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Special Forums IP Networking What's a Mailbomber? and what Post 34163 by Neo on Friday 7th of February 2003 01:07:42 PM
Old 02-07-2003
Yes, you are right, in this world of cyber-uncertainly, people must be very careful and have positive-ID when considering countermeasures against cyberattacks.

It is possible for an attacker to fake the originating address of an attack and an unknowing defender might take action against the completely wrong party.

In this particular attack; I have found about 5 IP addresses attacking the site and all are static, verifiable and all come from Korean address space. All are behind a firewall with one one open <1024 IP port... POP3...... seems more than a coincident when all attackers are from the Korean IP land and all the platforms are tightly locked down.....
 

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NAT action in tc(8)						       Linux						       NAT action in tc(8)

NAME
nat - stateless native address translation action SYNOPSIS
tc ... action nat DIRECTION OLD NEW DIRECTION := { ingress | egress } OLD := IPV4_ADDR_SPEC NEW := IPV4_ADDR_SPEC IPV4_ADDR_SPEC := { default | any | all | in_addr[/{prefix|netmask}] DESCRIPTION
The nat action allows to perform NAT without the overhead of conntrack, which is desirable if the number of flows or addresses to perform NAT on is large. This action is best used in combination with the u32 filter to allow for efficient lookups of a large number of stateless NAT rules in constant time. OPTIONS
ingress Translate destination addresses, i.e. perform DNAT. egress Translate source addresses, i.e. perform SNAT. OLD Specifies addresses which should be translated. NEW Specifies addresses which OLD should be translated into. NOTES
The accepted address format in OLD and NEW is quite flexible. It may either consist of one of the keywords default, any or all, represent- ing the all-zero IP address or a combination of IP address and netmask or prefix length separated by a slash (/) sign. In any case, the mask (or prefix length) value of OLD is used for NEW as well so that a one-to-one mapping of addresses is assured. Address translation is done using a combination of binary operations. First, the original (source or destination) address is matched against the value of OLD. If the original address fits, the new address is created by taking the leading bits from NEW (defined by the netmask of OLD) and taking the remaining bits from the original address. There is rudimental support for upper layer protocols, namely TCP, UDP and ICMP. While for the first two only checksum recalculation is performed, the action also takes care of embedded IP headers in ICMP packets by translating the respective address therein, too. SEE ALSO
tc(8) iproute2 12 Jan 2015 NAT action in tc(8)
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