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SSFW super simple firewall - actually its a slightly brutal firewall system (ie FragHaus - "Whare" (farry) is Maori for House). Individual "Gerka's" maintain the defence. The rest is just "fluff".

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SS-FragWhare

SSFW is a super simple firewall, based around ip command.

Actually its a slightly brutal firewall system (ie FragHaus - "Whare" (farry) is Maori for House). Individual "Gerka" scripts maintain the defence, and can be adjusted from "soft" defence, to "brutal" defence.

(Wendel of LevelOneTech fame assessment of a brutally simple firewall)


I shall quote this “officially” 1st New Year commit message

gerka: I woke up just now, looked at the last entry and ..

just realised now that what I originally wanted is what the gerka's are, a super simple firewall, the rest is just fluff from me wanting to automate various stuff, generate logs and block list, and adding other forms of block analysis & feedback, to simplify what you need to type on (a sometimes dodgey) remote server link thats SSH but not.

But Hey, the "fluff" has an installer now :)

searching "super simple firewall" now shows this project 1st.


The original standalone SS-FragWhare (sshd) "Gerka" script is also available on the LevelOneTechs Forum, along with some studies and analysis on the IP addresses, ranges, timings, and URL attempts. There is also a commentary on why and how this project came about, as well as some resulting associated filesystem driver development discussions in the later posts of the thread.

Current Standalone Gerka's

ss-fragwhare-sshd-gerka.sh

Super Simple SSHd IP blocking

https://forum.level1techs.com/t/automated-network-threat-response/174480/12

A Simple hits/sec Algorythim

https://forum.level1techs.com/t/automated-network-threat-response/174480/11

Automated Network Threat Response

https://forum.level1techs.com/t/automated-network-threat-response/174480

Devember 2021 Project Entry

https://forum.level1techs.com/t/devember-2021-brutally-simple-firewall/179875

What is SSFW

The firewall system is a combination of:

  • web server url "capture" list generator
  • per second log file IPv4 blocker
  • pre-generated block list data

SSFW uses shell scripts which are written for #!/bin/sh and use the .sh extention, so they should work on any POSIX compliant platform with a shell, including non-Linux based systems. You might want to start IPv4 block from a "clean slate" (lots of hosting services are blocked by ranges). You also might want to pre-scan the URL block list for common names and locations NOT to use on your webserver.

SSFW Prerequisites

For the PHP viewer scripts any version of PHP will work, as long as it can write its own files and contents. Everything else uses off-the-shelf commands:

  • ip add blackhole (only accessible as root)
  • id (used by installer to verify user:group)
  • $$ (the currently running script process ID)
  • ls -1 (1 per line, default formatting output used)
  • echo -n (used to join the ip output to IPv4 logs)
  • grep (the heart if the IPv4 gathering and lookup)
  • cut (used extensively, cheap IPv4 formating check)
  • tail (10 lines by deafult, but 20 should be fine too)
  • sort (used as little as possible)
  • uniq (only used once with a 10 line tail)
  • date +%s%N date -Iseconds date -Ihours
  • sed (in pipes. only one script uses in-place editing)
  • find -mtime -1 (-mtime works with BusyBox)
  • mkdir -p (could be a problem on BSD systems)
  • chown www:www (where the script was run as root)
  • chmod a+x (for the install.sh script)
  • crontab (or any "cronjob" service)
  • php (any version with file write access)

NOTES:

  • BusyBox does not support "nano-seconds" (%N) output for the date +%s%N command, but it does not "error out" either or otherwise break the scripts (only used to calculate shell script execution times).
  • BusyBox find command has limited time support options, so we use the -mtime option (as opposed to other more appropriate -?time options).
  • Also ls -1 is prefered over sort as it requires less memory, and is therefore lighter and faster (due to ls having human-readable ordered output by default).
  • All the shell scripts use the .sh extension, and execute via #!/bin/sh.

SSFW Block Lists

The IPv4 and URL block lists are gathered from actual hack attempts. The resulting IPv4 addresses are then assessed (manually) for assignment location and entity, where a blocked range may be generated as a result.

Not all blocked ranges are limited to assigned entity ranges (CIDR), sometimes analysis shows a higher or multiple range exclusion may be more practical.

Web server URL's are mostly due to known exploit paths, known paths on weak hardware or firmware, or common alternate paths to web software. All were collect from actual attempts, of which there are clearly lists available (based on log file analysis).

The IPv4 blocking script has a --load option that can be used at boot time, to reinstate the block list. The ip command does not maintain data across reboots, which is one of the main reasons for other firewall software (like iptables).

Raw data block lists are available archived in both text format, and as filesystem entries, to make it easier to adapt to any one particular system.

The latest version is in ssfw-blocklists/latest.txt and collected together in ssfw-latest-blocklists.tar.gz. I decided to put a statically named ssfw-blocklists/known_urls.txt as well.

SSFW Limitations

At the moment only IPv4 addresses are processed and blocked. It is planned to allow IPv6 blocking, but there is also an inherant problem with this on a per IP address basis, and that is there are exponentially more individual addresses, and so blocking ranges instead is more useful, and frugal with in-kernel memory space (which is how ip entries are processed).

Currently only Nginx log files have been tested against, with the target of most common (or any) web servers being added, since the analysers are SH shell scripts, this task is relatively simple.

In actual use, a (Alpine Linux Nginx) web server without any content, rotates its /var/log/messages log files at a minimum of every three hours (3 hrs), if the server is being hit relatively hard (ie. multiple per second hits from the same or different IPv4 locations).

Currently only the sshd log entries are analysed via service processes ("Gerka" scripts). The success of that script, via its per second setting, is (to a certain degree) dependant on some conditions which are out of any scope of control.

For example, on a 1Gb single core x64 VM running Alpine Linux, after a few thousand blocked IP address have been processed, a setting of less that 5 seconds can cause the script to miss heavy (per second) sshd hits, and may be caused by underlying system or hardware write caching limitations. ie. if they are too fast, the time between actual (write) presence of a log entry will be longer than the time taken to conduct attack attempts.

Also over time, one of the checks will incrementally consume more processor CPU % usage (but not memory % usage). Cleaning of the log directory at least every month solves (resets) this problem. A fresh install of SSFW will consume about 0.15% of CPU, while after six months the end of month processing can consume about 10-15% (on a single core VM) on-the-hour via the cronjob processes. After a year this is upto 25% every 15 minutes, for less than a minute (with 11,000 blocked IPv4).

Currently, the sshd key exchange (kex) failure check and resulting IPv4 block is a manual operation. Realistically (on Alpine Linux) this check only needs to be done once per every second log rotation (when there is only one backup log file). If you attempt to initialize your own SSH kex and it fails, that IPv4 will be present in the failures sent to the system logs.

ANY failed sshd attempt will also be blocked by the SSH "gerka" service, based on the number of times the that IPv4 is present in the log file, and the setting in the script. A setting of 1 is brutal , and actually means 2 entries. This is fine because sshd logs a disconnect for every failed attempt to login.

So a certain amount of care needs to be taken, especially on a shared IP address. A custom removal script should be maintained for multiple user SSH access. Linode's control panel remote SSH access (weblish) allows standard SSH failures, that would normally cause critical access denial, to be mitigated. However this is a per hosting service, not gaurenteed to be available, so a regular "check and remove" process or script is more useful to protect against known IP address failures.

The webserver known urls (or haxor urls) are generated manually, and by default, in an additive fashion, meaning you can loose your original referenced logs and still maintain an ever growing list. Web based development is not a problem on a server protected with SSFW, as long as you dont generate 404, 405 errors or a 200 reponse with 0 bytes returned (ie. just the header).

At least on Linode, there is no correlation between bandwith usage and sshd attempts or webserver returned data, except to say that it can indicate a sustained presence over time. By default it climbs by 8Kbit/s increments. Also note that the "here have this 4.5Gb file for your troubles" brutality bonus served via the webserver will not be present until after the connection is closed. (I believe I have seen one pull of 2.5Gb, which is enough to lock up the probing process).

Securing SSFW

SSFW uses security by obscurity, which is successful only if unique installation presets are used. The repo software is setup to not function unless installed via the install script, which requires presets to be supplied. These presets affect the web server location, SSFW folder name, and (optionally different) script names.

If you are not an advance *nix user or webserver administrator, then I suggest you look through the known urls block list to see what NOT to use as presets (because they are common targets for probes and resulting haxor url attempts).

The scripts are designed to be used as the root user, and function from within a webserver filesystem tree owned by the www user (or www-data user), however none of those scripts contain any sudo commands. The SSH "Gerka" requires running as root because they access the system log file which by default, even reading is limited to root user.

It may be possible to adjust this in the future, as is done with the default Nginx Access log file (by soft linking it into the web server filesystem tree SSFW log directory, and then setting ownership of that link to the webserver username and group).

Only one script (that generates addition 404 urls for the webserver block list base) works outside of the installed ~tools-dir, and that is so it can be used to process other non-default location webserver error logs. All other scripts must be run from ~tools-dir, and that path is NOT included in the $PATH environment variable, as both these conditions help with security (ie. you have to know SSFW is present AND where it is).

Only actual scripts can be run from the ~cron-dir, not links to scripts, AND they must be owned by the webserver user, again, to help secure any expoit usage. However the ~cron-dir is pre-setup with "hourly", "daily", "weekly", and "monthly" sub-folders to make server maintenance easier, and again, only "real" scripts will be executed.

SSFW Installation

Certain information needs to be known before running the install.sh script:

  • a functioning webserver root (doesn't have to be Nginx)
  • a user and webserver group (eg. www:www or www-data:www-data)
  • a working domain or IP address (used to create URL's)
  • location within webserver root (maps path to URL)
  • SSFW unique folder prefix (folder and script access)
  • SSWF unique script prefix (optionally different)

Examples:

SSFW_WWWROOT='/web/server/root' SSFW_WWWUSER='www-data:www-data' SSFW_WWWURL='http://some.url/' \
SSFW_SSFWROOT='a/path/or/not' SSFW_PREFIX='unique-svc' SSFW_FILEPREFIX='' install.sh
SSFW_WWWROOT='/web/server/root' SSFW_WWWUSER='www:www' SSFW_WWWURL='http://some.url/' \
SSFW_SSFWROOT='' SSFW_PREFIX='' SSFW_FILEPREFIX='egfw-svc' install.sh --random

SSFW Structure

Before posting the SS:FragWhare firewall system in a GIT repository, I tested it for about 6 months (7 months in 4 days time), and the last tweak was made 2 months ago (a fix in the IPv4 select regex for grep, and another different IPv4 lookup regex fix last night).

/web/server/root/
  uniq_svr-php_scripts.php
  uniq_svr-tools_dir/
    uniq_svr-sh_scripts.sh
  uniq_svr-cron_dir/
    uniq_svr-cron_scripts.sh
  uniq_svr-stats_dir/
  uniq_svr-log_dir/
    browser-various-log
    nginx-linked-files.log
    gerka-monitor.sshd
    gerka-monitor.sshd.pid
  uniq_svr-block_dir/ipv6/
  uniq_svr-block_dir/ipv4/
    ipv4.address.as.filenames
    192.168.100.200
    .ranges.ipv4
  uniq_svr-block_dir/urls/
    :some:haxor:url:path:
    :some:haxor:url:filename.ext
  uniq_svr-block_dir/
    nginx-block.conf
    nginx-block.head
    nginx-block.mime
    nginx-block.tail
  uniq_svr-archive_dir/2021-07=July_2021/
    uniq_svr-log_dir/*
    uniq_svr-stats_dir/*
    uniq_svr-php_scripts.php.html

chown www:www -r /web/server/root
chmod a+x -r /web/server/root/uniq_svr-tools_dir
chmod a+x -r /web/server/root/uniq_svr-cron_dir
chmod a+x -r /web/server/root/uniq_svr-*.php

The IPv4 recorded in ../b/ipv4 is a filename, where the file contents contains the human readable date when said IPv4 was blocked, which may be different from the stat date of the file, due to the fact that the cron jobs are for www user, but the ip command requires root, and we dont use sudo (just incase someone hacks your www user). The ranges are recorded in a dot-file (hidden) in ../b/ipv4.

Webserver readable access is given to the following SSFW folders (via fancyindex on Nginx):

  • the SSFW log directory
  • the SSFW stats directory
  • the SSFW archive directory

All other SSFW folders are not readable by the webserver. The following are set to executable:

  • SH scripts in ~tools_dir/
  • PHP scripts in ~tools_dir/..
  • SH scripts in ~tools_dir/../cron_dir/

(C) 2021/2022 - Paul Wratt

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SSFW super simple firewall - actually its a slightly brutal firewall system (ie FragHaus - "Whare" (farry) is Maori for House). Individual "Gerka's" maintain the defence. The rest is just "fluff".

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