Configuring a Known Attack Source Rule
If WAF blocks a malicious request by IP address, Cookie, or Params, you can configure a known attack source rule to let WAF automatically block all requests from the attack source for a blocking duration set in the known attack source rule. For example, if a blocked malicious request originates from an IP address and you set the blocking duration to 500 seconds, WAF will block the IP address for 500 seconds after the known attack source rule takes effect.
Known attack source rules can be used by basic web protection, precise protection, IP address blacklist, and IP address whitelist rules. You can use known attack source rules in basic web protection, precise protection, and IP blacklist or whitelist rules as long as you set Protective Action to Block for these rules.
Prerequisites
You have added the website you want to protect to WAF.
Constraints
- For a known attack source rule to take effect, it must be enabled when you configure basic web protection, precise protection, blacklist, or whitelist protection rules.
- It takes several minutes for a new rule to take effect. After the rule takes effect, protection events triggered by the rule will be displayed on the Events page.
- Before adding a known attack source rule for malicious requests blocked by Cookie or Params, a traffic identifier must be configured for the corresponding domain name. For more details, see Configuring a Traffic Identifier for a Known Attack Source.
Specification Limitations
- You can configure up to six blocking types. Each type can have one known attack source rule configured.
- The maximum time an IP address can be blocked for is 30 minutes.
Procedure
- 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 under Security & Compliance.
- In the navigation pane on the left, choose Website Settings.
- In the Policy column of the row containing the domain name, click the number to go to the Policies page.
- In the Known Attack Source configuration area, change Status if needed and click Customize Rule to go to the Known Attack Source page.
- In the upper left corner of the known attack source rules, click Add Known Attack Source Rule.
- In the displayed dialog box, specify the parameters by referring to Table 1.
Table 1 Known attack source parameters Parameter
Description
Example Value
Blocking Type
Specifies the blocking type. The options are:
- Long-term IP address blocking
- Short-term IP address blocking
- Long-term Cookie blocking
- Short-term Cookie blocking
- Long-term Params blocking
- Short-term Params blocking
Long-term IP address blocking
Blocking Duration (s)
The blocking duration must be an integer and range from:
- (300, 1800] for long-term blocking
- (0, 300] for short-term blocking
500
Rule Description
A brief description of the rule. This parameter is optional.
None
- Click Confirm. You can then view the added known attack source rule in the list.
Other Operations
- To modify a rule, click Modify in row containing the rule.
- To delete a rule, click Delete in the row containing the rule.
Configuration Example - Blocking Known Attack Source Identified by Cookie
Assume that domain name www.example.com has been connected to WAF and a visitor has sent one or more malicious requests through IP address XXX.XXX.248.195. You want to block access requests from this IP address and whose cookie is jsessionid for 10 minutes. Refer to the following steps to configure a rule and verify its effect.
- On the Website Settings page, click www.example.com to go to its basic information page.
- In the Traffic Identifier area, configure the cookie in the Session Tag field.
- Add a known attack source, select Long-term Cookie blocking for Blocking Type, and set block duration to 600 seconds.
- Enable the known attack source protection.
- Add a blacklist and whitelist rule to block XXX.XXX.248.195. Select Long-term Cookie blocking for Known Attack Source.
- Clear the browser cache and access http://www.example.com.
When a request from IP address XXX.XXX.248.195, WAF blocks the access. When WAF detects that the cookie of the access request from the IP address is jsessionid, WAF blocks the access request for 10 minutes.
Figure 1 Block page
- Go to the WAF console. In the navigation pane on the left, choose Events. View the event on the Events page.
Feedback
Was this page helpful?
Provide feedbackThank you very much for your feedback. We will continue working to improve the documentation.See the reply and handling status in My Cloud VOC.
For any further questions, feel free to contact us through the chatbot.
Chatbot