$?
}

restart() {
        stop
        start
        RETVAL=$?
}

condrestart() {
        [ -e /var/lock/subsys/snortd ] && restart || :
}

# See how we were called.
case "$1" in
  start)
        start
        ;;
  stop)
        stop
        ;;
  status)
        dostatus
        ;;
  restart|reload)
        restart
        ;;
  condrestart)
        condrestart
        ;;
  *)
        echo "Usage: snortd {start|stop|status|restart|condrestart}"
        exit 1
esac

exit $RETVAL

****************SNORTD******************



****************SNORTD.CONF******************

#--------------------------------------------------
#   http://www.snort.org     Snort 1.8.6 Ruleset
#     Contact: snort-sigs () lists sourceforge net
#--------------------------------------------------
# NOTE:This ruleset only works for 1.8.0 and later
#--------------------------------------------------
# $Id: snort.conf,v 1.77.2.19 2002/06/29 13:32:48 chrisgreen Exp $
#
###################################################
# This file contains a sample snort configuration. 
# You can take the following steps to create your 
# own custom configuration:
#
#  1) Set the network variables for your network
#  2) Configure preprocessors
#  3) Configure output plugins
#  4) Customize your rule set
#
###################################################
# Step #1: Set the network variables:
#


var HOME_NET x.0.0.0/24
var EXTERNAL_NET any
#var EXTERNAL_NET $eth0_ADDRESS

var SMTP $HOME_NET
var SMTP_SERVERS $HOME_NET
var HTTP_SERVERS $HOME_NET
var SQL_SERVERS $HOME_NET
var DNS_SERVERS x.x.x.x, x.x.x.x
var TELNET_SERVERS $HOME_NET
var AIM_SERVERS $HOME_NET

var RULE_PATH /IDS/rules

var SHELLCODE_PORTS !80
var HTTP_PORTS 80
var ORACLE_PORTS 1521


###################################################
# Step #2: Configure preprocessors
#
# General configuration for preprocessors is of 
# the form
# preprocessor <name_of_processor>: <configuration_options>

# frag2: IP defragmentation support
# -------------------------------
# This preprocessor performs IP defragmentation.  This plugin will also
detect
# people launching fragmentation attacks (usually DoS) against hosts.
No
# arguments loads the default configuration of the preprocessor, which
is a 
# 60 second timeout and a 4MB fragment buffer. 

# The following (comma delimited) options are available for frag2
#    timeout [seconds] - sets the number of [seconds] than an unfinished

#                        fragment will be kept around waiting for
completion,
#                        if this time expires the fragment will be
flushed
#    memcap [bytes] - limit frag2 memory usage to [number] bytes
#                      (default:  4194304)

preprocessor frag2

# stream4: stateful inspection/stream reassembly for Snort
#----------------------------------------------------------------------
# Use in concert with the -z [all|est] command line switch to defeat 
# stick/snot against TCP rules.  Also performs full TCP stream 
# reassembly, stateful inspection of TCP streams, etc.  Can statefully
# detect various portscan types, fingerprinting, ECN, etc.

# stateful inspection directive
# no arguments loads the defaults (timeout 30, memcap 8388608)
# options (options are comma delimited):
#   detect_scans - stream4 will detect stealth portscans and generate
alerts
#                  when it sees them when this option is set
#   detect_state_problems - detect TCP state problems, this tends to be
very
#                           noisy because there are a lot of crappy ip
stack
#                           implementations out there
#
#   disable_evasion_alerts - disable fragroute alerting.  Useful for
#                             machines with odd retransmission patterns
#
#   keepstats [machine|binary] - keep session statistics, add "machine"
to 
#                         get them in a flat format for machine reading,
add
#                         "binary" to get them in a unified binary
output 
#                         format
#   noinspect - turn off stateful inspection only
#   timeout [number] - set the session timeout counter to [number]
seconds,
#                      default is 30 seconds
#   memcap [number] - limit stream4 memory usage to [number] bytes
#   log_flushed_streams - if an event is detected on a stream this
option will
#                         cause all packets that are stored in the
stream4
#                         packet buffers to be flushed to disk.  This
only 
#                         works when logging in pcap mode!
#
#   

preprocessor stream4: detect_scans, disable_evasion_alerts

# tcp stream reassembly directive
# no arguments loads the default configuration 
#   Only reassemble the client,
#   Only reassemble the default list of ports (See below),  
#   Give alerts for "bad" streams
#
# Available options (comma delimited):
#   clientonly - reassemble traffic for the client side of a connection
only
#   serveronly - reassemble traffic for the server side of a connection
only
#   both - reassemble both sides of a session
#   noalerts - turn off alerts from the stream reassembly stage of
stream4
#   ports [list] - use the space separated list of ports in [list],
"all" 
#                  will turn on reassembly for all ports, "default" will
turn
#                  on reassembly for ports 21, 23, 25, 53, 80, 143, 110,
111
#                  and 513

preprocessor stream4_reassemble

# http_decode: normalize HTTP requests
# ------------------------------------
# http_decode normalizes HTTP requests from remote 
# machines by converting any %XX character 
# substitutions to their ASCII equivalent. This is
# very useful for doing things like defeating hostile
# attackers trying to stealth themselves from IDSs by
# mixing these substitutions in with the request. 
# Specify the port numbers you want it to analyze as arguments.
# You may also specify -unicode to turn off detection of 
# UNICODE directory traversal, etc attacks.  Use -cginull to
# turn off detection of CGI NULL code attacks.

preprocessor http_decode: 80

# rpc_decode: normalize RPC traffic
# ---------------------------------
# RPC may be sent in alternate encodings besides the usual
# 4-byte encoding that is used by default.  This preprocessor
# normalized RPC traffic in much the same way as the http_decode
# preprocessor.  This plugin takes the ports numbers that RPC 
# services are running on as arguments.

preprocessor rpc_decode: 111 32771

# bo: Back Orifice detector
# -------------------------
# Detects Back Orifice traffic on the network.  This preprocessor
# uses the Back Orifice "encryption" algorithm to search for 
# traffic conforming to the Back Orifice protocol (not BO2K).
# This preprocessor can take two arguments.  The first is "-nobrute"
# which turns off the plugin's brute forcing routine (brute forces 
# the key space of the protocol to find BO traffic).  The second
# argument that can be passed to the routine is a number to use
# as the default key when trying to decrypt the traffic.  The 
# default value is 31337 (just like BO).  Be aware that turning on
# the brute forcing option runs the risk of impacting the overall
# performance of Snort, you've been warned...

preprocessor bo

# telnet_decode: Telnet negotiation string normalizer
# ---------------------------------------------------
# This preprocessor "normalizes" telnet negotiation strings from
# telnet and ftp traffic.  It works in much the same way as the 
# http_decode preprocessor, searching for traffic that breaks up
# the normal data stream of a protocol and replacing it with 
# a normalized representation of that traffic so that the "content"
# pattern matching keyword can work without requiring modifications.
# This preprocessor requires no arguments.

preprocessor telnet_decode

# portscan: detect a variety of portscans
# ---------------------------------------
# portscan preprocessor by Patrick Mullen <p_mullen () linuxrc net>
# This preprocessor detects UDP packets or TCP SYN packets going to
# four different ports in less than three seconds. "Stealth" TCP
# packets are always detected, regardless of these settings.


preprocessor portscan: $HOME_NET 4 3 portscan.log
preprocessor portscan: $EXTERNAL_NET 4 3 portscan.log

# Use portscan-ignorehosts to ignore TCP SYN and UDP "scans" from
# specific networks or hosts to reduce false alerts. It is typical
# to see many false alerts from DNS servers so you may want to
# add your DNS servers here. You can all multiple hosts/networks
# in a whitespace-delimited list.
#

# preprocessor portscan-ignorehosts: 0.0.0.0 $DNS_SERVERS 

# Spade: the Statistical Packet Anomaly Detection Engine
#-------------------------------------------------------
# READ the README.Spade file before using this plugin!
#
# preprocessor spade: <anom-report-thresh> <state-file>
# <log-file> <prob-mode> <checkpoint-freq>  [-corrscore]
#
# set this to a directory Spade can read and write to
# store its files
#
# var SPADEDIR .
#
# preprocessor spade: -1 $SPADEDIR/spade.rcv $SPADEDIR/log.txt 3 50000
#
# put a list of the networks you are interested in Spade observing
packets
# going to here; separate these by spaces
#
# preprocessor spade-homenet: 0.0.0.0/0
#
# this causes Spade to adjust the reporting threshold automatically
# the first argument is the target rate of alerts for normal
circumstances
# (0.01 = 1% or you can give it an hourly rate) after the first hour (or
# however long the period is set to in the second argument), the
reporting
# threshold given above is ignored you can comment this out to have the
# threshold be static, or try one of the other adapt methods below
# preprocessor spade-adapt3: 0.01 60 168
#
# other possible Spade config lines:
# adapt method #1
#preprocessor spade-adapt: 20 2 0.5
# adapt method #2
#preprocessor spade-adapt2: 0.01 15 4 24 7
# offline threshold learning
#preprocessor spade-threshlearn: 200 24
# periodically report on the anom scores and count of packets seen
#preprocessor spade-survey:  $SPADEDIR/survey.txt 60
# print out known stats about packet feature
#preprocessor spade-stats: entropy uncondprob condprob

# arpspoof
#----------------------------------------
# Experimental ARP detection code from Jeff Nathan, detects ARP attacks,

# unicast ARP requests, and specific ARP mapping monitoring.  To make
use
# of this preprocessor you must specify the IP and hardware address of
hosts on # the same layer 2 segment as you.  Specify one host IP MAC
combo per line.
# Also takes a "-unicast" option to turn on unicast ARP request
detection. 

#preprocessor arpspoof
#preprocessor arpspoof_detect_host: 192.168.40.1 f0:0f:00:f0:0f:00


####################################################################
# Step #3: Configure output plugins
#
# Uncomment and configure the output plugins you decide to use.
# General configuration for output plugins is of the form:
#
# output <name_of_plugin>: <configuration_options>
#
# alert_syslog: log alerts to syslog
# ----------------------------------
# Use one or more syslog facilities as arguments
#

# output alert_syslog: LOG_AUTH LOG_ALERT

# log_tcpdump: log packets in binary tcpdump format
# -------------------------------------------------
# The only argument is the output file name.
#
# output log_tcpdump: snort.log

# database: log to a variety of databases
# ---------------------------------------
# See the README.database file for more information about configuring
# and using this plugin.
#
# output database: log, mysql, user=root password=test dbname=db
host=localhost
# output database: alert, postgresql, user=snort dbname=snort
# output database: log, unixodbc, user=snort dbname=snort
# output database: log, mssql, dbname=snort user=snort password=test

# xml: xml logging
# ----------------
# See the README.xml file for more information about configuring
# and using this plugin.
#
# output xml: log, file=/var/log/snortxml

# unified: Snort unified binary format alerting and logging
# -------------------------------------------------------------
# The unified output plugin provides two new formats for logging
# and generating alerts from Snort, the "unified" format.  The
# unified format is a straight binary format for logging data 
# out of Snort that is designed to be fast and efficient.  Used
# with barnyard (the new alert/log processor), most of the overhead
# for logging and alerting to various slow storage mechanisms
# such as databases or the network can now be avoided.  
#
# Check out the spo_unified.h file for the data formats.
#
# Two arguments are supported.
#    filename - base filename to write to (current time_t is appended)
#    limit    - maximum size of spool file in MB (default: 128)
#
# output alert_unified: filename snort.alert, limit 128
# output log_unified: filename snort.log, limit 128


# trap_snmp: SNMP alerting for Snort
# -------------------------------------------------------------
# Read the README-SNMP file for more information on enabling and using
this
# plug-in.
#
#
# The SnmpTrapGenerator outputplugin requires several parameters
# The parameters depend on the Snmpversion that is used (specified)
# For the SNMPv2c case the paremeters will be as follows
#  alert, <sensorID>, {trap|inform} -v <SnmpVersion> -p <portNumber>
#         <hostName> <community>
#
# For SNMPv2c traps 
#
#output trap_snmp: alert, 7, trap -v 2c -p 162  myTrapListener
myCommunity
#
# For SNMPv2c informs 
#
#output trap_snmp: alert, 7, inform -v 2c -p 162  myTrapListener
myCommunity
#
# For SNMPv3 traps with 
# security name = snortUser 
# security level = authentication and privacy
# authentication parameters :
#           authentication protocol = SHA , 
#           authentication pass phrase = SnortAuthPassword
# privacy (encryption) parameters 
#           privacy protocol = DES, 
#           privacy pass phrase = SnortPrivPassword
#
#output trap_snmp: alert, 7, trap -v 3 -p 162 -u snortUser -l authPriv
-a SHA -A SnortAuthPassword -x DES -X SnortPrivPassword myTrapListener
#For SNMPv3 informs with authentication and encryption
#output trap_snmp: alert, 7, inform -v 3 -p 162 -u snortUser -l authPriv
-a SHA -A SnortAuthPassword -x DES -X SnortPrivPassword myTrapListener

# You can optionally define new rule types and associate one or 
# more output plugins specifically to that type.
#
# This example will create a type that will log to just tcpdump.
# ruletype suspicious
# {
#   type log
#   output log_tcpdump: suspicious.log
# }
#
# EXAMPLE RULE FOR SUSPICIOUS RULETYPE:
# suspicious $HOME_NET any -> $HOME_NET 6667 (msg:"Internal IRC
Server";)
#
# This example will create a rule type that will log to syslog
# and a mysql database.
# ruletype redalert
# {
#   type alert
#   output alert_syslog: LOG_AUTH LOG_ALERT
#   output database: log, mysql, user=snort dbname=snort host=localhost
# }
#
# EXAMPLE RULE FOR REDALERT RULETYPE
# redalert $HOME_NET any -> $EXTERNAL_NET 31337 (msg:"Someone is being
LEET"; \
#   flags:A+;)

#
# Include classification & priority settings
#

include classification.config


####################################################################
# Step #4: Customize your rule set
#
# Up to date snort rules are available at http://www.snort.org
#
# The snort web site has documentation about how to write your own 
# custom snort rules.
#
# The rules included with this distribution generate alerts based on
# on suspicious activity. Depending on your network environment, your
# security policies, and what you consider to be suspicious, some of
# these rules may either generate false positives ore may be detecting
# activity you consider to be acceptable; therefore, you are
# encouraged to comment out rules that are not applicable in your
# environment.
#
# Note that using all of the rules at the same time may lead to
# serious packet loss on slower machines. YMMV, use with caution,
# standard disclaimers apply. :)
#
# The following individuals contributed many of rules in this
# distribution.
#
# Credits:
#   Ron Gula <rgula () securitywizards com> of Network Security Wizards
#   Max Vision <vision () whitehats com>
#   Martin Markgraf <martin () mail du gtn com>
#   Fyodor Yarochkin <fygrave () tigerteam net>
#   Nick Rogness <nick () rapidnet com>
#   Jim Forster <jforster () rapidnet com>
#   Scott McIntyre <scott () whoi edu>
#   Tom Vandepoel <Tom.Vandepoel () ubizen com>
#   Brian Caswell <bmc () snort org>
#   Zeno <admin () cgisecurity com>
#   Ryan Russell <ryan () securityfocus com>
# 
#=========================================
# Include all relevant rulesets here 
# 
# shellcode, policy, info, backdoor, and virus rulesets are 
# disabled by default.  These require tuning and maintance.  
# Please read the included specific file for more information.
#=========================================

include $RULE_PATH/bad-traffic.rules
include $RULE_PATH/exploit.rules
include $RULE_PATH/scan.rules
include $RULE_PATH/finger.rules
include $RULE_PATH/ftp.rules
include $RULE_PATH/telnet.rules
include $RULE_PATH/smtp.rules
include $RULE_PATH/rpc.rules
include $RULE_PATH/rservices.rules
include $RULE_PATH/dos.rules
include $RULE_PATH/ddos.rules
include $RULE_PATH/dns.rules
include $RULE_PATH/tftp.rules
include $RULE_PATH/web-cgi.rules
include $RULE_PATH/web-coldfusion.rules
include $RULE_PATH/web-iis.rules
include $RULE_PATH/web-frontpage.rules
include $RULE_PATH/web-misc.rules
include $RULE_PATH/web-attacks.rules
include $RULE_PATH/sql.rules
include $RULE_PATH/x11.rules
include $RULE_PATH/icmp.rules
include $RULE_PATH/netbios.rules
include $RULE_PATH/misc.rules
include $RULE_PATH/attack-responses.rules
include $RULE_PATH/backdoor.rules
# include $RULE_PATH/shellcode.rules
# include $RULE_PATH/policy.rules
# include $RULE_PATH/porn.rules
# include $RULE_PATH/info.rules
# include $RULE_PATH/icmp-info.rules
# include $RULE_PATH/virus.rules


include local.rules

****************SNORTD.CONF******************


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