In this tutorial you will learn how to configure Suricata’s built-in Intrusion Prevention System (IPS) mode on Ubuntu 20.04. By default Suricata is configured to run as an Intrusion Detection System (IDS), which only generates alerts and logs suspicious traffic. When you enable IPS mode, Suricata can actively drop suspicious network traffic in addition to generating alerts for further analysis.
Before enabling IPS mode, it is important to check which signatures you have enabled, and their default actions. An incorrectly configured signature, or a signature that is overly broad may result in dropping legitimate traffic to your network, or even block you from accessing your servers over SSH and other management protocols.
In the first part of this tutorial you will check the signatures that you have installed and enabled. You will also learn how to include your own signatures. Once you know which signatures you would like to use in IPS mode, you’ll convert their default action to drop or reject traffic. With your signatures in place, you’ll learn how to send network traffic through Suricata using the netfilter NFQUEUE iptables target, and then generate some invalid network traffic to ensure that Suricata drops it as expected.
If you have been following this tutorial series then you should already have Suricata running on an Ubuntu 20.04 server.
If you still need to install Suricata then you can follow How To Install Suricata on Ubuntu 20.04
You should also have the ET Open Ruleset downloaded using the suricata-update
command, and included in your Suricata signatures.
The jq
command line JSON processing tool. If you do not have it installed from a previous tutorial, you can do so using the apt
command:
- sudo apt update
- sudo apt install jq
You may also have custom signatures that you would like to use from the previous Understanding Suricata Signatures tutorial.
The previous tutorials in this series explored how to install and configure Suricata, as well as how to understand signatures. If you would like to create and include your own rules then you need to edit Suricata’s /etc/suricata/suricata.yaml
file to include a custom path to your signatures.
First, let’s find your server’s public IPs so that you can use them in your custom signatures. To find your IPs you can use the ip
command:
- ip -brief address show
You should receive output like the following:
Outputlo UNKNOWN 127.0.0.1/8 ::1/128
eth0 UP 203.0.113.5/20 10.20.0.5/16 2001:DB8::1/32 fe80::94ad:d4ff:fef9:cee0/64
eth1 UP 10.137.0.2/16 fe80::44a2:ebff:fe91:5187/64
Your public IP address(es) will be similar to the highlighted 203.0.113.5
and 2001:DB8::1/32
IPs in the output.
Now let’s create the following custom signature to scan for SSH traffic to non-SSH ports and include it in a file called /var/lib/suricata/rules/local.rules
. Open the file with nano
or your preferred editor:
- sudo nano /var/lib/suricata/rules/local.rules
Copy and paste the following signature:
alert ssh any any -> 203.0.113.5 !22 (msg:"SSH TRAFFIC on non-SSH port"; flow:to_client, not_established; classtype: misc-attack; target: dest_ip; sid:1000000;)
alert ssh any any -> 2001:DB8::1/32 !22 (msg:"SSH TRAFFIC on non-SSH port"; flow:to_client, not_established; classtype: misc-attack; target: dest_ip; sid:1000001;)
Substitute your server’s public IP address in place of the 203.0.113.5
and 2001:DB8::1/32
addresses in the rule. If you are not using IPv6 then you can skip adding that signature in this and the following rules.
You can continue adding custom signatures to this local.rules
file depending on your network and applications. For example, if you wanted to alert about HTTP traffic to non-standard ports, you could use the following signatures:
alert http any any -> 203.0.113.5 !80 (msg:"HTTP REQUEST on non-HTTP port"; flow:to_client, not_established; classtype:misc-activity; sid:1000002;)
alert http any any -> 2001:DB8::1/32 !80 (msg:"HTTP REQUEST on non-HTTP port"; flow:to_client, not_established; classtype:misc-activity; sid:1000003;)
To add a signature that checks for TLS traffic to ports other than the default 443
for web servers, add the following:
alert tls any any -> 203.0.113.5 !443 (msg:"TLS TRAFFIC on non-TLS HTTP port"; flow:to_client, not_established; classtype:misc-activity; sid:1000004;)
alert tls any any -> 2001:DB8::1/32 !443 (msg:"TLS TRAFFIC on non-TLS HTTP port"; flow:to_client, not_established; classtype:misc-activity; sid:1000005;)
When you are done adding signatures, save and close the file. If you are using nano
, you can do so with CTRL+X
, then Y
and ENTER
to confirm. If you are using vi
, press ESC
and then :x
then ENTER
to save and exit.
Now that you have some custom signatures defined, edit Suricata’s /etc/suricata/suricata.yaml
configuration file using nano
or your preferred editor to include them:
- sudo nano /etc/suricata/suricata.yaml
Find the rule-files:
portion of the configuration. If you are using nano
use CTRL+_
and then enter the line number 1879
. If you are using vi
enter 1879gg
to go to the line. The exact location in your file may be different, but you should be in the correct general region of the file.
Edit the section and add the following highlighted - local.rules
line:
. . .
rule-files:
- suricata.rules
- local.rules
. . .
Save and exit the file. Be sure to validate Suricata’s configuration after adding your rules. To do so run the following command:
- sudo suricata -T -c /etc/suricata/suricata.yaml -v
The test can take some time depending on how many rules you have loaded in the default suricata.rules
file. If you find the test takes too long, you can comment out the - suricata.rules
line in the configuration by adding a #
to the beginning of the line and then run your configuration test again. Be sure to remove the #
comment if you plan to use the suricata.rules
signature in your final running configuration.
Once you are satisfied with the signatures that you have created or included using the suricata-update
tool, you can proceed to the next step, where you’ll switch the default action for your signatures from alert
or log
to actively dropping traffic.
Now that you have your custom signatures tested and working with Suricata, you can change the action to drop
or reject
. When Suricata is operating in IPS mode, these actions will actively block invalid traffic for any matching signature.
These two actions are described in the previous tutorial in this series, Understanding Suricata Signatures. The choice of which action to use is up to you. A drop
action will immediately discard a packet and any subsequent packets that belong to the network flow. A reject
action will send both the client and server a reset packet if the traffic is TCP-based, and an ICMP error packet for any other protocol.
Let’s use the custom rules from the previous section and convert them to use the drop
action, since the traffic that they match is likely to be a network scan, or some other invalid connection.
Open your /var/lib/suricata/rules/local.rules
file using nano
or your preferred editor and change the alert
action at the beginning of each line in the file to drop
:
- sudo nano /var/lib/suricata/rules/local.rules
drop ssh any any -> 203.0.113.5 !22 (msg:"SSH TRAFFIC on non-SSH port"; classtype: misc-attack; target: dest_ip; sid:1000000;)
drop ssh any any -> 2001:DB8::1/32 !22 (msg:"SSH TRAFFIC on non-SSH port"; classtype: misc-attack; target: dest_ip; sid:1000001;)
. . .
Repeat the step above for any signatures in /var/lib/suricata/rules/suricata.rules
that you would like to convert to drop
or reject
mode.
Note: If you ran suricata-update
in the prerequisite tutorial, you may have more than 30,000 signatures included in your suricata.rules file
.
If you convert every signature to drop
or reject
you risk blocking legitimate access to your network or servers. Instead, leave the rules in suricata.rules
for the time being, and add your custom signatures to local.rules
. Suricata will continue to generate alerts for suspicious traffic that is described by the signatures in suricata.rules
while it is running in IPS mode.
After you have a few days or weeks of alerts collected, you can analyze them and choose the relevant signatures to convert to drop
or reject
based on their sid
.
Once you have all the signatures configured with the action that you would like them to take, the next step is to reconfigure and then restart Suricata in IPS mode.
nfqueue
ModeSuricata runs in IDS mode by default, which means it will not actively block network traffic. To switch to IPS mode, you’ll need to edit Suricata’s /etc/default/suricata
configuration file.
Open the file in nano
or your preferred editor:
- sudo nano /etc/default/suricata
Find the LISTENMODE=af-packet
line and comment it out by adding a #
to the beginning of the line. Then add a new line LISTENMODE=nfqueue
line that tells Suricata to run in IPS mode.
Your file should have the following highlighted lines in it when you are done editing:
. . .
# LISTENMODE=af-packet
LISTENMODE=nfqueue
. . .
Save and close the file. Now you can restart Suricata using systemctl
:
- sudo systemctl restart suricata.service
Check Suricata’s status using systemctl
:
- sudo systemctl status suricata.service
You should receive output like the following:
Output● suricata.service - LSB: Next Generation IDS/IPS
Loaded: loaded (/etc/init.d/suricata; generated)
Active: active (running) since Wed 2021-12-01 15:54:28 UTC; 2s ago
Docs: man:systemd-sysv-generator(8)
Process: 1452 ExecStart=/etc/init.d/suricata start (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
Tasks: 12 (limit: 9513)
Memory: 63.6M
CGroup: /system.slice/suricata.service
└─1472 /usr/bin/suricata -c /etc/suricata/suricata.yaml --pidfile /var/run/suricata.pid -q 0 -D -vvv
Dec 01 15:54:28 suricata systemd[1]: Starting LSB: Next Generation IDS/IPS...
Dec 01 15:54:28 suricata suricata[1452]: Starting suricata in IPS (nfqueue) mode... done.
Dec 01 15:54:28 suricata systemd[1]: Started LSB: Next Generation IDS/IPS.
Note the highlighted active (running)
line that indicates Suricata restarted successfully. Also note the Starting suricata in IPS (nfqueue) mode... done.
line, which confirms Suricata is now running in IPS mode.
With this change you are now ready to send traffic to Suricata using the UFW firewall in the next step.
Now that you have configured Suricata to process traffic in IPS mode, the next step is to direct incoming packets to Suricata. If you followed the prerequisite tutorials for this series and are using an Ubuntu 20.04 system, you should have the Uncomplicated Firewall (UFW) installed and enabled.
To add the required rules for Suricata to UFW, you will need to edit the firewall files in the /etc/ufw/before.rules
(IPv4 rules) and /etc/ufw/before6.rules
(IPv6) directly.
Open the first file for IPv4 rules using nano
or your preferred editor:
- sudo nano /etc/ufw/before.rules
Near the beginning of the file, insert the following highlighted lines:
. . .
# Don't delete these required lines, otherwise there will be errors
*filter
:ufw-before-input - [0:0]
:ufw-before-output - [0:0]
:ufw-before-forward - [0:0]
:ufw-not-local - [0:0]
# End required lines
## Start Suricata NFQUEUE rules
-I INPUT 1 -p tcp --dport 22 -j NFQUEUE --queue-bypass
-I OUTPUT 1 -p tcp --sport 22 -j NFQUEUE --queue-bypass
-I FORWARD -j NFQUEUE
-I INPUT 2 -j NFQUEUE
-I OUTPUT 2 -j NFQUEUE
## End Suricata NFQUEUE rules
# allow all on loopback
-A ufw-before-input -i lo -j ACCEPT
-A ufw-before-output -o lo -j ACCEPT
. . .
Save and exit the file when you are done editing it. Now add the same highlighted lines to the same section in the /etc/ufw/before6.rules
file:
- sudo nano /etc/ufw/before.rules
Ensure that both files have the same contents. Save and exit the file when you are done editing it.
The first two INPUT
and OUTPUT
rules are used to bypass Suricata so that you can connect to your server using SSH, even when Suricata is not running. Without these rules, an incorrect or overly broad signature could block your SSH access. Additionally, if Suricata is stopped, all traffic will be sent to the NFQUEUE
target and then dropped since Suricata is not running.
The next FORWARD
rule ensures that if your server is acting as a gateway for other systems, all that traffic will also go to Suricata for processing.
The final two INPUT
and OUTPUT
rules send all remaining traffic that is not SSH traffic to Suricata for processing.
Restart UFW to load the new rules:
- sudo systemctl restart ufw.service
Note: If you are using another firewall you will need to modify these rules to match the format your firewall expects.
If you are using iptables, then you can insert these rules directly using the iptables
and ip6tables
commands. However, you will need to ensure that the rules are persistent across reboots with a tool like iptables-persistent
.
If you are using firewalld
, then the following rules will direct traffic to Suricata:
- firewall-cmd --permanent --direct --add-rule ipv4 filter INPUT 0 -p tcp --dport 22 -j NFQUEUE --queue-bypass
- firewall-cmd --permanent --direct --add-rule ipv4 filter INPUT 1 -j NFQUEUE
- firewall-cmd --permanent --direct --add-rule ipv6 filter INPUT 0 -p tcp --dport 22 -j NFQUEUE --queue-bypass
- firewall-cmd --permanent --direct --add-rule ipv6 filter INPUT 1 -j NFQUEUE
-
- firewall-cmd --permanent --direct --add-rule ipv4 filter FORWARD 0 -j NFQUEUE
- firewall-cmd --permanent --direct --add-rule ipv6 filter FORWARD 0 -j NFQUEUE
-
- firewall-cmd --permanent --direct --add-rule ipv4 filter OUTPUT 0 -p tcp --sport 22 -j NFQUEUE --queue-bypass
- firewall-cmd --permanent --direct --add-rule ipv4 filter OUTPUT 1 -j NFQUEUE
- firewall-cmd --permanent --direct --add-rule ipv6 filter OUTPUT 0 -p tcp --sport 22 -j NFQUEUE --queue-bypass
- firewall-cmd --permanent --direct --add-rule ipv6 filter OUTPUT 1 -j NFQUEUE
At this point in the tutorial you have Suricata configured to run in IPS mode, and your network traffic is being sent to Suricata by default. You will be able to restart your server at any time and your Suricata and firewall rules will be persistent.
The last step in this tutorial is to verify Suricata is dropping traffic correctly.
Now that you have Suricata and your firewall configured to process network traffic, you can test whether Suricata will drop packets that match your custom and other included signatures.
Recall signature sid:2100498
from the previous tutorial, which is modified in this example to drop
matching packets:
drop ip any any -> any any (msg:"GPL ATTACK_RESPONSE id check returned root"; content:"uid=0|28|root|29|"; classtype:bad-unknown; sid:2100498; rev:7; metadata:created_at 2010_09_23, updated_at 2010_09_23;)
Find and edit the rule in your /var/lib/suricata/rules/suricata.rules
file to use the drop
action if you have the signature included there. Otherwise, add the rule to your /var/lib/suricata/rules/local.rules
file.
Send Suricata the SIGUSR2
signal to get it to reload its signatures:
- sudo kill -usr2 $(pidof suricata)
Now test the rule using curl
:
- curl --max-time 5 http://testmynids.org/uid/index.html
You should receive an error stating that the request timed out, which indicates Suricata blocked the HTTP response:
Outputcurl: (28) Operation timed out after 5000 milliseconds with 0 out of 39 bytes received
You can confirm that Suricata dropped the HTTP response using jq
to examine the eve.log
file:
- jq 'select(.alert .signature_id==2100498)' /var/log/suricata/eve.json
You should receive output like the following:
Output{
. . .
"community_id": "1:tw19kjR2LeWacglA094gRfEEuDU=",
"alert": {
"action": "blocked",
"gid": 1,
"signature_id": 2100498,
"rev": 7,
"signature": "GPL ATTACK_RESPONSE id check returned root",
"category": "Potentially Bad Traffic",
"severity": 2,
"metadata": {
"created_at": [
"2010_09_23"
],
"updated_at": [
"2010_09_23"
]
}
},
"http": {
"hostname": "testmynids.org",
"url": "/uid/index.html",
"http_user_agent": "curl/7.68.0",
"http_content_type": "text/html",
"http_method": "GET",
"protocol": "HTTP/1.1",
"status": 200,
"length": 39
},
. . .
The highlighted "action": "blocked"
line confirms that the signature matched, and Suricata dropped or rejected the test HTTP request.
In this tutorial you configured Suricata to block suspicious network traffic using its built-in IPS mode. You also added custom signatures to examine and block SSH, HTTP, and TLS traffic on non-standard ports. To tie everything together, you also added firewall rules to direct traffic through Suricata for processing.
Now that you have Suricata installed and configured in IPS mode, and can write your own signatures that either alert on or drop suspicious traffic, you can continue monitoring your servers and networks, and refining your signatures.
Once you are satisfied with your Suricata signatures and configuration, you can continue with the last tutorial in this series, which will guide you through sending logs from Suricata to a Security and Information Event Management (SIEM) system built using the Elastic Stack.
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Suricata is a flexible, high performance Network Security Monitoring (NSM) tool that can detect and block attacks against your network.
This series will explore how to install Suricata on various operating systems, how to understand and write your own signatures to detect malicious or unknown traffic, and how to configure Suricata in both Intrusion Detection (IDS) and Intrusion Prevention (IPS) modes.
Once you have Suricata configured and running on your network, you’ll learn how to build your own Security Information and Event Management (SIEM) tool on top of the data that Suricata collects.
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