Introductory blog posts:
- http://blog.cloudflare.com/bpf-the-forgotten-bytecode/
- http://blog.cloudflare.com/introducing-the-bpf-tools/
Here you can find a set of tool for analyzing and processing of pcap traffic dumps. The aim of this tool is to help creating BPF rules that will match (and drop) malicious traffic.
To run these scripts you will need:
-
Kernel headers (ideally from a 3.10+ kernel):
$ sudo apt-get install linux-headers-generic
-
Installed dependencies:
$ sudo apt-get install python-setuptools libpcap-dev \ libreadline-dev binutils-dev bison flex $ sudo easy_install pcappy
-
Build the binary tools in
linux_tools
directory:$ make
BPF Tools repository contains a number simple Python scripts, some of them focus on analyzing pcap files, others focus more on the BPF:
pcap2hex
,hex2pcap
parsedns
bpfgen
filter
iptables_bpf
,iptables_bpf_chain
The core script is bpfgen
which generates the BPF bytecode. For more
information please read:
$ ./bpfgen --help
$ ./bpfgen dns -- --help
$ ./bpfgen dns_validate -- --help
$ ./bpfgen suffix -- --help
This script generates a simple bash script that contains iptables rules that drop traffic based on selected parameters.
For example, to generate a script dropping packets exactly to a domain "example.com" you can run:
$ ./iptables_bpf dns -- example.com
Generated file 'bpf_dns_ip4_example_com.sh'
If you want commands for IPv6 use -6
flag:
$ ./iptables_bpf -6 dns -- example.com
Generated file 'bpf_dns_ip6_example_com.sh'
The rule can match any from a number listed domains:
$ ./iptables_bpf dns -- example.com example1.com example2.com
Generated file 'bpf_dns_ip4_example_com_example1_com_example2_com.sh'
If you want to match any subdomain you can use a star '*'. This will only work if star is the only character in a domain part. Valid examples:
$ ./iptables_bpf dns -- *.example.com
Generated file 'bpf_dns_ip4_any_example_com.sh'
$ ./iptables_bpf dns -- *.example.*.gov.de
Generated file 'bpf_dns_ip4_any_example_any_gov_de.sh'
You can run the generated script to apply the rule and match it against one or more flooded ip addresses:
$ sudo ./bpf_dns_ip4_example_com.sh 1.2.3.4/32
To remove the iptable rule simply specify --delete
:
$ sudo ./bpf_dns_ip4_example_com.sh --delete