Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Brute force SMTP attack right now *help* Post 302262219 by mcraul on Wednesday 26th of November 2008 04:15:59 PM
Old 11-26-2008
ok i tried netsat -na but what am i looking for?
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Apache brute force attack

Hi, I'm trying find out if there is a way to stop a brute force attack on a Webmail site. I'm trying to setup a webmail access, but I would like to prevent too many invalid logins from the same IP. I've looked into Snort, but I was wondering if there was an application level firewall that can... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: nitin
1 Replies

2. Cybersecurity

What I think is a DoS attack

About 3 days ago our Apache logs started filling with the following errors: mod_ssl: SSL handshake failed (server <weberver>:443, client 41.235.234.172) (OpenSSL library error follows) OpenSSL: error:1408A0B7:SSL routines:SSL3_GET_CLIENT_HELLO:no ciphers specified These initially were... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ccj4467
1 Replies

3. Cybersecurity

Found attack from

Hi, I have a belkin router installed and a look at the security log has got me worried a little bit. Security log: Fri Jan 29 20:41:46 2010 =>Found attack from 68.147.232.199. Source port is 58591 and destination port is 12426 which use the TCP protocol. Fri Jan 29 20:41:46 2010 ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jld
1 Replies

4. Cybersecurity

Network attack - so what?

In my logs I find entries about attacks on my system. I know IP addresses, I know date and time and I know what they tried to do. So what's the best I can do now? Tell everybody that there are cybercriminals on that network? Write an email to their admin? Anything else? (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: Action
10 Replies

5. Cybersecurity

UUCP attack?

Is this an attack attempt? I got an e-mail from 'uucp Admin' last night and again this morning: What does it mean and what can I do about it? Thanks (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ctafret
4 Replies

6. Cybersecurity

DDoS and brute force attack

How to protect DDoS and brute force attack. I want to secure my server and block attacker. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: romanepo
1 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Expect script that simulates a SSH brute force attack

I want to test the effectiveness of sshguard on some of my systems so I'm trying to write a script that simulates a brute force attack by sending a bunch of different username and password combinations to the servers being tested. So far I have this: #!/usr/local/bin/expect set timeout 3... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: ph0enix
5 Replies

8. Emergency UNIX and Linux Support

DDOS attack please help!

Dear community, my site was recently attacjed by DDOS technique and goes down in a few minutes. My site runs under Debian/Apache2/Mysql. I identified the IPs who attack me and block it through iptable firewall from debian. Something like: iptables -D INPUT -s xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx -j DROP This... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Lord Spectre
7 Replies
Path::Dispatcher::Match(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation			      Path::Dispatcher::Match(3pm)

NAME
Path::Dispatcher::Match - the result of a successful rule match SYNOPSIS
my $rule = Path::Dispatcher::Rule::Tokens->new( tokens => [ 'attack', qr/^w+$/ ], block => sub { my $match = shift; attack($match->pos(2)) }, ); my $match = $rule->match("attack dragon"); # introspection $match->path # "attack dragon" $match->leftover # empty string (populated with prefix rules) $match->rule # $rule $match->positional_captures # ["attack", "dragon"] (decided by the rule) $match->pos(1) # "attack" $match->pos(2) # "dragon" $match->run # attack("dragon") DESCRIPTION
If a Path::Dispatcher::Rule successfully matches a path, it creates one or more "Path::Dispatcher::Match" objects. ATTRIBUTES
rule The Path::Dispatcher::Rule that created this match. path The path that the rule matched. leftover The rest of the path. This is populated when the rule matches a prefix of the path. positional_captures Any positional captures generated by the rule. For example, Path::Dispatcher::Rule::Regex populates this with the capture variables. named_captures Any named captures generated by the rule. For example, Path::Dispatcher::Rule::Regex populates this with named captures. parent The parent match object, if applicable (which may be set if this match is the child of, for exampl, a Path::Dispatcher::Rule::Under prefix) METHODS
run Executes the rule's codeblock with the same arguments. pos($i) Returns the $ith positional capture, 1-indexed. perl v5.12.4 2011-08-30 Path::Dispatcher::Match(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:13 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy