Denial of service overview, Syn flood attack – Allied Telesis AT-S63 User Manual
Page 660

Chapter 31: Denial of Service Defense
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Section IV: Security
Denial of Service Overview
The AT-S63 management software can help protect your switch against
the following types of denial of service attacks.
❑ SYN Flood Attack
❑ SMURF Attack
❑ Land Attack
❑ Teardrop Attack
❑ Ping of Death Attack
❑ IP Options Attack
The following subsections briefly describe each type of attack and the
mechanism employed by the AT-S63 management software to protect
your network.
Note
Be sure to read the following descriptions before you implement a
DoS defense on a switch. Some defense mechanisms are CPU
intensive and can impact switch behavior.
SYN Flood
Attack
In this type of attack, an attacker sends a large number of TCP
connection requests (TCP SYN packets) with bogus source addresses to
the victim. The victim responds with acknowledgements (SYN ACK
packets), but because the original source addresses are bogus, the
victim node does not receive any replies. If the attacker sends enough
requests in a short enough period, the victim may freeze operations
when the number of requests exceeds the capacity of its connections
queue.
To defend against this form of attack, a switch port monitors the number
of ingress TCP connection requests it receives. If a port receives more
than 60 requests per second, the following occurs.
❑ The switch sends an SNMP trap to the management stations
❑ The port discards all ingress TCP-SYN packets for one minute.
However, the port continues to allow existing TCP connections to
go through.
This defense mechanism does not involve the switch’s CPU. You can
activate it on as many ports as you want without it impacting switch
performance.