And, unlike with rsyslogd, you can't natively set up journalctl to generate an alert,
as in generate an email based on log entries. How nice.
I'm not in a good mood LOL.
I've closed down my ISP's firewall. I have the luxury of being able to do that.
I'll have something back up by the weekend, when I need the service. By then, I should
have something figured out.
On Thu, Apr 10, 2025 at 09:49:42AM -0700, Gary wrote:
Today I received, via email, a security warning from
my ISP, who is ATT. They were advising me that my system was being attacked and that the
attack was based on an OpenSSH vulnerability.
After reading some CVE and Red Hat pages, it turns out I'm at risk because I updated
my bastion server. My other systems, which the bastion server front ends for, aren't
affected because the version of OpenSSH is too OLD.
What a pain.
This happens all the time, whether I get notified or not. Newer versions of software are
NOT more secure. In fact, they become LESS secure as developers try to incorporate more
functionalty and edge uses. And, in this case, because someone made a mistake.
The whole world is on this upgrade/update treadmill and it gets you nothing. IMHO you are
delusional if you think it does.
I have to get on it because I HAVE to upgrade browsers. You can only do this
independently from an OS upgrade for so long.
Fortunately the exploit is very difficut to exploit beyond causing a "system
crash". It takes a lot of "resources" and thousands of attempts. Which is
probably how ATT noticed it.
I can't determine if, or ask ATT, to just block the attack. I can't respond to
the email. It seems like blocking the attack would be nice. Fortunately, my network is
on the slow side and the exploit probably can't be feasibly involked.
This is why I resist upgrading/updating. It is a waste of A LOT OF TIME. Better to have
a version and just patch vulnerabilities that apply to you and forget the rest.
The recommended fix is to set the logingracetime=0 for the sshd server. I'm trying
to determine how this will affect password based authentication with long passwords over
slow/bad networks, my situation. It seems like it might.
I'm seriously considering just downreving the OS on the bastion server. It
doesn't really need that much functionality and never runs a browser. And, although I
wouldn't like it, I'm not sure what they could do by executing arbitrary code
there. They would have to be able to ssh somewhere useful.
I can see from the logs that I'm being hit every 3 sec or so. All different
IP's, must be a botnet.
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