
I'm interested in this. We use some HMRs to do various manipulations, but is there a method to 'drop' traffic matching HMRs, or cause a DOS/ACL block on the source? ________________________________________ From: voiceops-bounces at voiceops.org [voiceops-bounces at voiceops.org] On Behalf Of anorexicpoodle [anorexicpoodle at gmail.com] Sent: Saturday, 27 November 2010 7:15 AM To: Christian Pena Cc: voiceops at voiceops.org Subject: Re: [VoiceOps] Strange register attack I have a fairly substantial HMR ruleset on our access side doing everything from user agent filtering, to collecting custom values for CDR's, and while there is a CPU hit, its not nearly as bad as you might think. On Fri, 2010-11-26 at 09:26 -0500, Christian Pena wrote: We have seen similar things on our network. I never setup the HMRs on the access side of the Acme thinking they would cause a substantial increase in CPU usage. Anyone have any luck in doing this on a production network? Thanks, Chris anorexicpoodle wrote: This is a well-known attack. If you're running an Acme, contact TAC, they have a HMR ruleset that will blackhole this attack based on the user agent, though if your access side is tuned up well enough it should black-hole itself pretty quickly. On Thu, 2010-11-25 at 23:44 -0600, Lee Riemer wrote: Yes, this is normal. Just figure out how to deal with it. On 11/25/2010 11:03 PM, Darren Schreiber wrote:
We've been suffering from this, too. The SIP headers are hacked and completely bogus. They seem to be from only a few select IPs from us.
I'm about ready to abandon port 5060 :-)
- Darren
On 11/25/10 9:03 PM, "Peter Childs"<PChilds at internode.com.au<mailto:PChilds at internode.com.au>> wrote:
sql> select count(ua) from sip_trace where ua = 'friendly-scanner'; COUNT(UA): 22330
We get thousands of these scans from all over the joint all the time.
That is in the last 8 hours...
sql> select count(fromip), fromip from sip_trace where ua = 'friendly-scanner' group by fromip; COUNT(FROMIP): 3 FROMIP : 124.195.52.250
COUNT(FROMIP): 1 FROMIP : 124.254.44.172
COUNT(FROMIP): 13127 FROMIP : 202.101.187.66
COUNT(FROMIP): 9199 FROMIP : 74.218.78.29 (4 rows, 10201 ms)
I occasionally have discussions with others about http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5635 using some thresholds to block some of these at the border, with the problem being that one day someone will use some cloud platform and we will take out we shouldn't.
The ACME SBCs we use seem to eat this stuff up ok, but some of the issues we encounter 1. Customers with SIP CPE where a high volume of SIP trash causes the CPE to lock 2. Customers running Asterisk implementations getting cracked and owned
Cheers, Peter
On 26/11/2010, at 1:32 PM, Colin wrote:
Tonight i'm seeing hundreds of register attempts per second to one of my SBC's from an IP in china 61.142.250.96.
the From: and to: line is always one of these 2 below.
\"118\"<sip:118 at my SBC IP>; source port 5063 \"qwerty\"<sip:qwerty at my SBC IP>; source port 5067
user-agent: friendly-scanner is always.
Looks like sipvicious default user agent. Anyone seen a register flood like this before?
Colin
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