Figure 402 smurf attack – ZyXEL Communications 200 Series User Manual

Page 525

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Chapter 30 ADP

ZyWALL USG 100/200 Series User’s Guide

525

Flood Detection

Flood attacks saturate a network with useless data, use up all available bandwidth, and
therefore make communications in the network impossible.

ICMP Flood Attack

An ICMP flood is broadcasting many pings or UDP packets so that so much data is sent to the
system, that it slows it down or locks it up.

Smurf

A smurf attacker (A) floods a router (B) with Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) echo
request packets (pings) with the destination IP address of each packet as the broadcast address
of the network. The router will broadcast the ICMP echo request packet to all hosts on the
network. If there are numerous hosts, this will create a large amount of ICMP echo request and
response traffic.

If an attacker (A) spoofs the source IP address of the ICMP echo request packet, the resulting
ICMP traffic will not only saturate the receiving network (B), but the network of the spoofed
source IP address (C).

Figure 402 Smurf Attack

TCP SYN Flood Attack

Usually a client starts a session by sending a SYN (synchronize) packet to a server. The
receiver returns an ACK (acknowledgment) packet and its own SYN, and then the initiator
responds with an ACK (acknowledgment). After this handshake, a connection is established.

• TCP Filtered

Portsweep

• UDP Filtered Portsweep

• IP Filtered Portsweep

• ICMP Filtered

Portsweep

• TCP Filtered Distributed

Portscan

• UDP Filtered

Distributed Portscan

• IP Filtered

Distributed Portscan

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