Hi,
Stefan is the maintainer of Guardian.
On Thu, 2017-10-26 at 21:49 +0200, Peter Müller wrote:
Hello,
there are two security vulnerabilities in IPFire's IDS/IPS (snort/Guardian) which I consider quite critical:
(a) Guardian does not malicious destination IP addresses As described in bug #11532, it is possible to access a "bad" IP address (C&C server, Spamhaus DROP, Dshield, and others) in the internet from a internal network behind IPFire.
This is because Guardian only looks at the source IP of a snort alert, and in this case, it is the firewall's IP which should not be blocked for obvious reason.
There is little change that an admin will notice that the IPS is only working in case of inbound attacks since snort triggers an alert correctly.
Could someone (maintainer?) have a look at Guardian and fix this? Unfortunately, my programming skills are too little for this job. :-|
I think this is a problem that could be solved. Probably the solution is quite simple even.
However, I do not consider this a security issue that requires us to send an update immediately.
(b) Snort does not detect internal attacks As described in bug #10273 (which has been reported back in 2012), the IDS is fully working on RED only. Although it can be turned on for GREEN, BLUE and ORANGE, too, it does not capture any attacks in internal networks.
This can be hardly examined from the WebUI, too, since it shows snort being up and running on GREEN and others.
Changing this also allows blocking an infected PC in a local network which is spreading malware. On RED, the internal IP is already NATted.
Maybe Guardian can be configured so it shows a big warning in case of blocked local IPs (internal networks should be clean), but this is kind of a feature request.
I think it blocks this now as I think it should be.
Of course it won't be able to block the one machine attacking others on the same network because the firewall does not see that traffic, but Guardian blocks attacks from the internal network to the Internet if snort detects it.
Let's see if Stefan can clear this up for us.
See also:
(Thanks again to Michael for enabling HTTPS with trusted certificates.)
One question left: If there are attacks from a network connected via VPN, where are they captured by snort? On RED?
They should show up on the RED interface.
I hate bringing up bugs like this - and hope I did not harm anybody :-) - but since this has a security impact, it seems okay to me.
Well, we all hate bugs :)
Thanks and best regards, Peter Müller