ID | Name |
---|---|
T1499.001 | OS Exhaustion Flood |
T1499.002 | Service Exhaustion Flood |
T1499.003 | Application Exhaustion Flood |
T1499.004 | Application or System Exploitation |
Adversaries may target resource intensive features of applications to cause a denial of service (DoS), denying availability to those applications. For example, specific features in web applications may be highly resource intensive. Repeated requests to those features may be able to exhaust system resources and deny access to the application or the server itself.[1]
ID | Mitigation | Description |
---|---|---|
M1037 | Filter Network Traffic |
Leverage services provided by Content Delivery Networks (CDN) or providers specializing in DoS mitigations to filter traffic upstream from services.[2] Filter boundary traffic by blocking source addresses sourcing the attack, blocking ports that are being targeted, or blocking protocols being used for transport. |
ID | Data Source | Data Component |
---|---|---|
DS0015 | Application Log | Application Log Content |
DS0029 | Network Traffic | Network Traffic Content |
Network Traffic Flow | ||
DS0013 | Sensor Health | Host Status |
Detection of Endpoint DoS can sometimes be achieved before the effect is sufficient to cause significant impact to the availability of the service, but such response time typically requires very aggressive monitoring and responsiveness. Typical network throughput monitoring tools such as netflow, SNMP, and custom scripts can be used to detect sudden increases in circuit utilization.[3] Real-time, automated, and qualitative study of the network traffic can identify a sudden surge in one type of protocol can be used to detect an attack as it starts.
In addition to network level detections, endpoint logging and instrumentation can be useful for detection. Attacks targeting web applications may generate logs in the web server, application server, and/or database server that can be used to identify the type of attack, possibly before the impact is felt.