Is There a Zombie On Your Network?

I recently worked on two issues where zombie hosts were causing major problems for the people responsible for managing the networks.
In the first case a network manager received a letter from his ISP requesting that his company cease from sending spam email. Included with the notice was the date and time of the spam email together with an IP address of the source. Unfortunately, the IP address was of the external interface of his firewall which was useless for tracing the source of the spam on his network. He was left with the prospect of reinstalling all PC's on his network or locating the source of the problem another way.

- Port-mirror the internal interface of your firewall. For more information, check out my previous blog post on monitoring your network core.
- Use a traffic analysis tool to filter on any systems sending traffic on TCP port 25
- Have a look at the packet content of this traffic for email addresses. SMTP traffic analysis tools are also available for this purpose.

I suggested that she monitor the traffic going to and from the Internet. When we started looking at the traffic we found a server sending huge amounts of UDP traffic to external systems located in different countries. This behavior is very typical of a system that is part of a botnet. It will have received commands from an external source to send large amounts of traffic to specific websites. These websites can then go offline as they cannot cope with the huge volume of traffic.
The server in question was checked for viruses but nothing was found. She took the server off the network and luckily it was not a big job to get it reinstalled and databases restored. Traffic rates on her Internet connection immediately dropped and the next bill from the ISP was back at normal levels. If you notice a change in traffic volumes on your Internet connection of if you suddenly incur extra data charges from your ISP, follow these steps to locate the source of the traffic.
- Port-mirror the internal interface of your firewall
- Use a traffic analysis tool to look at the top clients based on traffic totals.
- Normally, traffic on TCP port 80 or 443 would account for most activity on an Internet connection. Look for anomalies like excessive UDP traffic or traffic on random port numbers.

Darragh
Darragh Delaney is head of technical services at NetFort Technologies . As Director of Technical Services and Customer Support, he interacts on a daily basis with NetFort customers and is responsible for the delivery of a high quality technical and customer support service.







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