Combining WAF and Layer-7 Load Balancers to Protect Services over Any Ports
This topic walks you through how to combine dedicated WAF instances and layer-7 load balancers to protect your services over non-standard ports that cannot be protected with WAF alone. For ports supported by WAF, see Ports Supported by WAF.
Protection Scenarios
The following procedure describes how WAF and ELB together protect www.example.com:9876. Port 9876 is a non-standard port WAF alone cannot protect.
Prerequisites
- A proper load balancer type is available.
- Related ports have been enabled in the security group to which the dedicated WAF instance belongs.
You can configure your security group as follows:
- Inbound rules
Add an inbound rule to allow incoming network traffic to pass through over a specified port based on your service requirements. For example, if you want to allow access from port 80, add a rule that allows TCP and port 80.
- Outbound rules
Retain the default settings. All outgoing network traffic is allowed by default.
- Inbound rules
Procedure
- Apply for a dedicated WAF instance.
- Connect www.example.com to WAF by referring to Step 1: Add a Website to WAF (Dedicated Mode). Select any non-standard port as the protected port, for example, port 86, set Server Port to 9876, and set Proxy Configured to .
- Add listeners and backend server groups to the load balancer.
- Log in to the management console.
- Click in the upper left corner of the management console and select a region or project.
- Click in the upper left corner of the page and choose Elastic Load Balance under Networking to go to the Load Balancers page.
- Click the name of the load balancer in the Name column to go to the Basic Information page.
- Click the Listeners tab and then click Add Listener. On the displayed page, configure the listener. In the Frontend Port text box, enter the port you want to protect. In this case, enter 9876.
- Click Next: Configure Request Routing Policy.
If you select Weighted round robin for Load Balancing Algorithm, disable Sticky Session. If you enable Sticky Session, the same requests will be forwarded to the same dedicated WAF instance. If this instance becomes faulty, an error will occur when the requests come to it next time.
- Click Next: Add Backend Server and click Next: Confirm.
- Add the WAF instance to the load balancer.
- Log in to the management console.
- Click in the upper left corner of the management console and select a region or project.
- Click in the upper left corner and choose Web Application Firewall (Dedicated) under Security.
- In the navigation pane on the left, choose Instance Management > Dedicated Engine to go to the dedicated WAF instance page.
- Locate the row containing the WAF instance. In the Operation column, click More > Add to ELB.
- In the Add to ELB dialog box, specify ELB (Load Balancer), ELB Listener, and Backend Server Group based on 3.
- Click Confirm. Then, configure service port for the WAF instance. In this example, configure Backend Port to 86, which is the one we configured in 2.
- Click Confirm.
- Bind an EIP to a Load Balancer.
- Whitelist IP addresses of your dedicated WAF instances.
How the Combination Protects Traffic
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