Search Computing Unplugged's 16,065 article archive 
Home
EasyPrint
News details Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Articles-only Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Twitter Feed Click here for the Twitter feed.
FROM THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Incident report: denial of service attack against ConnectedPhotographer.com
By David Gewirtz

You may have noticed that Connected Photographer has been offline for the past few days. It's back, and what happened makes for quite a story.

About two months ago, I noticed increased traffic on our Web sites -- and the traffic was causing a load on the servers that didn't seem to be right. In particular, I noticed that our email-to-a-friend page was getting accessed repeatedly, at a rate disproportionate to what regular traffic would generate. I reasoned that a spammer was using the page to send junk mail out through our email-to-a-friend interface, and promptly turned that page off.

"A million individual computers hit our servers in the space of a day."

Traffic was one or two accesses a minute from different IP addresses, all over the world. I traced IP addresses to Russia, Brazil, UK, Turkey, Korea, Ukraine, Australia, Canada. There were also a bunch of IPs that wouldn't give up their real locations.

Current incident
Beginning Tuesday night, performance of our Web servers began to degrade. It took me until Thursday morning to determine that the performance degradation was due to an increase in traffic to a particular set of Web pages. This was, in part, because the server was performing so slowly that accessing any information took a very long time.

Eventually, I was able to determine that the email-to-a-friend page (which no longer existed) was being requested for our Connected Photographer Web site. Each request caused a server error, slowing the system down. Unfortunately, there was no way to stop the server errors, since the code that generated them was compiled into the server's kernel.

Yes, I have access to the kernel code and have added features in the past, but I didn't want to muck with code at such a low level while trying to sustain our level of quality service. It would have just taken too much time.

Through the use of a software firewall, I was able to determine that requests to the email-to-a-friend URL were comining into the server at the rate of thousands of requests per second. I configured the software firewall to ban requests to this particular page, and then ban the IP addresses that originated the request.

However, within about ten minutes, the software firewall ceased to function. It had banned more than 10,000 individual IP addresses, (about 1,000 per minute), exceeded its available memory, and pushed the server to 100% utilization.

I tried re-routing and even turning off the DNS pointing to the server. The requests still kept coming in. My guess is that the URL they were requesting was cached, and so the spamming system knew the IP address, ignoring the DNS completely.


1  ·  2  ·  Next »
Other articles you might like
Home > Extras > Editorials (118 articles)
   Say goodbye to the Uh-Ohs. Long live the Tens.
   Exploring the dark side of social networks
   An open letter to Palm CEO Ed Colligan about finding the win-win position
Home > Solutions > Safety and Security (8 articles)
   The dangers of wireless computing for the unsuspecting
   Exploring the dark side of social networks
   Watch your back: avoid becoming a victim of holiday scams
Get Weekly Email Updates
Subscribe to our regular weekly email newsletter. It's packed with tips, reviews, deep analysis, and the latest news.
 
Recent Computing Unplugged Articles
The iPad defenders have spoken
Make Mafia Wars an offer it can't refuse
Yet another toaster oven not to buy: Cuisinart TOB-50
Heather in Kuwait: what gadgets to bring on a long trip
Invade my privacy, please.
The iPad: Apple's latest heartbreaker
Recruiting the Army of Two on PSP
Computing Unplugged News
New Phones Still Sold With Old Versions of Android
E-Readers Will Survive the Onslaught of Tablets
If iPad Battery Fails, Apple Will Replace the iPad for $99
Google Says China Talks Continue, But Pullout Signs Grow
The FCC Wants You to Test Your Broadband Speeds
Solar Technology Gives iPhone a Power Boost
Apple takes pre-orders for April 3 iPad launch
>> Read all the news
More from the ZATZ journals
David Gewirtz Online: CNN commentary and analysis
DominoPower: Application development, William Shatner, and the origin of the universe
OutlookPower: More about disappearing text
-- Advertisement --

EASY DEDICATED AND VIRTUAL DEDICATED SERVERS FOR AS LOW AS $67.99 PER MONTH
Customize and configure your own dedicated server. Simply choose one of our popular plans or select your own Linux or Windows server and plan options.

NO LONG WAITS. Server provisioned within hours.

Tap here now and be up and running with your own server tonight.

-- Advertisement --

Sent Items Organizer
When you need to file your sent email into their proper folders based on keywords or who it's to. It's also perfect for shared mailboxes.

It also adds a "Send And File" toolbar button while you're composing (similar to the way Lotus Notes used to work) for quick and easy filing.

Find out more!

ZATZ Home  ·  News  ·  Back Issues  ·  Credits/Trademarks ·  Link To Us
Copyright © 2003-2010, ZATZ Publishing. All rights reserved worldwide.
Editor's Login