Date: Wed, 9 Feb 2011 19:51:18 +0100 From: Daniel Hartmeier <daniel@benzedrine.cx> To: Vadym Chepkov <vchepkov@gmail.com> Cc: freebsd-pf@freebsd.org Subject: Re: brutal SSH attacks Message-ID: <20110209185118.GA16942@insomnia.benzedrine.cx> In-Reply-To: <A141DF22-E35C-46BD-B88B-D68800812359@gmail.com> References: <D04005BA-E154-4AE3-B14B-F9E6EF1269B0@gmail.com> <5A0B04327C334DA18745BFDBDBECE055@charlieroot.de> <A6E48F78-AC10-40DE-9345-86D14CC4D3A1@gmail.com> <98689EFE59404E4B838E79071AABA8B4@charlieroot.de> <56413CA2-EE4F-4E06-B044-0982E864E44D@gmail.com> <A141DF22-E35C-46BD-B88B-D68800812359@gmail.com>
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On Tue, Feb 08, 2011 at 08:07:52PM -0500, Vadym Chepkov wrote: > No idea, why it didn't stop after 9 attempts. The connection rate is not calculated precisely, from pf.conf(5) max-src-conn-rate <number> / <seconds> Limit the rate of new connections over a time interval. The con- nection rate is an approximation calculated as a moving average. There is a counter, and a last-update-time. When the first connection matches, the counter starts at zero, and the time (one second resolution) is noted. Whenever a subsequent connection matches, the following happens: 1) if the last-update-time is further back than <seconds> (60, in your case), the counter is reset to zero. 2) otherwise, the counter is reduced relative to how much time has passed since last-update-time (i.e. the counter is multiplied by (now - last-update-time) / <seconds> 3) the counter is incremented by 1000 When the counter exceeds 1000 * <number> (9, in your case), the max-src-conn-rate is triggered. This works reasonably well in many cases, but may be quite inprecise, especially when <number> is much smaller than <seconds>. You could try max-src-conn-rate 2/5 instead. The details can be found in pf.c, see http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/src/sys/contrib/pf/net/pf.c?rev=HEAD The reason this was chosen over a more precise algorithm is that this is very cheap CPU-wise and requires only a minimal amount of memory. Regards, Daniel
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