426 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
426 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
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# $Id: oinkmaster.conf,v 1.132 2006/02/02 12:05:08 andreas_o Exp $ #
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# This file is pretty big by default, but don't worry.
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# The only things required are "path" and "update_files". You must also
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# set "url" to point to the correct rules archive for your version of
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# Snort, unless you prefer to specify this on the command line.
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# The rest in here is just a few recommended defaults, and examples
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# how to use all the other optional features and give some ideas how they
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# could be used.
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# Remember not to let untrusted users edit Oinkmaster configuration
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# files, as things like the PATH to use during execution is defined
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# in here.
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# Use "url = <url>" to specify the location of the rules archive to
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# download. The url must begin with http://, https://, ftp://, file://
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# or scp:// and end with .tar.gz or .tgz, and the file must be a
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# gzipped tarball what contains a directory named "rules".
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# You can also point to a local directory with dir://<directory>.
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# Multiple "url = <url>" lines can be specified to grab multiple rules
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# archives from different locations.
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#
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# Note: if URL is specified on the command line, it overrides all
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# possible URLs specified in the configuration file(s).
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#
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# The location of the official Snort rules you should use depends
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# on which Snort version you run. Basically, you should go to
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# http://www.snort.org/rules/ and follow the instructions
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# there to pick the right URL for your version of Snort
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# (and remember to update the URL when upgrading Snort in the
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# future). You can of course also specify locations to third party
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# rules.
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#
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# As of March 2005, you must register on the Snort site to get access
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# to the official Snort rules. This will get you an "oinkcode".
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# You then specify the URL as
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# http://www.snort.org/pub-bin/oinkmaster.cgi/<oinkcode>/<filename>
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# For example, if your code is 5a081649c06a277e1022e1284b and
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# you use Snort 2.4, the url to use would be (without the wrap):
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# http://www.snort.org/pub-bin/oinkmaster.cgi/
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# 5a081649c06a277e1022e1284bdc8fabda70e2a4/snortrules-snapshot-2.4.tar.gz
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# See the Oinkmaster FAQ Q1 and http://www.snort.org/rules/ for
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# more information.
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# URL examples follows. Replace <oinkcode> with the code you get on the
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# Snort site in your registered user profile.
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# Example for Snort
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# url = http://www.snort.org/pub-bin/oinkmaster.cgi/157f1670c58caa1bcb3e4de0d68e96c7e12a08ca/snortrules-snapshot-2976.tar.gz
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# Suricata
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url = http://rules.emergingthreats.net/open/suricata/emerging.rules.tar.gz
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# Example for Community rules
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# url = http://www.snort.org/pub-bin/downloads.cgi/Download/comm_rules/Community-Rules.tar.gz
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# Example for rules from the Bleeding Snort project
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# url = http://www.bleedingsnort.com/bleeding.rules.tar.gz
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# If you prefer to download the rules archive from outside Oinkmaster,
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# you can then point to the file on your local filesystem by using
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# file://<filename>, for example:
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# url = file:///tmp/snortrules.tar.gz
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# In rare cases you may want to grab the rules directly from a
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# local directory (don't confuse this with the output directory).
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# url = dir:///etc/snort/src/rules
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# Example to use scp to copy the rules archive from another host.
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# Only OpenSSH is tested. See the FAQ for more information.
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# url = scp://user@somehost.example.com:/somedir/snortrules.tar.gz
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# If you use -u scp://... and need to specify a private ssh key (passed
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# as -i <key> to the scp command) you can specify it here or add an
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# entry in ~/.ssh/config for the Oinkmaster user as described in the
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# OpenSSH manual.
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# scp_key = /home/oinkmaster/oinkmaster_privkey
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# The PATH to use during execution. If you prefer to use external
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# binaries (i.e. use_external_bins=1, see below), tar and gzip must be
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# found, and also wget if downloading via ftp, http or https. All with
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# optional .exe suffix. If you're on Cygwin, make sure that the path
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# contains the Cygwin binaries and not the native Win32 binaries or
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# you will get problems.
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# Assume UNIX style by default:
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path = /bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin
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# Example if running native Win32 or standalone Cygwin:
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# path = c:\oinkmaster;c:\oinkmaster\bin
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# Example if running standalone Cygwin and you prefer Cygwin style path:
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# path = /cygdrive/c/oinkmaster:/cygdrive/c/oinkmaster/bin
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# We normally use external binaries (wget, tar and gzip) since they're
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# already available on most systems and do a good job. If you have the
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# Perl modules Archive::Tar, IO::Zlib and LWP::UserAgent, you can use
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# those instead if you like. You can set use_external_bins below to
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# choose which method you prefer. It's set to 0 by default on Win32
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# (i.e. use Perl modules), and 1 on other systems (i.e. use external
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# binaries). The reason for that is that the required Perl modules
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# are included on Windows/ActivePerl 5.8.1+, so it's easier to use
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# those than to install the ported Unix tools. (Note that if you're
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# using scp to download the archive, external scp binary is still
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# used.)
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# use_external_bins = 0
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# Temporary directory to use. This directory must exist when starting and
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# Oinkmaster will then create a temporary sub directory in here.
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# Keep it as a #comment if you want to use the default.
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# The default will be checked for in the environment variables TMP,
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# TMPDIR or TEMPDIR, or otherwise use "/tmp" if none of them was set.
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# Example for UNIX.
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# tmpdir = /home/oinkmaster/tmp/
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# Example if running native Win32 or Cygwin.
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# tmpdir = c:\tmp
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# Example if running Cygwin and you prefer Cygwin style path.
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# tmpdir = /cygdrive/c/tmp
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# The umask to use during execution if you want it to be something
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# else than the current value when starting Oinkmaster.
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# This will affect the mode bits when writing new files.
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# Keep it commented out to keep your system's current umask.
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# umask = 0027
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# Files in the archive(s) matching this regular expression will be
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# checked for changes, and then updated or added if needed.
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# All other files will be ignored. You can then choose to skip
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# individual files by specifying the "skipfile" keyword below.
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# Normally you shouldn't need to change this one.
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update_files = \.rules$|\.config$|\.conf$|\.txt$|\.map$
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# Regexp of keywords that starts a Snort rule.
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# May be useful if you create your own ruletypes and want those
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# lines to be regarded as rules as well.
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# rule_actions = alert|drop|log|pass|reject|sdrop|activate|dynamic
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# If the number of rules files in the downloaded archive matching the
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# 'update_files' regexp is below min_files, or if the number
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# of rules is below min_rules, the rules are regarded as broken
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# and the update is aborted with an error message.
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# Both are set to 1 by default (i.e. the archive is only regarded as
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# broken if it's totally empty).
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# If you download from multiple URLs, the count is the total number
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# of files/rules across all archives.
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# min_files = 1
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# min_rules = 1
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# By default, a basic sanity check is performed on most paths/filenames
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# to see if they contain illegal characters that may screw things up.
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# If this check is too strict for your system (e.g. you get bogus
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# "illegal characters in filename" errors because of your local language
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# etc) and you're sure you want to disable the checks completely,
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# set use_path_checks to 0.
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# use_path_checks = 1
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# If you want Oinkmaster to send a User-Agent HTTP header string
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# other than the default one for wget/LWP, set this variable.
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# user_agent = Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1)
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# You can include other files anywhere in here by using
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# "include <file>". <file> will be parsed just like a regular
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# oinkmaster.conf as soon as the include statement is seen, and then
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# return and continue parsing the rest of the original file. If an
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# option is redefined, it will override the previous value. You can use
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# as many "include" statements as you wish, and also include even more
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# files from included files. Example to load stuff from "/etc/foo.conf".
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# include /etc/foo.conf
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#######################################################################
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# Files to totally skip (i.e. never update or check for changes) #
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# #
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# Syntax: skipfile filename #
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# or: skipfile filename1, filename2, filename3, ... #
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#######################################################################
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# Ignore local.rules from the rules archive by default since we might
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# have put some local rules in our own local.rules and we don't want it
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# to get overwritten by the empty one from the archive after each
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# update.
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skipfile local.rules
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# The file deleted.rules contains rules that have been deleted from
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# other files, so there is usually no point in updating it.
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skipfile deleted.rules
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# Also skip snort.conf by default since we don't want to overwrite our
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# own snort.conf if we have it in the same directory as the rules. If
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# you have your own production copy of snort.conf in another directory,
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# it may be really nice to check for changes in this file though,
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# especially since variables are sometimes added or modified and
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# new/old files are included/excluded.
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skipfile snort.conf
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# You may want to consider ignoring threshold.conf for the same reasons
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# as for snort.conf, i.e. if you customize it locally and don't want it
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# to become overwritten by the default one. It may be better to put
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# local thresholding/suppressing in some local file and still update
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# and use the official one though, in case important stuff is added to
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# it some day. We do update it by default, but it's your call.
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# skipfile threshold.conf
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# If you update from multiple URLs at the same time you may need to
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# ignore the sid-msg.map (and generate it yourself if you need one) as
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# it's usually included in each rules tarball. See the FAQ for more info.
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# skipfile sid-msg.map
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##########################################################################
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# SIDs to modify after each update (only for the skilled/stupid/brave). #
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# Don't use it unless you have to. There is nothing that stops you from #
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# modifying rules in such ways that they become invalid or generally #
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# break things. You have been warned. #
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# If you just want to disable SIDs, please skip this section and have a #
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# look at the "disablesid" keyword below. #
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# #
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# You may specify multiple modifysid directives for the same SID (they #
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# will be processed in order of appearance), and you may also specify a #
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# list of SIDs on which the substitution should be applied. #
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# If the argument is in the form something.something it's regarded #
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# as a filename and the substitution will apply on all rules in that #
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# file. The wildcard ("*") can be used to apply the substitution on all #
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# rules regardless of the SID or file. Please avoid using #comments #
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# at the end of modifysid lines, they may confuse the parser in some #
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# situations. #
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# #
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# Syntax: #
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# modifysid SID "replacethis" | "withthis" #
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# or: #
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# modifysid SID1, SID2, SID3, ... "replacethis" | "withthis" #
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# or: #
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# modifysid file "replacethis" | "withthis" #
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# or: #
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# modifysid * "replacethis" | "withthis" #
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# #
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# The strings within the quotes will basically be passed to a #
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# s/replacethis/withthis/ statement in Perl, so they must be valid #
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# regular expressions. The strings are case-insensitive and only the #
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# first occurrence will be replaced. If there are multiple occurrences #
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# you want to replace, simply repeat the same modifysid line. #
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# As the strings are regular expressions, you MUST escape special #
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# characters like $ \ / ( ) | by prepending a "\" to them. #
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# #
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# If you specify a modifysid statement for a multi-line rule, Oinkmaster #
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# will first translate the rule into a single-line version and then #
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# perform the substitution, so you don't have to care about the trailing #
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# backslashes and newlines. #
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# #
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# If you use backreference variables in the substitution expression, #
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# it's strongly recommended to specify them as ${1} instead of $1 and so #
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# on, to avoid parsing confusion with unexpected results in some #
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# situations. Note that modifysid statements will process both active #
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# and inactive (disabled) rules. #
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# #
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# You may want to check out README.templates and template-examples.conf #
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# to find how you can simplify the modifysid usage by using templates. #
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##########################################################################
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# Example to enable a rule (in this case SID 1325) that is disabled by
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# default, by simply replacing leading "#alert" with "alert".
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# (You should really use 'enablesid' for this though.)
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# Oinkmaster removes whitespaces next to the leading "#" so you don't
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# have to worry about that, but be careful about possible whitespace in
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# other places when writing the regexps.
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# modifysid 1325 "^#alert" | "alert"
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# You could also do this to enable it no matter what type of rule it is
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# (alert, log, pass, etc).
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# modifysid 1325 "^#" | ""
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# Example to add "tag" stuff to SID 1325.
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# modifysid 1325 "sid:1325;" | "sid:1325; tag: host, src, 300, seconds;"
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# Example to make SID 1378 a 'drop' rule (valid if you're running
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# Snort_inline).
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# modifysid 1378 "^alert" | "drop"
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# Example to replace first occurrence of $EXTERNAL_NET with $HOME_NET
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# in SID 302.
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# modifysid 302 "\$EXTERNAL_NET" | "\$HOME_NET"
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# You can also specify that a substitution should apply on multiple SIDs.
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# modifysid 302,429,1821 "\$EXTERNAL_NET" | "\$HOME_NET"
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# You can take advantage of the fact that it's regular expressions and
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# do more complex stuff. This example (for Snort_inline) adds a 'replace'
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# statement to SID 1324 that replaces "/bin/sh" with "/foo/sh".
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# modifysid 1324 "(content\s*:\s*"\/bin\/sh"\s*;)" | \
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# "${1} replace:"\/foo\/sh";"
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# If you for some reason would like to add a comment inside the actual
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# rules file, like the reason why you disabled this rule, you can do
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# like this (you would normally add such comments in oinkmaster.conf
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# though).
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# modifysid 1324 "(.+)" | "# 20020101: disabled this rule just for fun:\n#${1}"
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# Here is an example that is actually useful. Let's say you don't care
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# about incoming welchia pings (detected by SID 483 at the time of
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# writing) but you want to know when infected hosts on your network
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# scans hosts on the outside. (Remember that watching for outgoing
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# malicious packets is often just as important as watching for incoming
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# ones, especially in this case.) The rule currently looks like
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# "alert icmp $EXTERNAL_NET any -> $HOME_NET any ..."
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# but we want to switch that so it becomes
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# "alert icmp $HOME_NET any -> $EXTERNAL_NET any ...".
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# Here is how it could be done.
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# modifysid 483 \
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# "(.+) \$EXTERNAL_NET (.+) \$HOME_NET (.+)" | \
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# "${1} \$HOME_NET ${2} \$EXTERNAL_NET ${3}"
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# The wildcard (modifysid * ...) can be used to do all kinds of
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# interesting things. The substitution expression will be applied on all
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# matching rules. First, a silly example to replace "foo" with "bar" in
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# all rules (that have the string "foo" in them, that is.)
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# modifysid * "foo" | "bar"
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# If you for some reason don't want to use the stream preprocessor to
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# match established streams, you may want to replace the 'flow'
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# statement with 'flags:A+;' in all those rules.
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# modifysid * "flow:[a-z,_ ]+;" | "flags:A+;"
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# Example to convert all rules of classtype attempted-admin to 'drop'
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# rules (for Snort_inline only, obviously).
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# modifysid * "^alert (.*classtype\s*:\s*attempted-admin)" | "drop ${1}"
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# This one will append some text to the 'msg' string for all rules that
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# have the 'tag' keyword in them.
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# modifysid * "(.*msg:\s*".+?)"(\s*;.+;\s*tag:.*)" | \
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# "${1}, going to tag this baby"${2}"
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# There may be times when you want to replace multiple occurrences of a
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# certain keyword/string in a rule and not just the first one. To
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# replace the first two occurrences of "foo" with "bar" in SID 100,
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# simply repeat the modifysid statement:
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# modifysid 100 "foo" | "bar"
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# modifysid 100 "foo" | "bar"
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# Or you can even specify a SID list but repeat the same SID as many
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# times as required, like:
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# modifysid 100,100,100 "foo" | "bar"
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# Enable all rules in the file exploit.rules.
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# modifysid exploit.rules "^#" | ""
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# Enable all rules in exploit.rules, icmp-info.rules and also SID 1171.
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# modifysid exploit.rules, snmp.rules, 1171 "^#" | ""
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########################################################################
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# SIDs that we don't want to update. #
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# If you for some reason don't want a specific rule to be updated #
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# (e.g. you made local modifications to it and you never want to #
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# update it and don't care about changes in the official version), you #
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# can specify a "localsid" statement for it. This means that the old #
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# version of the rule (i.e. the one in the rules file on your #
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# harddrive) is always kept, regardless if the official version has #
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# been updated. Please do not use this feature unless in special #
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# cases as it's easy to end up with many signatures that aren't #
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# maintained anymore. See the FAQ for details about this and hints #
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# about better solutions regarding customization of rules. #
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# #
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# Syntax: localsid SID #
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# or: localsid SID1, SID2, SID3, ... #
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########################################################################
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# Example to never update SID 1325.
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# localsid 1325
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########################################################################
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# SIDs to enable after each update. #
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# Will simply remove all the leading '#' for a specified SID (if it's #
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# a multi-line rule, the leading '#' for all lines are removed.) #
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# These will be processed after all the modifysid and disablesid #
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# statements. Using 'enablesid' on a rule that is not disabled is a #
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# NOOP. #
|
||
|
# #
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# Syntax: enablesid SID #
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# or: enablesid SID1, SID2, SID3, ... #
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||
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########################################################################
|
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# Example to enable SID 1325.
|
||
|
# enablesid 1325
|
||
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########################################################################
|
||
|
# SIDs to comment out, i.e. disable, after each update by placing a #
|
||
|
# '#' in front of the rule (if it's a multi-line rule, it will be put #
|
||
|
# in front of all lines). #
|
||
|
# #
|
||
|
# Syntax: disablesid SID #
|
||
|
# or: disablesid SID1, SID2, SID3, ... #
|
||
|
########################################################################
|
||
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|
||
|
# You can specify one SID per line.
|
||
|
# disablesid 1
|
||
|
# disablesid 2
|
||
|
# disablesid 3
|
||
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|
||
|
# And also as comma-separated lists.
|
||
|
# disablesid 4,5,6
|
||
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|
||
|
# It's a good idea to also add comment about why you disable the sid:
|
||
|
# disablesid 1324 # 20020101: disabled this SID just because I can
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