I put up a vps with nginx and the logs show dodgy requests within minutes, how do you guys deal with these?

Edit: Thanks for the tips everyone!

@[email protected]
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112Y

I’ve been using crowdsec with swag for quite some time. I set it up with a discord notifier. It’s very interesting to see the types of exploits that are probed and from each country. Crowdsec blocks just like fail2ban and seems to do so in a more elegant fashion.

@[email protected]
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92Y

I map them every day.

@[email protected]
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72Y

Ignore them, as long as your firewall is set up properly.

@[email protected]
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232Y

Fail2ban and Nginx Proxy Manager. Here’s a tutorial on getting started with Fail2ban:

https://github.com/yes-youcan/bitwarden-fail2ban-libressl

@[email protected]
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32Y

I really wanted to use this and set it up a while ago. Works great but in the end I had to deactivate it, because my nextcloud instance would cause too many false positives (404s and such) and I would ban my own up way too often.

@[email protected]
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22Y

Crowdsec is more advanced

Does it integrate with NPM?

@[email protected]
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32Y

Yes it does! You find everything on the site. It is very well documented.

@[email protected]
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22Y

Cloudflare tunnel

@[email protected]
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52Y

I’ve implemented bot blocker and some iptables rate limiting.

@[email protected]
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52Y

These requests are probably made by search/indexing bots. My personal server gets a quite a lot of these, but they rarely use any bandwidth.
The easiest choice (probably disliked by more savvy users) is to just enable cloudflare on your server. It won’t block the requests, but will stop anything malicious.
With how advanced modern scraping techniques are there is so much you can do. I am not an expert, so take what I say with a grain of salt.

WasPentalive
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22Y

The ligitimate web spiders (for example the crawler used by Google to map the web for search) should pay attention to robots.txt. I think though that that is only valid for web-based services.

Rusty
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22Y

Fail2Ban is great and all, but Cloudflare provides such an amazing layer of protection with so little effort that it’s probably the best choice for most people.

You press a few buttons and have a CDN, bot attack protection, DDOS protection, captcha for weird connections, email forwarding, static website hosting… It’s suspicious just how much stuff you get for free tbh.

@[email protected]
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82Y

And you only need to give them your unencrypted data…

@[email protected]
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2Y

To be fair, you can configure Cloudflare to use your own certs.

Sifr Moja
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12Y

@GlitzyArmrest Including for origins? If not, the point of CloudFlare is gone.

@[email protected]
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32Y

You can use a custom origin certificate, but that’s irrelevant when CloudFlare still re-encrypt everything to analyse the request in more detail. It does leave me torn when using it, I don’t use it on anything where sensitive plain text is flying around, especially authentication data (which is annoying when that’s the most valuable place to have the protection), but I do have it on my matrix homeserver as anything remotely important is E2EE anyway so there’s little they can gain, and with the amount of requests it gets some level of mitigation is desirable

Teapot
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452Y

Anything exposed to the internet will get probed by malicious traffic looking for vulnerabilities. Best thing you can do is to lock down your server.

Here’s what I usually do:

  • Install and configure fail2ban
  • Configure SSH to only allow SSH keys
  • Configure a firewall to only allow access to public services, if a service only needs to be accessible by you then whitelist your own IP. Alternatively install a VPN
@[email protected]
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142Y

I would suggest crowdsec and not fail2ban

@[email protected]
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132Y

Seconded, not only is CrowdSec a hell of a lot more resource efficient (Go vs Python IIRC), having it download a list of known bad actors for you in advance really slows down what it needs to process in the first place. I’ve had servers DDoSed just by fail2ban trying to process the requests.

Alfi
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2Y

Hi,

Reading the thread I decided to give it a go, I went ahead and configured crowdsec. I have a few questions, if I may, here’s the setup:

  • I have set up the basic collections/parsers (mainly nginx/linux/sshd/base-http-scenarios/http-cve)
  • I only have two services open on the firewall, https and ssh (no root login, ssh key only)
  • I have set up the firewall bouncer.

If I understand correctly, any attack detected will result in the ip being banned via iptables rule (for a configured duration, by default 4 hours).

  • Is there any added value to run the nginx bouncer on top of that, or any other?
  • cscli hub update/upgrade will fetch new definitions for collections if I undestand correctly. Is there any need to run this regularly, scheduled with let’s say a cron job, or does crowdsec do that automatically in the background?
@[email protected]
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12Y

Well I was expecting some form of notification for replies, but still, seen it now.

My understanding of this is limited having mostly gotten as far as you have and been satisfied.

For other bouncers, there’s actually a few decisions you can apply. By default the only decision is BAN which as the name suggests just outright blocks the IP at whatever level your bouncer runs at (L4 for firewall and L7 for nginx). The nginx bouncer can do more thought with CAPTCHA or CHALLENGE decisions to allow false alerts to still access your site. I tried writing something similar for traefik but haven’t deployed anything yet to comment further.

Wih updates, I don’t have them on automated, but I do occasionally go in and run a manual update when I remember (usually when I upgrade my OPNSense firewall that’s runs it). I don’t think it’s a bad idea at all to automate them, however the attack vectors don’t change that often. One thing to note, newer scenarios only run on the latest agent, something I discovered recently when trying to upgrade. I believe it will refuse to update them if it would cause them to break in this way, but test it yourself before enabling corn

apigban
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42Y

Depends on what kind of service the malicious requests are hitting.

Fail2ban can be used for a wide range of services.

I don’t have a public facing service (except for a honeypot), but I’ve used fail2ban before on public ssh/webauth/openvpn endpoint.

For a blog, you might be well served by a WAF, I’ve used modsec before, not sure if there’s anything that’s newer.

Last
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Waf is the way to go I think. Fail2ban has had it’s own issues over the years, and if you use keys then you can forget about the constant SSH attempts. The ‘AllowUsers’ option in your SSH config is a good place to start too.

I just find all of these “lock down port 22” posts to be so noobish. Declarative waf is the way to go

Edit: Red Hat Identity Management (IdM) + Hashicorp Vault if you really care about SSH. Rotate your keys and create new users automatically

Last
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-32Y

Nginx app protect. The license is like $1,200 per year though. You can also use Cloudflare free tier.

Alfi
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82Y

sometimes I grab popcorn and “tail -f /var/log/secure”

@[email protected]
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152Y

Nothing too fancy other than following the recommended security practices. And to be aware of and regularly monitor the potential security holes of the servers/services I have open.

Even though semi-related, and commonly frowned upon by admins, I have unattended upgrades on my servers and my most of my services are auto-updated. If an update breaks a service, I guess its an opportunity to earn some more stripes.

@[email protected]
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32Y

Why is unattended upgrades frowned upon? Seems like I good idea all round to me?

@[email protected]
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42Y

Mostly because stability is usually prioritized above all else on servers. There’s also a multitude of other legit reasons.

@[email protected]
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102Y

All the legit reasons mentioned in the blog post seem to apply to badly behaved client software. Using a good and stable server OS avoids most of the negatives.

Unattended Upgrades on Debian for example will by default only apply security updates. I see no reason why this would harm stability more than running a potentially unpatched system.

@[email protected]
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12Y

Hell, debian is usually so stable I would just run dist-upgrade on my laptop every morning.

The difference there is that I’d be working with my laptop regularly and would notice problems more quickly

@[email protected]
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32Y

Even though minimal, the risk of security patches introducing new changes to your software is still there as we all have different ideas on how/what correct software updates should look like.

@[email protected]
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32Y

Fair, I’d just rather have a broken system than a compromised one.

z3bra
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172Y

I mean, it’s not a big deal to have crawlers and bots poking at our webserver if all you do is serving static pages (which is common for a blog).

Now if you run code on server side (eg using PHP or python), you’ll want to retrieve multiple known lists of bad actors to block them by default, and setup fail2ban to block those that went through. The most important thing however is to keep your server up to date at all times.

@[email protected]
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I only expose services on IPv6, for now that seems to work pretty well - very few scanners (I encounter only 1 or 2 per week, and they seem to connect to port 80/443 only).

@[email protected]
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52Y

Must be nice living in a post 1995 country… theres only 1 or 2 ISPs in Australia that support ipv6…

@[email protected]
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12Y

Aussie supports full IPv6 and provide a /48

@[email protected]
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32Y

Lol, I have heard some ISP horror stories from the Down Under.

I am fortunate enough that my country’s government has been forcing ISPs to implement IPv6 in their backbone infrastructure, so nowadays all I have to really do is to flick a switch on the router (unfortunately many routers still turn off IPv6 by default) to get an IPv6 connection.

@[email protected]
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22Y

Yeah the internet services here are really stuck in the past. Hard to tell if theyre taking advantage of the scarcity of ipv4 addresses to make more money somehow, or of theyre just too fuckn lazy

@[email protected]
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32Y

I’m guessing they’re on CG-NAT and someone upstairs thinks staying ipv4 reduces customer support costs.

@[email protected]
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22Y

Being put on CGNAT without IPv6 is terrifying.

@[email protected]
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22Y

Isn’t that akin to security through obscurity… you might want one more layer of defense

@[email protected]
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2Y

I still have firewall (that blocks almost all incoming connections) and sshguard setup. I also check the firewall logs daily, blocking IPs that I find to be suspicious.

I could probably do better, but with so few scanners connecting to my home server, I have managed to sleep way better than back when I setup a server on IPv4!

Also, even if my home server gets attacked, at least I know that my other devices aren’t sharing the same IP with them… NAT-less is a godsend.

BlackEco
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52Y

I’m using BunkerWeb which is an Nginx reverse-proxy with hardening, ModSecurity WAF, rate-limiting and auto-banning out of the box.

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