HTTP CONNECT flood is a layer 7 DDoS attack that targets web servers and applications.
Layer 7 is the application layer of the OSI model. The HTTP protocol – is an Internet protocol which is the basis of browser-based Internet requests, and is commonly used to send form contents over the Internet or to load web pages.
HTTP CONNECT floods are designed to overwhelm web servers’ resources by continuously requesting single or multiple URL’s from many source attacking machines, which simulate a HTTP clients, such as web browsers (Though the attack analyzed here, does not use browser emulation).
An HTTP CONNECT Flood consists of CONNECT requests. Unlike other HTTP floods that may include other request methods such as POST, PUT, DELETE, etc.
When the server’s limits of concurrent connections are reached, the server can no longer respond to legitimate requests from other clients attempting to connect, causing a denial of service.
HTTP CONNECT flood attacks use standard URL requests, hence it may be quite challenging to differentiate from valid traffic. Traditional rate-based volumetric detection is ineffective in detecting HTTP CONNECT flood attacks since traffic volume in HTTP CONNECT floods is often under detection thresholds. However, HTTP CONNECT flood uses the less common CONNECT method. As such, it may be beneficial to review network traffic carefully when witnessing many such incoming requests.
Technical analysis
To send an HTTP CONNECT request client establishes a TCP connection. Before sending an HTTP CONNECT request a TCP connection between a client and a server is established, using 3-Way Handshake (SYN, SYN-ACK, ACK), seen in packets 39,58,59 in Image 1. The HTTP request will be in a PSH, ACK packet.
Image 1 – Example of TCP connection
An attacker (IP 10.128.0.2) sends HTTP/1.1 CONNECT requests, while the target responds with HTTP/1.1 403 Forbidden as seen in Image 2.
While in this flow we see an HTTP/1.1 403 Forbidden response, that might change depending on the web server settings.
Image 2 – Example of HTTP packets exchange between an attacker and a target:
The capture analyzed is around 3 seconds long while it contains an average of 70 PPS (packets per second), with an average traffic rate of 0.06 Mbps (considered low, the attack you are analyzing could be significantly higher).
Image 3 – HTTP Flood stats
Analysis of HTTP CONNECT Flood in WireShark – Filters
“http” filter – Will show all http related packets.
“http.request.method == CONNECT” – Will show HTTP CONNECT requests.
It will be important to review the user agent and other HTTP CONNECTer structures as well as the timing of each request to understand the attack underway.
Download example PCAP of HTTP CONNECT Flood attack
*Note: IP’s have been randomized to ensure privacy.
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