keycloak-scim/server_admin/topics/threat/brute-force.adoc

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=== Brute Force Attacks
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A brute force attack attempts to guess a user's password by trying to log in multiple times. {project_name} has brute force detection capabilities and can temporarily disable a user account if the number of login failures exceeds a specified threshold.
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[NOTE]
====
{project_name} disables brute force detection by default. Enable this feature to protect against brute force attacks.
====
.Procedure
To enable this protection:
. Click the *Realm Settings* menu
. Click the *Security Defenses* tab.
. Click the *Brute Force Detection* tab.
+
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.Brute Force Detection
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image:{project_images}/brute-force.png[]
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{project_name} can deploy permanent lockout and temporary lockout actions when it detects an attack. Permanent lockout disables a user account until an administrator re-enables it. Temporary lockout disables a user account for a specific period of time. The time period that the account is disabled increases as the attack continues.
[NOTE]
====
When a user is temporarily locked and attempts to log in, {project_name} displays the default `Invalid username or password` error message. This message is the same error message as the message displayed for an invalid username or invalid password to ensure the attacker is unaware the account is disabled.
====
*Common Parameters*
|===
|Name |Description |Default
|Max Login Failures
|The maximum number of login failures.
|30 failures.
|Quick Login Check Milliseconds
|The minimum time between login attempts.
|1000 milliseconds.
|Minimum Quick Login Wait
|The minimum time the user is disabled when login attempts are quicker than _Quick Login Check Milliseconds_.
|1 minute.
|===
*Permanent Lockout Flow*
====
. On successful login
.. Reset `count`
. On failed login
.. Increment `count`
.. If `count` greater than _Max Login Failures_
... Permanently disable user
.. Else if the time between this failure and the last failure is less than _Quick Login Check Milliseconds_
... Temporarily disable user for _Minimum Quick Login Wait_
When {project_name} disables a user, the user cannot log in until an administrator enables the user. Enabling an account resets the `count`.
====
*Temporary Lockout Parameters*
|===
|Name |Description |Default
|Wait Increment
|The time added to the time a user is temporarily disabled when the user's login attempts exceed _Max Login Failures_.
|1 minute.
|Max Wait
|The maximum time a user is temporarily disabled.
|15 minutes.
|Failure Reset Time
|The time when the failure count resets. The timer runs from the last failed login.
|12 hours.
|===
*Temporary Lockout Algorithm*
====
. On successful login
.. Reset `count`
. On failed login
.. If the time between this failure and the last failure is greater than _Failure Reset Time_
... Reset `count`
.. Increment `count`
.. Calculate `wait` using _Wait Increment_ * (`count` / _Max Login Failures_). The division is an integer division rounded down to a whole number
.. If `wait` equals 0 and the time between this failure and the last failure is less than _Quick Login Check Milliseconds_, set `wait` to _Minimum Quick Login Wait_.
... Temporarily disable the user for the smaller of `wait` and _Max Wait_ seconds
'count` does not increment when a temporarily disabled account commits a login failure.
====
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The downside of {project_name} brute force detection is that the server becomes vulnerable to denial of service attacks. When implementing a denial of service attack, an attacker can attempt to log in by guessing passwords for any accounts it knows and eventually causing {project_name} to disable the accounts.
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Consider using intrusion prevention software (IPS). {project_name} logs every login failure and client IP address failure. You can point the IPS to the {project_name} server's log file, and the IPS can modify firewalls to block connections from these IP addresses.
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==== Password Policies
Ensure you have a complex password policy to force users to choose complex passwords. See the <<_password-policies, Password Policies>> chapter for more information. Prevent password guessing by setting up the {project_name} server to use one-time-passwords.