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Suricata & Iptables cheatsheet
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Iptables
Chains
Iptables chains are just lists of rules, processed in order. You will always find the following 3, but others such as NAT might also be supported.
- Input – This chain is used to control the behavior of incoming connections.
- Forward – This chain is used for incoming connections that aren’t being delivered locally. Think of a router – data is always being sent to it but rarely actually destined for the router itself; the data is just forwarded to its target. Unless you’re doing some kind of routing, NATing, or something else on your system that requires forwarding, you won’t even use this chain.
- Output – This chain is used for outgoing connections.
# Delete all rules
iptables -F
# List all rules
iptables -L
iptables -S
# Block IP addresses & ports
iptables -I INPUT -s ip1,ip2,ip3 -j DROP
iptables -I INPUT -p tcp --dport 443 -j DROP
iptables -I INPUT -s ip1,ip2 -p tcp --dport 443 -j DROP
# String based drop
## Strings are case sensitive (pretty easy to bypass if you want to check an SQLi for example)
iptables -I INPUT -p tcp --dport <port_listening> -m string --algo bm --string '<payload>' -j DROP
iptables -I OUTPUT -p tcp --sport <port_listening> -m string --algo bm --string 'CTF{' -j DROP
## You can also check for the hex, base64 and double base64 of the expected CTF flag chars
# Drop every input port except some
iptables -P INPUT DROP # Default to drop
iptables -I INPUT -p tcp --dport 8000 -j ACCEPT
iptables -I INPUT -p tcp --dport 443 -j ACCEPT
# Persist Iptables
## Debian/Ubuntu:
apt-get install iptables-persistent
iptables-save > /etc/iptables/rules.v4
ip6tables-save > /etc/iptables/rules.v6
iptables-restore < /etc/iptables/rules.v4
##RHEL/CentOS:
iptables-save > /etc/sysconfig/iptables
ip6tables-save > /etc/sysconfig/ip6tables
iptables-restore < /etc/sysconfig/iptables
Suricata
Install & Config
# Install details from: https://suricata.readthedocs.io/en/suricata-6.0.0/install.html#install-binary-packages
# Ubuntu
add-apt-repository ppa:oisf/suricata-stable
apt-get update
apt-get install suricata
# Debian
echo "deb http://http.debian.net/debian buster-backports main" > \
/etc/apt/sources.list.d/backports.list
apt-get update
apt-get install suricata -t buster-backports
# CentOS
yum install epel-release
yum install suricata
# Get rules
suricata-update
suricata-update list-sources #List sources of the rules
suricata-update enable-source et/open #Add et/open rulesets
suricata-update
## To use the dowloaded rules update the following line in /etc/suricata/suricata.yaml
default-rule-path: /var/lib/suricata/rules
rule-files:
- suricata.rules
# Run
## Add rules in /etc/suricata/rules/suricata.rules
systemctl suricata start
suricata -c /etc/suricata/suricata.yaml -i eth0
# Reload rules
suricatasc -c ruleset-reload-nonblocking
## or set the follogin in /etc/suricata/suricata.yaml
detect-engine:
- rule-reload: true
# Validate suricata config
suricata -T -c /etc/suricata/suricata.yaml -v
# Configure suricata as IPs
## Config drop to generate alerts
## Search for the following lines in /etc/suricata/suricata.yaml and remove comments:
- drop:
alerts: yes
flows: all
## Forward all packages to the queue where suricata can act as IPS
iptables -I INPUT -j NFQUEUE
iptables -I OUTPUT -j NFQUEUE
## Start suricata in IPS mode
suricata -c /etc/suricata/suricata.yaml -q 0
### or modify the service config file as:
systemctl edit suricata.service
[Service]
ExecStart=
ExecStart=/usr/bin/suricata -c /etc/suricata/suricata.yaml --pidfile /run/suricata.pid -q 0 -vvv
Type=simple
systemctl daemon-reload
Rules Definitions
A rule/signature consists of the following:
- The action, determines what happens when the signature matches.
- The header, defines the protocol, IP addresses, ports and direction of the rule.
- The rule options, define the specifics of the rule.
Valid actions are
- alert - generate an alert
- pass - stop further inspection of the packet
- drop - drop packet and generate alert
- reject - send RST/ICMP unreachable error to the sender of the matching packet.
- rejectsrc - same as just reject
- rejectdst - send RST/ICMP error packet to the receiver of the matching packet.
- rejectboth - send RST/ICMP error packets to both sides of the conversation.
Protocols
- tcp (for tcp-traffic)
- udp
- icmp
- ip (ip stands for ‘all’ or ‘any’)
- layer7 protocols: http, ftp, tls, smb, dns, ssh... (more in the docs)
Source and Destination Addresses
It supports IP ranges, negations and a list of addresses:
Example | Meaning |
---|---|
! 1.1.1.1 | Every IP address but 1.1.1.1 |
![1.1.1.1, 1.1.1.2] | Every IP address but 1.1.1.1 and 1.1.1.2 |
$HOME_NET | Your setting of HOME_NET in yaml |
[$EXTERNAL_NET, !$HOME_NET] | EXTERNAL_NET and not HOME_NET |
[10.0.0.0/24, !10.0.0.5] | 10.0.0.0/24 except for 10.0.0.5 |
Source and Destination Ports
It supports port ranges, negations and lists of ports
Example | Meaning |
---|---|
any | any address |
[80, 81, 82] | port 80, 81 and 82 |
[80: 82] | Range from 80 till 82 |
[1024: ] | From 1024 till the highest port-number |
!80 | Every port but 80 |
[80:100,!99] | Range from 80 till 100 but 99 excluded |
[1:80,![2,4]] | Range from 1-80, except ports 2 and 4 |
Direction
It's possible to indicate the direction of the communication rule being applied:
source -> destination
source <> destination (both directions)
Keywords
There are hundreds of options available in Suricata to search for the specific packet you are looking for, here it will be mentioned if something interesting is found. Check the documentation for more!
# Meta Keywords
msg: "description"; #Set a description to the rule
sid:123 #Set a unique ID to the rule
rev:1 #Rule revision number
config classification: not-suspicious,Not Suspicious Traffic,3 #Classify
reference: url, www.info.com #Reference
priority:1; #Set a priority
metadata: key value, key value; #Extra metadata
# Filter by geolocation
geoip: src,RU;
# ICMP type & Code
itype:<10;
icode:0
# Filter by string
content: "something"
content: |61 61 61| #Hex: AAA
content: "http|3A|//" #Mix string and hex
content: "abc"; nocase; #Case insensitive
reject tcp any any -> any any (msg: "php-rce"; content: "eval"; nocase; metadata: tag php-rce; sid:101; rev: 1;)
# Replaces string
## Content and replace string must have the same length
content:"abc"; replace: "def"
alert tcp any any -> any any (msg: "flag replace"; content: "CTF{a6st"; replace: "CTF{u798"; nocase; sid:100; rev: 1;)
## The replace works in both input and output packets
## But it only modifies the first match
# Filter by regex
pcre:"/<regex>/opts"
pcre:"/NICK .*USA.*[0-9]{3,}/i"
drop tcp any any -> any any (msg:"regex"; pcre:"/CTF\{[\w]{3}/i"; sid:10001;)
# Other examples
## Drop by port
drop tcp any any -> any 8000 (msg:"8000 port"; sid:1000;)
🎙️ HackTricks LIVE Twitch Wednesdays 5.30pm (UTC) 🎙️ - 🎥 Youtube 🎥
- Do you work in a cybersecurity company? Do you want to see your company advertised in HackTricks? or do you want to have access to the latest version of the PEASS or download HackTricks in PDF? Check the SUBSCRIPTION PLANS!
- Discover The PEASS Family, our collection of exclusive NFTs
- Get the official PEASS & HackTricks swag
- Join the 💬 Discord group or the telegram group or follow me on Twitter 🐦@carlospolopm.
- Share your hacking tricks by submitting PRs to the hacktricks repo and hacktricks-cloud repo.