On Wed, 06 Nov 2013 14:00:09 +0200 Lars Noodén lars.nooden@gmail.com allegedly wrote:
On 11/06/2013 01:26 PM, mick wrote:
I disagree. Dropping all traffic other than that which is explicitly required is IMHO a better practice. (And how do you know in advance which ports get attacked?)
Using reject instead of drop simplifies troubleshooting.
http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~peterb/network/drop-vs-reject
Drop tends to get in the way.
Again, I disagree. But I recognise that this can be a religious decision. My default policy is to drop rather than reject. I know that strict adherence to standards implies we should “REJECT” with a helpful ICMP error message. But, doing that can mean that incoming packets with a spoofed source address can get replies sent back to that (innocent) source address. DDOS bots exploit this behaviour.
I’d rather break standards than help a DDOS bot. :-)
Mick ---------------------------------------------------------------------
Mick Morgan gpg fingerprint: FC23 3338 F664 5E66 876B 72C0 0A1F E60B 5BAD D312 http://baldric.net
---------------------------------------------------------------------