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Re: [Full-Disclosure] DHCP Flood on inside network. HELP!!



Sounds like someone discovered the DHCP discover flood trick and set it
to work on you. A little packet filtering kung fu on your part ought to be 
sufficient to prevent it happening again.

-- Greg

On or about 2004.10.11 22:00:07 +0000, Eddie  (EddieS@xxxxxxxxxxxx) said:

> I don't have much information on this yet, I am driving down to the office 
> now to pull an all nighter. I figured I would toss this out to the list and 
> see if anyone has any 
> idea.  This is just info from what I can get from talking to people and what 
> little time I can get on the network before it goes down. 
> 
> Starting 2 days ago, I discovered the PIX 515 was locked hard.  It seems to 
> be random, but around every 15-30 minutes something floods the network hard 
> for a few 
> minutes. Broadcast flood too. This is a small network with 30 workstations 
> and 5 servers (Linux and SCO, no Wins). It overloads the Extreme switches and 
> I see pdu (or 
> something like that, not udp tho) errors on about every port. 
> The Pix 515  overloads and is having issues, but I did see it say something 
> about ARP problems when I could get to the syslog for more info. I looked up 
> the error 
> number and it said it could be ARP poisoning. Not sure what would do that. 
> 
> In the syslog of the DHCP server, I see thousands of DHCP DISCOVER 
> request(and the REPLAY request from the server, a Linux box).  It looks like 
> one client on the 
> network (I have seen this both from XP and Win98) will send 100+  DISCOVER 
> request a second swamping the network. Not always DISCOVER too. 
> That will go on for a few minutes, then all is well. Then another computer 
> will do the same thing. 
> 
> This is quickly overloading things and I am getting IRQ busy and overload 
> errors on some of the servers. 
> 
> What should I look for. I have never seen something like this before. 
> 
> Thanks
> -Eddie
> 
> 
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
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-- 
Gregory A. Gilliss, CISSP                              E-mail: greg@xxxxxxxxxxx
Computer Security                             WWW: http://www.gilliss.com/greg/
PGP Key fingerprint 2F 0B 70 AE 5F 8E 71 7A 2D 86 52 BA B7 83 D9 B4 14 0E 8C A3

_______________________________________________
Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
Charter: http://lists.netsys.com/full-disclosure-charter.html