UDP flood attack
A UDP flood attack is a volumetric denial-of-service (DoS) attack using the User Datagram Protocol (UDP), a sessionless/connectionless computer networking protocol.
Using UDP for denial-of-service attacks is not as straightforward as with the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP). However, a UDP flood attack can be initiated by sending a large number of UDP packets to random ports on a remote host. As a result, the distant host will:
- Check for the application listening at that port;
- See that no application listens at that port;
- Reply with an ICMP Destination Unreachable packet.
Thus, for a large number of UDP packets, the victimized system will be forced into sending many ICMP packets, eventually leading it to be unreachable by other clients. The attacker(s) may also spoof the IP address of the UDP packets, ensuring that the excessive ICMP return packets do not reach them, and anonymizing their network location(s). Most operating systems mitigate this part of the attack by limiting the rate at which ICMP responses are sent.
UDP Flood Attack Tools:
- Low Orbit Ion Cannon
- UDP Unicorn
This attack can be managed by deploying firewalls at key points in a network to filter out unwanted network traffic. The potential victim never receives and never responds to the malicious UDP packets because the firewall stops them. However, as firewalls are 'stateful' i.e. can only hold a number of sessions, firewalls can also be susceptible to flood attacks.
There are ways to protect a system against UDP flood attacks. Here are examples of some of the possible measures:
- ICMP rate-limiting: This limitation is generally placed on ICMP responses at operating system level.
- Firewall-level filtering on the server: This enables suspicious packets to be rejected. However, it is possible for the firewall to collapse under the strain of a UDP flood attack.
- Filtering UDP packets (except for DNS) at network level: DNS requests are typically made using UDP. Any other source generating huge amounts of UDP traffic is considered suspicious, which leads to the packets in question being rejected.[1]
References
- "UDP flood". IONOS Digitalguide. Retrieved 2022-07-19.
External links
- "CA-1996-01: UDP Port Denial-of-Service Attack" (PDF). Carnegie Mellon University Software Engineering Institute. Archived from the original on 2001-01-24. Retrieved 14 September 2019.