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Subsections
1.5 Inline Mode
Snort 2.3.0 RC1 integrated the intrusion prevention system (IPS) capability of
snort_inline into the official Snort project. Snort_inline obtains packets
from iptables instead of libpcap and then uses new rule types to help iptables
pass or drop packets based on Snort rules.
In order for snort_inline to work properly, you must download and compile the
iptables code to include ``make install-devel''
(http://www.iptables.org). This will install the libipq library
that allows snort_inline to interface with iptables. Also, you must build and
install LibNet, which is available from http://www.packetfactory.net.
There are three rule types you can use when running Snort with snort_inline:
- drop - The drop rule type will tell iptables to drop the packet and log it
via usual Snort means.
- reject - The reject rule type will tell iptables to drop the packet, log it
via usual Snort means, and send a TCP reset if the protocol is
TCP or an icmp port unreachable if the protocol is UDP.
- sdrop - The sdrop rule type will tell iptables to drop the packet. Nothing
is logged.
NOTE
When using a reject rule, there are two options you can use to send
TCP resets:
1.5.1 Snort Inline Rule Application Order
The current rule application order is:
->activation->dynamic->drop->sdrop->reject->alert->pass->log
This will ensure that a drop rule has precedence over an alert or log rule.
You can use the -o flag to the rule application order to:
->activation->dynamic->pass->drop->sdrop->reject->alert->log
1.5.2 New STREAM4 Options for Use with Snort Inline
When using snort_inline, you can use two additional stream4 options:
- inline_state (no arguments)
This option causes Snort to drop TCP packets that are not associated with
an existing TCP session, and is not a valid TCP initiator.
- midstream_drop_alerts (no arguments)
By default, when running in inline mode, Snort will silently drop any
packets that were picked up in midstream and would have caused an alert
to be generated, if not for the 'flow: established' option. This is to
mitigate stick/snot type attacks when the user hasn't enabled
inline_state. If you want to see the alerts that are silently
dropped, enable this keyword. Note that by enabling this keyword,
you have opened yourself up to stick/snot-type attacks.
For more information about Stream4, see Section .
1.5.3 Replacing Packets with Snort Inline
Additionally, Jed Haile's content replace code allows you to modify packets
before they leave the network. For example:
alert tcp any any <> any 80 (msg: "tcp replace"; content:"GET"; replace:"BET";)
alert udp any any <> any 53 (msg: "udp replace"; \
content: "yahoo"; replace: "xxxxx";)
These rules will comb tcp port 80 traffic looking for GET, and udp port 53
traffic looking for yahoo. Once they are found, they are replaced with BET and
xxxxx, respectively. The only catch is that the replace must be the same
length as the content.
1.5.4 Installing Snort Inline
To install Snort inline, use the following command:
./configure --enable-inline
make
make install
First, you need to ensure that the ip_queue module is loaded. Then,
you need to send traffic to snort_inline using the QUEUE target. For
example,
iptables -A OUTPUT -p tcp --dport 80 -j QUEUE
sends all TCP traffic leaving the firewall going to port 80 to the QUEUE
target. This is what sends the packet from kernel space to user space
(snort_inline). A quick way to get all outbound traffic going to the
QUEUE is to use the rc.firewall script created and maintained by the
Honeynet Project (http://www.honeynet.org/papers/honeynet/tools/)
This script is well-documented and allows you to direct packets
to snort_inline by simply changing the QUEUE variable to yes.
Finally, start snort_inline.
snort_inline -QDc ../etc/drop.conf -l /var/log/snort
You can use the following command line options:
- -Q - Gets packets from iptables.
- -D - Runs snort_inline in daemon mode. The process ID is stored
at /var/run/snort_inline.pid
- -c - Reads the following configuration file.
- -l - Logs to the following directory.
Ideally, snort_inline will be run using only its own drop.rules. If
you want to use Snort for just alerting, a separate process should be
running with its own ruleset.
The Honeynet Snort Inline Toolkit is a statically compiled snort_inline
binary put together by the
Honeynet Project for the Linux operating system. It comes with a set
of drop.rules, the snort_inline binary, a snort-inline rotation shell
script, and a good README. It can be found at:
http://www.honeynet.org/papers/honeynet/tools/
If you run snort_inline and see something like this:
Initializing Output Plugins!
Reading from iptables
Log directory = /var/log/snort
Initializing Inline mode
InlineInit: : Failed to send netlink message: Connection refused
More than likely, the ip_queue module is not loaded or ip_queue
support is not compiled into your kernel. Either recompile
your kernel to support ip_queue, or load the module.
The ip_queue module is loaded by executing:
insmod ip_queue
Also, if you want to ensure snort_inline is getting packets, you can
start it in the following manner:
snort_inline -Qvc <configuration file>
This will display the header of every packet that snort_inline sees.
Next: 1.6 Miscellaneous
Up: 1. Snort Overview
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