35 lines
2.3 KiB
Text
35 lines
2.3 KiB
Text
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=== Password guess: brute force attacks
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A brute force attack happens when an attacker is trying to guess a user's password.
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{project_name} has some limited brute force detection capabilities.
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If turned on, a user account will be temporarily disabled if a threshold of login failures is reached.
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To enable this feature go to the `Realm Settings` left menu item, click on the `Security Defenses` tab, then additional
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go to the `Brute Force Detection` sub-tab.
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.Brute Force Detection
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image:{project_images}/brute-force.png[]
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The way this works is that if there are `Max Login Failures` during a period of `Failure Reset Time`,
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the account is temporarily disabled for the `Wait Increment` multiplied by the number of failures over the max. After
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`Failure Reset Time` is reached all failures are wiped clean. The `Max Wait` is the maximum amount of time
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an account can be disabled. Another preventive measure is that if there are subsequent login failures for one
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account that are too quick for a human to initiate the account will be disabled. This is controlled by the
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`Quick Login Check Milli Seconds` value. So, if there are two login failures for the same account within that value,
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the account will be disabled for `Minimum Quick Login Wait`.
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The downside of {project_name} brute force detection is that the server becomes vulnerable to denial of service attacks.
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An attacker can simply try to guess passwords for any accounts it knows and these account will be disabled.
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Eventually we will expand this functionality to take client IP address into account when deciding whether to block a user.
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A better option might be a tool like http://www.fail2ban.org/wiki/index.php/Main_Page[Fail2Ban]. You can point this service at the {project_name} server's log file.
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{project_name} logs every login failure and client IP address that had the failure. Fail2Ban can be used to modify
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firewalls after it detects an attack to block connections from specific IP addresses.
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==== Password Policies
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Another thing you should do to prevent password guess is to have a complex enough password policy to ensure that
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users pick hard to guess passwords. See the <<_password-policies, Password Policies>> chapter for more details.
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The best way to prevent password guessing though is to set up the server to use a one-time-password (OTP).
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