ZyXEL Communications ZyWALL 300 User Manual

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Chapter 30 ADP
ZyWALL USG 300 User’s Guide
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30.8.1.4  Filtered Port Scans
A filtered port scan may indicate that there were no network errors (ICMP unreachables or 
TCP RSTs) or responses on closed ports have been suppressed. Active network devices, such 
as NAT routers, may trigger these alerts if they send out many connection attempts within a 
very small amount of time. These are some filtered port scan examples.  
30.8.2  Flood Detection
Flood attacks saturate a network with useless data, use up all available bandwidth, and 
therefore make communications in the network impossible.
30.8.2.1  ICMP Flood Attack
An ICMP flood is broadcasting many pings or UDP packets so that so much data is sent to the 
system, that it slows it down or locks it up.
30.8.2.2  Smurf 
A smurf attacker (A) floods a router (B) with Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) echo 
request packets (pings) with the destination IP address of each packet as the broadcast address 
of the network. The router will broadcast the ICMP echo request packet to all hosts on the 
network. If there are numerous hosts, this will create a large amount of ICMP echo request and 
response traffic. 
If an attacker (A) spoofs the source IP address of the ICMP echo request packet, the resulting 
ICMP traffic will not only saturate the receiving network (B), but the network of the spoofed 
source IP address (C).
Figure 342   Smurf Attack 
• TCP Filtered Portscan
• UDP Filtered Portscan
• IP Filtered Portscan
• TCP Filtered Decoy 
Portscan
• UDP Filtered Decoy 
Portscan
• IP Filtered Decoy 
Portscan
• TCP Filtered 
Portsweep
• UDP Filtered Portsweep
• IP Filtered Portsweep
• ICMP Filtered 
Portsweep
• TCP Filtered Distributed 
Portscan
• UDP Filtered 
Distributed Portscan
• IP Filtered 
Distributed Portscan