BugTraq
Permitting recursion can allow spammers to steal name server resources Sep 10 2003 02:52AM
Chris Brenton (cbrenton chrisbrenton org) (4 replies)
Re: Permitting recursion can allow spammers to steal name server resources Sep 14 2003 03:15AM
Devin Nate (devin nate bridgecomm net)
Re: Permitting recursion can allow spammers to steal name server resources Sep 10 2003 07:29PM
Dan Harkless (bugtraq harkless org) (1 replies)

On September 9, 2003, Chris Brenton <cbrenton (at) chrisbrenton (dot) org [email concealed]> wrote:
[...]
> "DNS Cache Poisoning - The Next Generation" by by Joe Stewart, GCIH
> http://www.securityfocus.com/guest/17905
[...]
> _Fixing the problem with Bind_

You aren't making any distinction between different versions of BIND, but
you probably should be. The traditional easy cache poisoning attack using
extra records in the "ADDITIONAL" section is resisted by BIND 9, but BIND 4
and 8 are still vulnerable, IIRC. Against BIND 9 you'd have to use address,
port, and transaction ID spoofing, as Joe Stewart discusses in his article,
which raises the bar for entry quite a bit.

> Changing Bind so that it will not act recursively for all hosts on the
> Internet is a relatively simple process. Edit the /etc/named.conf file
> to add in the "allow-recursion" parameter similar to the following:
>
> options {
> directory "/var/named";
> allow-recursion {localnets; };
> };
[...]
> allow-recursion {172.16.1.1, 10.0.0.0/8, 192.168.1.0/24;};

As has been pointed out before, this still leaves you potentially open to
cache poisoning if the attacker can spoof those addresses (and again, the
attacker will need to be spoofing anyway, if attacking BIND 9).

The safest setup is to run authoritative nameservers on separate machines
(or at least IPs) from caching recursive servers, as discussed, e.g. here:

http://cr.yp.to/djbdns/separation.html

--
Dan Harkless
bugtraq (at) harkless (dot) org [email concealed]
http://harkless.org/dan/

[ reply ]
Re: Permitting recursion can allow spammers to steal name server resources Sep 10 2003 10:00PM
Mike Hoskins (mike adept org)
Re: Permitting recursion can allow spammers to steal name server resources Sep 10 2003 07:14PM
Greg A. Woods (woods weird com)
Re: Permitting recursion can allow spammers to steal name server resources Sep 10 2003 06:21PM
Mark Johnston (mjohnston skyweb ca)


 

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