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60-564 Survey

60-564 Survey. “Intrusion Detection: Systems and Models” “A Stateful Intrusion Detection System for World-Wide Web Servers”. Outline. Introduction Computer attacks The STAT framework Intrusion Detection System A novel IDS – WebSTAT Performance evaluation Conclusion. Introduction.

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60-564 Survey

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  1. 60-564 Survey “Intrusion Detection: Systems and Models” “A Stateful Intrusion Detection System for World-Wide Web Servers”

  2. Outline • Introduction • Computer attacks • The STAT framework • Intrusion Detection System • A novel IDS – WebSTAT • Performance evaluation • Conclusion

  3. Introduction • Computer security is to protect computer resources: • read and write access to a data file • processing time • communication over a network link • An intrusion is somebody attempting to break into or misuse your system • IDS is a network security system designed to identify intrusive or malicious behavior via monitoring of network activity.

  4. Computer Attacks • Worms - self replicating programs that spread across a network. • Viruses - programs that replicate when a user performs some action such as running a program. • Server attacks - a client exploits a bug in the server to cause it to perform some unintended action. • Client attacks - a server exploits a bug in a client to cause it to perform some unintended action. • Network attacks (denial of service) - a remote attacker exploits a bug in the network software or weakness in the protocol to cause a server, router, or network to fail. • Root attacks - a user on a multiuser operating system obtains the priveliges of another user (usually root)

  5. Computer Attacks - Worm • A worm is an independent program that replicates from machine to machine across network connections. • The three security flaws: • Backdoor • bypasses the normal security mechanisms • Usually installed for maintenance purposes • Buffer overflow • A process contains: Code, data, and stack • Stack is to store information associated with function calls • By overriding stack, the attacker can both inject a malicious execution code and set the return address to point to the malicious code • Weak password • First guess the administrator’s password • Copy itself to the startup to propagate every time the machine start up

  6. Computer Attacks - Virus • software program capable of causing great harm to the computer • Unlike a worm, it requires action from a user to spread • For example, email viruses spread when the recipient runs an attached program

  7. Computer Attacks - Server Attacks • Nearly every type of service has identified vulnerabilities which has been attacked • For example, IIS4 installs a number of sample scripts. • These scripts give clients access to view any file on the same volume as the web server

  8. Computer Attacks - Client Attacks • Unlike a server attack, it works by waiting for victims to connect to a rogue server • For example, a buffer overflow vulnerability has been found in Outlook • It allows arbitrary code to be executed by overflowing the time zone field in the date field of the mail header • activated when the user download the mail from mail server using outlook

  9. Computer Attacks - Network Attacks • usually Denial of Service (DoS) attacks • disturb the normal operation of applications • take advantage of a weakness in the system or application • cause it to crash or stop responding • For example, ping to death: Some systems will crash if they received a fragmented ICMP packet. An attack is to send a packet larger than 65,535 bytes, which causes many TCP/IP implementations to crash.

  10. Computer Attacks - Root Attacks • a user on a multi-user system obtains root or administrative privileges • Certain programs are suid bit set, break this program means obtaining the root user privilege

  11. The STAT Framework • STAT is a technique for representing high-level descriptions of computer attacks • It contains 6 components: • STATL • Language Extension Module • Event Provider • Scenario Plug-in • Response Module • STAT Core

  12. The STATL Language • Attack description language • Using states and transitions to represent attack scenarios • domain-independent • It is extended by the IDS developer to express the characteristics of a particular domain and environment. E.g. Sun Solaris, Windows NT.

  13. Language Extension Modules • shared libraries that define events that describe a particular application domain. • Loaded into STAT Core in runtime • Loaded before either Scenario Plugin or Event Provider can use it

  14. Event Providers • collects events from the external environment • Create events as defined in Language Extension Modules • encapsulates events into generic STAT events • inserts events into the event queue of the STAT Core

  15. Scenario Plugins • shared library that describes an attack scenario. • It is defined either from a STATL description or from user manually

  16. Response Modules • shared library that contains Response Functions. • If the state in a scenario is reached the Response Function is invoked • For example, it an alert to someone, or take steps to stop an ongoing attack once a state is reached.

  17. STAT Core • Loads various modules • matches the event supplied by Event Providers • executes the corresponding transitions • triggers responses defined in Response Modules

  18. Intrusion Detection System • Host-based IDS • uses log files and system’s auditing agents • monitors the communicationstraffic in and out of a single computer • checks the integrity of system files and process • Network-based IDS • monitors the traffic on its network segment • Capture three signatures: String, Port and Header signatures

  19. WebSTAT • It is an IDS developed based on STAT framework. • built by composing the STAT core with a number of web language extensions modules, event providers, attack scenarios plugins, and response modules.

  20. Attack Scenario Examples • Document Root Escape Attack: detect events from the web server log and operating system logs to examine the unauthorized file system access • Cookie stealing scenario: detects if a valid cookie is improperly used by unauthorized user to steal protected web resources

  21. Performance Evaluation • Experiments on a host running • standalone Apache • Apache monitored by WebSTAT • WebSTAT incurs a small performance overhead in web server throughput. • acceptable given the powerful detection capabilities WebSTAT provides • a sophisticated web server performance tuning would also reduce the overhead

  22. Conclusion • Presented classification of computer attacks and intrusion detection system • Described STAT framework • The IDS implementation WebSTAT • From the performance evaluation result, we see although WebSTAT brings some small performance overhead to the web server • It is acceptable considering the advanced detection capabilities.

  23. Reference • Sherif, J.S.; Dearmond, T.G.; “Intrusion detection: systems and models” • Sundaram, A., “An Introduction to Intrusion Detection”. • Mahoney, M., “Computer Security: A Survey of Attacks and Defenses” • Lindquist, U., and E. Jonsson, “How to Systematically Classify Computer Security Intrusions" • Giovanni Vigna, William Robertson, Vishal Kher, and Richard A. Kemmerer, “A Stateful Intrusion Detection System for World-Wide Web Servers” • STAT Framework Reference Manual • S.T. Eckmann, G. Vigna, and R.A. Kemmerer, "STATL: An Attack Language for State-based Intrusion Detection," • G. Vigna, S.T. Eckmann, and R.A. Kemmerer, "The STAT Tool Suite" • G. Vigna, R.A. Kemmerer, and P. Blix, "Designing a Web of Highly-Configurable Intrusion Detection Sensors"

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