What Is a Slow HTTP Attack?
Slow HTTP attacks are a variation of CC attacks. Here is how slow HTTP attacks work:
The attacker establishes a connection to the target server which allows HTTP access. Then the attacker specifies a large content length and sends packets in an extremely low rate, such as one byte per one to ten seconds. The connection is maintained this way. If the attacker keeps establishing such connections, available connections on the target server are slowly consumed and the server will stop responding to valid requests.
About Anti-DDoS FAQs
- What Is Anti-DDoS?
- What Are a SYN Flood Attack and an ACK Flood Attack?
- What Is a CC Attack?
- What Is a Slow HTTP Attack?
- What Are a UDP Attack and a TCP Attack?
- What Is the Million-level IP Address Blacklist Database?
- How Will Anti-DDoS Be Triggered to Scrub Traffic?
- Does Anti-DDoS Traffic Cleaning Affect Normal Services?
- How Does Anti-DDoS Scrub Traffic?
- What Are the Restrictions of Anti-DDoS?
- What Is the Protection Capacity of Anti-DDoS?
- What Data Can Be Provided by Anti-DDoS?
- In Which Regions Is Anti-DDoS Available?
- What Is the Maximum Protection Capacity Provided by HUAWEI CLOUD Anti-DDoS for Free?
- Which Services Can Use Anti-DDoS?
- Can Anti-DDoS Be Used Across Clouds?
- How to Determine Whether an Attack Occurs?
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