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ModSecurity 2.5
ModSecurity 2.5

ModSecurity 2.5: Prevent web application hacking with this easy to use guide

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ModSecurity 2.5

Chapter 1. Installation and Configuration

This chapter deals with the installation and basic configuration of ModSecurity. In this chapter you will learn about the following, among other things:

  • Which additional libraries are required to compile ModSecurity

  • How to compile ModSecurity from source

  • How to integrate ModSecurity with Apache

  • Getting the basic configuration for ModSecurity in place

  • Testing that ModSecurity is working correctly

If you're new to ModSecurity I would recommend that you set it up on a test server while you get acquainted with the ins and outs of using it. You wouldn't want to deploy it on a production server only to find out a few days later that you've been blocking everyone in Europe from accessing your server because of a misconfiguration. (For more on blocking users from specific countries, see Chapter 2, Writing Rules.)

The installation instructions in this chapter show you how to compile ModSecurity from source. Some Linux distributions also make packages for ModSecurity available, but since compiling from source guarantees you will get the latest version of ModSecurity that is what we'll be doing in this chapter.

Versions


ModSecurity version 2.0 was first released in October 2006 and is a big improvement over the previous major version line. It is a substantial rewrite that changes the rule language and adds a lot of improvements such as:

  • The ability to store data in transaction variables

  • Additional processing phases to give more fine-grained control over in which phase of the HTTP transaction a rule should be invoked

  • Regular expression back-references which allow you to capture parts of a regular expression and reference it later

  • Support for creating rules for XML data and much more

At the time this book was published, the latest major ModSecurity version was 2.5, and this version line adds even more enhancements such as the ability to reference a geographical database, which allows you to create rules that take action based on the geographical location of the user. Another interesting new feature is credit card number detection, which can be used to detect and prevent credit card numbers from being exposed through your web server. Of course, all the other security features that make ModSecurity such a great web application firewall have been refined and are available in the latest version, and we will learn all about them in the coming chapters.

Since version 2 of ModSecurity is such a different beast to previous versions, this book focuses only on this latest major version branch. This means that you must run Apache 2.0 or later, as ModSecurity 2 requires this Apache branch to function.

As Apache 1.x is a legacy branch that is now only infrequently updated (and when updated, mostly to patch known security vulnerabilities), now might be a good time to upgrade to the 2.x branch of Apache if you're still running an older version.

Downloading


ModSecurity was originally developed by web application security specialist Ivan Ristic in 2002. He has also written the excellent book Apache Security (O'Reilly Media, 2005) which I highly recommend if you want a general book on hardening Apache. ModSecurity was acquired by Breach Security, a California-based web application security company, in 2006. The company chose to continue releasing ModSecurity as a free open source product (under the GPLv2 license), hiring Ivan and additional staff to work on the product, which is good news for all users of ModSecurity.

The ModSecurity source code is available at http://www.modsecurity.org/download/. The source is provided as a .tar.gz archive—to download it all you have to do is copy the link to the latest release and you will then be able to use wget to download the source archive to your server.

In the following text the name of the file used for the source archive is assumed to be modsecurity‑apache.tar.gz. Make sure you substitute the actual file name or web location (which usually includes the version number of the latest release) for this name when downloading or working with files.

$ wget http://www.modsecurity.org/download/modsecurity-apache.tar.gz
Resolving www.modsecurity.org... 216.75.21.122
Connecting to www.modsecurity.org|216.75.21.122|:80... connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 302 Found
Location: http://downloads.sourceforge.net/mod-security/modsecurity-apache.tar.gz?use_mirror= [following]
[...]
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 200 OK
Length: 1252295 (1.2M) [application/x-gzip]
Saving to: `modsecurity-apache.tar.gz'
[...]
'modsecurity-apache.tar.gz' saved [1252295/1252295] ]

Checking the integrity of the downloaded source archive

Checking the integrity of the downloaded archive file is always a good habit. This ensures that the file has not been tampered with in any way. There are two ways to do this—a less secure and a more secure way. The less secure way is to use the md5sum tool to calculate the MD5 sum of the downloaded file and then compare this MD5 sum to the one published on the ModSecurity website.

MD5 is an algorithm of a type called "cryptographic one-way hash". It takes an input of an arbitrary size (the source archive, in this case), and produces an output of a fixed length. A hash function is designed so that if even one bit changes in the input data, a completely different hash sum is calculated. The hash function should also be collision resistant. This means that it should be very hard to create two files that have the same hash value.

Using the MD5 sum to verify the integrity of the archive is less than optimal for two reasons: :

  1. If anyone had the ability to alter the source code archive then they would also have the ability to alter the file that contains the calculated MD5 sum and could easily make the bad source distribution appear to have a valid checksum.

  2. The other, and less subtle reason to not use the checksum approach, is that it was recently discovered that the MD5 checksum function is not collision resistant. In 2008, a group of researchers used 200 Sony PlayStation 3 consoles (yes, really!) to create a falsified web server certificate using attacks on the MD5 function. All in all, this means that the MD5 checksum function is no longer considered secure.

The better way to verify the integrity of the downloaded source archive is to use public key cryptography. In public key cryptography, encryption and decryption are performed using different keys. Encryption is performed using a private key, which only the person encrypting a file or document has access to. Decryption is done using a public key, which anyone can access and which can be published online.

When a file is signed using public key cryptography, a checksum for the file is first calculated, just like with the MD5 algorithm described above. The calculated hash is then encrypted using the signer's private key. You can then verify the integrity of the signed file by decrypting the hash (using the signer's public key) and comparing it to the calculated hash value. All of this is done automatically using a program such as PGP or Gnu Privacy Guard (GPG).

The developers of ModSecurity have signed the source code archive using their private key, which allows us to verify its integrity in the manner just described. The first thing we need to do in order to verify the archive is download the file that contains the signature:

$ wget http://www.modsecurity.org/download/modsecurity-apache.tar.gz.asc

We can then use the open source program GPG to verify the signature. GPG comes pre-installed on most Linux systems; however should the program not be installed on your system you can get it at http://www.gnupg.org.

When we try to verify the signature of the source archive using GPG we will encounter a problem, as we don't have the public key of the person who signed the file:

Fixing this is however easy. All we need to do is download the public key file used to sign the file, as specified by the key ID in the output above. The key is available on the server pgp.mit.edu, which is a repository of public key files.

Tip

If you have a firewall controlling outbound traffic, you need to enable connections to remote port 11371 for GPG to be able to download the key.

The following command is used to download the key from the server:

Now that we have downloaded the public key, all the required elements to check the signature are in place. Running the verification command again produces this output:

The verification of the source archive using the public key we just downloaded has succeeded, as evidenced by the line starting with Good signature from. However, what about the ominous-looking message Warning: This key is not certified with a trusted signature?

Public key cryptography tools such as GPG work using a concept called web of trust. In the same way that you might trust that your best friend's parents are the people he introduces to you as his parents, a public key can be trusted if other people you trust have verified that the key belongs to the actual person it is issued to. This verification of another key is called signing the key, and this can be done by many people (to continue our analogy, this would be like other people verifying that your best friend's parents are the people he introduced you to).

If you don't already have public keys installed on your system that build a chain of trust and verify that the key you just used really does belong to Brian Rectanus, there is a (very small) chance that someone could have forged his public key. Fortunately, for those who are very paranoid, or are working on a project that has high security demands, it is possible to verify that a public key belongs to a person. This is done by taking the key's fingerprint, and asking someone who knows Brian (or even Brian himself) to verify that his key has the fingerprint shown on your copy. You can show the fingerprints of all the keys you have imported into GPG by executing gpg --fingerprint.

Unpacking the source code


If you have downloaded the gzip file with the source code and saved it as modsecurity-apache.tar.gz you can use the following command to unpack it:

$ tar xfvz modsecurity-apache.tar.gz

This will unpack the source code into a subfolder with the name modsecurity-apache. It will also create a directory structure in this folder where the different subfolders will hold the source code, documentation, and sample rules, among other things. A typical layout of the directories is as follows:

  • modsecurity/apache2

    Contains the source code to ModSecurity as well as the files needed to build the binary module

  • modsecurity/doc

    Contains the ModSecurity reference guide in HTML and PDF format

  • modsecurity/rules

    Contains .conf files with pre-configured rules useful for stopping a variety of attacks. These rule files are known as the core ruleset, and this ruleset is continuously refined by Breach Security.

  • modsecurity/tools

    Contains supporting tools such as a Perl script to update rules (which is created during the compilation process).

Required additional libraries and files


ModSecurity requires the following additional components before you can compile it:

  • apxs

  • libxml2

  • mod_unique_id

apxs is the APache eXtenSion tool and is used to compile extension modules for Apache. Since ModSecurity is an Apache module this tool is required to be able to compile ModSecurity. You can see if you have apxs installed on your system by running the following:

$ whereis -b apxs

If apxs is available the above command will return its location, like so:

$ whereis -b apxs
apxs: /usr/sbin/apxs

If you don't have apxs installed then it is available as part of a package called httpd-devel (or apache2-dev on Debian, Ubuntu, and related distributions). Use your favorite package manager to install this and you should then have apxs available on your system.

libxml2 is an XML parsing library. If you don't have this installed then you can get it by installing the package libxml2-devel (or libxml2-dev if you're using a Debian-based distribution).

Finally, mod_unique_id is an Apache module that generates a unique identifier for each HTTP request. (See http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.0/mod/mod_unique_id.html if you are interested in the technical details on how this works.) Apache usually comes with this module pre-compiled, but you'll need to insert the following line in the module list of httpd.conf (you can find this list by looking for a bunch of lines all starting with the LoadModule directive) and restart the server for the module to be activated:

LoadModule unique_id_module modules/mod_unique_id.so

Note that this procedure for enabling the module is for Red Hat/Fedora-based distributions. On Debian/Ubuntu, for example, you would use the command a2enmod unique_id to enable the module.

To verify that mod_unique_id is indeed loaded into Apache you can run the following command and check for the presence of the line unique_id_module (shared) in the output listing:

$ httpd -t -D DUMP_MODULES
…
unique_id_module (shared)

Tip

On Debian-based distributions, use apache2 -t -D DUMP_MODULES instead of the above.

Compilation


As with other Linux software that comes as source, you need to compile ModSecurity to be able to use it. Compilation will result in a file called mod_security2.so, which is a binary shared module used by the Apache server in a plugin-like fashion. This module file contains all the functionality of ModSecurity.

Note

The fact that ModSecurity is an Apache module and not a stand-alone application (it could have been written as a reverse proxy server, filtering requests and then passing them to Apache) confers many advantages. One of these is the ability to inspect SSL connections and see data compressed using mod_deflate without having to write any additional code to decrypt or decompress the data first.

To get started compiling the source, change to the root user as you will require root privileges to install ModSecurity. Then change to the apache2 subfolder of the directory where you unpacked ModSecurity (for example, /home/download/modsecurity-apache/apache2/). This directory contains the source files and all the files needed to build the binary module.

To be able to compile the binary, you need a Makefile, which is a file that contains details of your particular server setup such as which compiler is available and what options it supports. To generate the Makefile, run the following command:

[apache2]$ ./configure
...
config.status: creating Makefile
config.status: creating build/apxs-wrapper
config.status: creating mod_security2_config.h

If the configure script stops with an error indicating that the PCRE library cannot be found, this is usually because you have compiled Apache from source and it has used the PCRE library that is bundled with the Apache distribution. Running configure --with-pcre=/path/to/apache-src/srclib/pcre should solve the problem (if it doesn't, edit Makefile and change the PCRE_CFLAGS and PCRE_LIBS variables to point to the pcre directory).

After this command has completed, check for the presence of a file called Makefile in the current directory. After making sure it exists you can go ahead and compile the binary:

[apache2]$ make

You should see a fairly long list of messages written to the terminal as the compilation takes place, and if everything goes well there should be no error messages (though you may get a few compiler warnings, which you can ignore).

Integrating ModSecurity with Apache


The compilation process outlined in the previous section results in a file called mod_security2.so being created. This is an Apache dynamic shared object which is a plugin to Apache that adds functionality to the web server without requiring it to be recompiled. This file contains all the ModSecurity functionality, and integrating it like any other Apache module is, except for some basic configuration, all it takes to enable ModSecurity on your server.

The mod_security2.so file is output to the modsecurity-apache/apache2/.libs directory by the compiler. To let Apache know about ModSecurity, start by copying the mod_security2.so file to your Apache modules directory. Typically the modules directory will be something like /etc/httpd/modules, but the location will vary depending on your setup.

The next step is to edit the Apache configuration file and add a line to let the web server know about the new module. Start your favorite editor and open up httpd.conf (again, the location will vary depending on your setup, but assuming the same Apache base directory as in the previous section, the file will be in /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf). It's a good idea to create a backup copy of httpd.conf before you start editing the file, so that you can revert to the backup if anything goes wrong.

In httpd.conf there will be a fairly long list of configuration directives that start with the word LoadModule. Find this section of LoadModule directives and add the following line to the top of the list:

LoadModule security2_module modules/mod_security2.so

The security2_module string is known as the module identifier, and is declared in the source code of each module. It is used by Apache to later identify the module in such directives as IfModule, which turn on or off processing of configuration directives based on whether or not the module is loaded.

After adding this line, exit the editor and run apachectl configtest. This will test the new configuration file and report back any errors so you can fix them before attempting to restart the server. If all went well, run apachectl restart to restart the web server. This will load ModSecurity which means the fun part of writing rules can soon begin!

Configuration file


It is best to put all the configuration and security rules for ModSecurity in a separate file in the conf.d sub-directory of the Apache root directory. This prevents you from cluttering your main Apache configuration file with ModSecurity directives.

Simply start your favorite editor, create a file called modsec.conf in the conf.d directory, and enter the following to get started:

<IfModule security2_module>
# Turn on rule engine and set default action SecRuleEngine On SecDefaultAction "phase:2,deny,log,status:403"
</IfModule>

Make sure the IfModule directive uses the module identifier you provided in the LoadModule line in httpd.conf (security2_module in this case), otherwise Apache will ignore everything between the start and end of IfModule.

SecRuleEngine On turns on the rule engine so that it will start processing rules. For debugging purposes you can also set this to Off (which will turn off rule processing) or DetectionOnly, which will process rules but not take any action, even if a rule matches (which is helpful if you want to test that rules are working, but not block any requests should there be a problem with the rules).

The SecDefaultAction line above specifies what happens when a rule match occurs. In this case we want ModSecurity to deny the request with a status code 403 ("Forbidden"), and to write a log entry (which will show up in the Apache error log and the ModSecurity audit log). The default action is to allow requests even if a rule matches, so it is important to add this line to make sure any matching rule results in the request being denied.

You may be wondering what the phase:2 statement in the above directive does. ModSecurity divides the processing of a request into five phases—request headers, request body, response headers, response body and logging:

Phase number

Phase name

Phase occurs

1

REQUEST_HEADERS

Right after Apache has read the headers of the HTTP request.

2

REQUEST_BODY

After the request body has been read. Most ModSecurity rules are written to be processed in this phase.

3

RESPONSE_HEADERS

Right before the response headers are sent back to the client.

4

RESPONSE_BODY

Before the response body is sent back to client. Any processing of the response body to inspect for example data leaks should take place in this phase.

5

LOGGING

Right before logging takes place. At this point requests can no longer be blocked—all you can do is affect how logging is done.

As can be seen by the table, the most useful phase when we want to inspect incoming HTTP requests is the request body phase, in which all of the request headers, as well as the body, are available. By specifying phase:2 for the default action, subsequent rules will all be processed in phase 2 unless another phase is specified in a rule.

To override the default phase for a rule, you use the phase directive, as can be seen in this example, which stops processing and denies the request if the request header's user-agent field contains the string WebVulnScan, which is a script to find weaknesses in web servers:

SecRule REQUEST_HEADERS:User-Agent "WebVulnScan" "phase:1"

This will cause the rule to be processed in phase 1—after the request headers have been received.

Completing the configuration

To complete the configuration we will introduce some additional directives. Here is the complete basic configuration file:

<IfModule security2_module> # Turn on rule engine and set default action
SecRuleEngine On SecDefaultAction "phase:2,deny,log,status:403"
# Configure request body access and limits
SecRequestBodyAccess On
# Debug log settings
SecDebugLog logs/modsec_debug.log
SecDebugLogLevel 0 </IfModule>

The SeqRequestBodyAccess On directive turns on processing of HTTP request bodies. This allows us to inspect uploads done via POST requests. When this directive is enabled, ModSecurity will buffer the request body in memory and process it before giving Apache access to it for the remaining processing.

Using the SecDebugLog directive, we specify the path to the debug log file. In this case it will be stored in the logs sub-directory of the Apache root. We set the SecDebugLogLevel to 0, meaning no debug data will be recorded. It's useful to have this in the configuration file so that the debug log level can be changed should we need to debug the ruleset.

Testing your installation


After completing the installation we need a way to test that the ModSecurity module has been loaded and is working as it should. The procedure described here can be used to test that ModSecurity is functioning correctly whenever you feel the need to verify this (such as after making changes to your Apache configuration file).

Creating a simple ModSecurity rule

To test that ModSecurity is working correctly we will create a simple HTML file and then deny access to it using a ModSecurity rule. Change to your web server's DocumentRoot directory and run the following command to create a file called secret.html containing our secret string:

$ echo "The owl flies at midnight" > secret.html

Next, verify that you are able to access the file and see its content at the location http://yourserver/secret.html.

The main configuration directive used to create ModSecurity rules is called SecRule. You will learn all about using the SecRule directive in Chapter 2, but for now all you need to know is that this directive allows you to block content based on regular expressions.

We will now create a security rule to block access to this file. Enter the following in your modsec.conf file, below the configuration settings.

# Block all requests that have the string "secret" in the URI SecRule REQUEST_URI "secret"

Save the file and restart Apache to make it load the new security rule. Now try accessing the file again—you should get an "access denied" message, meaning that ModSecurity is doing its job and blocking access to the file because the URI contains the regular expression "secret".

Tip

If you add new ModSecurity rules on a production server, you can use apachectl graceful to restart Apache without closing currently open connections. However, this can cause inconsistent behavior when testing rules, as sometimes you may get an Apache instance that has not yet terminated after the graceful restart (and thus has the old ModSecurity rules loaded in memory). Consider always doing a full restart with apachectl restart when testing out your rules.

What ModSecurity does with this rule is match the "secret" phrase against the request URI. Since the regular expression "secret" matches the filename secret.html, the rule is a match and the default action specifies that the request should be denied with a 403 error.

Disguising the web server signature

Suppose a highly motivated attacker wanted to target your server specifically. What would be one of the first things he would do? Finding out which operating system and web server software your system is running would be important to him, as he would then be able to create a replica of your server and probe it for weaknesses in the comfort of his own home.

It follows, then, that disguising what web server software your system is running can help prevent an attack, or at least make it more difficult to carry out. This is actually something that is debated in the security community as some argue that "security by obscurity" is never the way to go. I am however of the belief that you should make life as difficult as possible for potential attackers, and if that means disguising the server version and list of installed modules then that's what you should do.

Apache itself actually doesn't provide a configuration directive to change the server signature—all you can do (unless you change the source code and compile Apache from source) is to use ServerTokens ProductOnly in the Apache configuration file, which will reduce the server signature to "Apache".

Using ModSecurity, we can change the server name to a different brand of server entirely, like for example Microsoft-IIS/5.0. We will however be a little bit more sneaky and just change the server version to make it look like we are running an old legacy version of Apache.

First you need to tell Apache to send full server version information. This is so that ModSecurity can recognize and alter the server signature—setting the signature to full creates a big enough buffer space in memory to allow for alterations. Simply make sure you have the following line in your httpd.conf:

# Send full server signature so ModSecurity can alter it ServerTokens Full

Finally, put the following line in your modsec.conf file and restart Apache to change the server signature:

# Alter the web server signature sent by Apache SecServerSignature "Apache 1.3.24"

This is an old version of Apache full of security vulnerabilities. Seeing this, an attacker might well waste a lot of time trying to use an old exploit to break into the system, hopefully triggering audit logs along the way to alert you of the attempted break-in.

The possibilities are endless when running your web server under a false flag—you could for example add unused Apache modules to the server signature to make it look like you are running all sorts of exploitable modules. This will not be a big stumbling block to an experienced attacker, as there are programs out there that fingerprint web servers and give the best guess as to the real name and version being run (we will be defeating this sort of program later on, in Chapter 6). However, it only makes sense to make the attacker's job as difficult as possible—every little bit really does help.

To test that your new server signature is working, you can use netcat while logged into your server to take a look at the response header Apache is sending out. If the server signature change was successful, you should see a line reading Server: Apache 1.3.24 in the header near the top of the output:

$ echo -e "HEAD / HTTP/1.0\n\n" | nc localhost 80
HTTP/1.1 200 OK Date: Wed, 28 Jan 2009 15:01:56 GMT
Server: Apache 1.3.24
Last-Modified: Mon, 26 Jan 2009 12:01:12 GMT
ETag: "6391bf-20-461617eaf9200"
Accept-Ranges: bytes
Content-Length: 32
Connection: close
Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8

Summary


These simple examples have hopefully given you a taste of what can be accomplished with ModSecurity. There are many powerful functions left, and you may be amazed at some of the things that can be done using this versatile module.

In this chapter we first looked at downloading the ModSecurity source code and verifying its integrity. We then compiled the source code to produce the binary module file mod_security2.so. After this, we integrated the module file with Apache, and tested the new setup to make sure that ModSecurity was properly installed and working. Finally, we used ModSecurity to alter Apache's server signature by employing the SecServerSignature directive.

We are now done with the installation and basic setup of ModSecurity. In the next chapter we move on to learning all about writing rules.

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Key benefits

  • Secure your system by knowing exactly how a hacker would break into it
  • Covers writing rules in-depth and Modsecurity rule language elements such as variables, actions, and request phases
  • Covers the common attacks in use on the Web, and ways to find the geographical location of an attacker and send alert emails when attacks are discovered
  • Packed with many real-life examples for better understanding

Description

With more than 67% of web servers running Apache and web-based attacks becoming more and more prevalent, web security has become a critical area for web site managers. Most existing tools work on the TCP/IP level, failing to use the specifics of the HTTP protocol in their operation. Mod_security is a module running on Apache, which will help you overcome the security threats prevalent in the online world. A complete guide to using ModSecurity, this book will show you how to secure your web application and server, and does so by using real-world examples of attacks currently in use. It will help you learn about SQL injection, cross-site scripting attacks, cross-site request forgeries, null byte attacks, and many more so that you know how attackers operate. Using clear, step-by-step instructions this book starts by teaching you how to install and set up ModSecurity, before diving into the rule language with examples. It assumes no prior knowledge of ModSecurity, so as long as you are familiar with basic Linux administration, you can start to learn right away. Real-life case studies are used to illustrate the dangers on the Web today ñ you will for example learn how the recent worm that hit Twitter works, and how you could have used ModSecurity to stop it in its tracks. The mechanisms behind these and other attacks are described in detail, and you will learn everything you need to know to make sure your server and web application remain unscathed on the increasingly dangerous web. Have you ever wondered how attackers figure out the exact web server version running on a system? They use a technique called HTTP fingerprinting, and you will learn about this in depth and how to defend against it by flying your web server under a "false flag". The last part of the book shows you how to really lock down a web application by implementing a positive security model that only allows through requests that conform to a specific, pre-approved model, and denying anything that is even the slightest bit out of line.

Who is this book for?

This book is written for system administrators or anyone running an Apache web server who wants to learn how to secure that server. It assumes that you are familiar with using the Linux shell and command-line tools, but does its best to explain everything so that those who are not Linux experts can make full use of ModSecurity.

What you will learn

  • Compile ModSecurity from source and install it on a Linux system
  • Log any anomalous event and use the ModSecurity console to view log data online so that attempted break-ins can be quickly discovered and dealt with
  • Learn how a recent worm disabled Twitter and how it could have been stopped using ModSecurity
  • Guard against web site defacement by having ModSecurity scan for unauthorized changes to your web pages then alert you about issues via email.
  • Locate the geographical position of an attacker using ModSecurity applications
  • Know how attackers operate by learning about SQL injection, cross-site scripting attacks, cross-site request forgeries, null byte attacks, and many more
  • Put Apache in a chroot jail using ModSecurity ñ no more frustrating hours of tinkering to get everything working as it should
  • Prevent HTTP fingerprinting by flying your Apache server under a false flag
  • Protect against newly discovered vulnerabilities that don t have a vendor-supplied patch, using ModSecurity "just-in-time" patching
  • Prevent the source code of your web application being shown to the world if something goes wrong with your server configuration
  • Discover the real IP address of an attacker using ModSecurity, even if the attacker is behind a proxy server
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€264.99 billed in 18 months
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Frequently bought together


Stars icon
Total 132.97
Advanced Penetration Testing for Highly-Secured Environments: The Ultimate Security Guide
€48.99
Metasploit Penetration Testing Cookbook
€41.99
ModSecurity 2.5
€41.99
Total 132.97 Stars icon
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Table of Contents

9 Chapters
Installation and Configuration Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Writing Rules Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Performance Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Audit Logging Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Virtual Patching Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Blocking Common Attacks Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chroot Jails Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
REMO Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Protecting a Web Application Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

Customer reviews

Rating distribution
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Half star icon Empty star icon 3.7
(3 Ratings)
5 star 0%
4 star 66.7%
3 star 33.3%
2 star 0%
1 star 0%
str Jan 04, 2013
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Empty star icon 4
Dieses Buch macht einen durchweg guten Eindruck. Aus meiner Sicht ist es als Einführung in ModSecurity, Nachschlagewerk und Rezeptesammlung gleichermaßen zu gebrauchen. Hier und da wären ein paar Erläuterungen mehr zu bestimmten Konfigurationen doch besser gewesen (daher "nur" 4 statt 5 Sterne).
Amazon Verified review Amazon
Russ McRee Jan 05, 2010
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Empty star icon 4
ModSecurity 2.5 covers the latest release of ModSecurity, "a web application firewall deployed to establish an external security layer that increases security, detects, and prevents attacks before they reach web applications. With over 70% of all attacks now carried out over the web application level, organizations need every help they can get in making their systems secure."- ModSecurity makes full HTTP transaction logging possible, allowing complete requests and responses to be logged.- ModSecurity can monitor the HTTP traffic in real time in order to detect attacks.- ModSecurity can also act immediately to prevent attacks from reaching your web applications.- ModSecurity includes a flexible rule engine and can be deployed embedded or as a reverse proxy.Covering ModSecurity 2.5 comprehensively and intelligibly is no small feat, and Mischel has achieved the goal. His style is concise yet clear, technical but not overly verbose, and well organized.As "complete guides" go ModSecurity 2.5 meets the standard.All the expected content is present, from installation to configuration, audit logging to chroot jails, blocking and protection, Mischel is thorough and takes due care to be precise and accurate.I have already recommended this book to a vendor in dire need of improved protection for their web application. I'll give you one guess regarding why they said "We can't use ModSecurity." Yep, performance. To which I said, "Yeah, but how's your performance with the terrible code you've written and the resulting SQL injection attack that took your site apart?"All of which takes us to my favored highlight of ModSecurity 2.5; specifically an entire chapter dedicated to performance. This was a great decision of Mischel's part. Performance is an important variable when utilizing ModSecurity and Mischel covers the fundamentals. He recommends using httperf and establishing a baseline without rules loaded. Response time, memory usage, and CPU usage are key. Once you've gathered necessary metrics, the same testing pattern with rules loaded will give you all the data you need to optimize. Mischel offers optimization concepts including memory consumption, bypassing static content inspection (think image files, JavaScript, and binary downloads), and using the @pm and @pmFromFile phrase matching operators (new in ModSecurity 2.5) to significantly speed up tasks normally left to regex matching (think 200 times faster).My criticisms of this book are editorial in nature; there is one truly egregious editing flaw and another odd decision.First, the page heading for the entirety of Chapter 5 (Virtual Patching) reads as Chapter 9. That's an error that a high school newspaper editor would catch and is simply unforgivable.Additionally, where Mischel discusses writing rules at great length in Chapter 2, I would have chosen to immediately follow with the REMO (Rule Editor for ModSecurity) content as Chapter 3 rather than sticking it in Chapter 8.Magnus Mischel's ModSecurity 2.5 is a worthy read and a recommended purchase, and earns 3.5 stars out of 5 (very good).As the Web Application Security Consortium releases WASC Threat Classification v2.0, there is much to consider in the way of web application threats; ModSecurity 2.5 will certainly contribute to your protection arsenal. ModSecurity 2.5
Amazon Verified review Amazon
ഹൈപ്നോ🐸ടോഡ്‌ Jul 16, 2019
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Empty star icon Empty star icon 3
Book is 10 years old. Most of the details apply. But it recommended to get book which is based on new modsecurity. Author does a good job explaining . But what i have fond is just reading through modsecuity documentation from spider should do the job... This can be read after to see what evolved ...
Amazon Verified review Amazon
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