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olds rulessyntax

bui edited this page Jul 15, 2016 · 1 revision

Naxsi is using a simple key-value system for its rules. For example MainRule "msg:this is a message" "str:searchstring" "mz:URL|BODY|ARGS" "s:$XSS:8" id:12345678990; is a main rule with the id 12345678990, that search the string searchstring in the url, the body and the arguments of the request, and upon match, it will increase the XSS score by 8.

Everything must be quoted with double quotes, except the id part.


MainRule "msg:this is a message" "str:searchstring"  "mz:URL|BODY" "s:$XSS:8" id:12345;
 |          |                      |                   |                 |     +-> UNIQUE ID     
 |          |                      |                   |                 |
 |          |                      |                   |                 +-> SCORE
 |          |                      |                   |
 |          |                      |                   +-> MZ
 |          |                      |
 |          |                      +-> SearchString/RegEx
 |          |
 |          +-> MESSAGE
 |
 +-> RuleDesignator

Designator

Either MainRule or BasicRule.

BasicRule and MainRule can be used either for rules or whitelist. The difference is the scope : BasicRule is valid in location {} context, while MainRule is valid at http {} context.

Match Pattern (str:... rx:...)

Match pattern can be a regular expression or a string match:

  • rx:foo|bar : will match foo or bar
  • str:foo|bar : will match foo|bar
  • d:libinj_xss : will match if libinjection says it's XSS (>= 0.55rc2)
  • d:libinj_sql : will match if libinjection says it's SQLi (>= 0.55rc2)

Using plain string match when possible is recommended, as it's way faster. All strings must be lowercase, since naxsi's matches are case insensitive.

Human readable message (msg:...)

msg is a string describing the pattern. This is mostly used for analyzing and to have some human-understandable text.

Score section (s:...)

s is the score section. You can create "named" counters: s:$FOOBAR:4 will increase counter $FOOBAR value by 4. One rule can increase several scores: s:$FOO:4,$BAR:8 will increase both $FOO by 4 and $BAR by 8. A rule can as well directly specifiy an action such a BLOCK (blocks the request in non-learning mode) or DROP (blocks the request even in learning mode)

Match Zone (mz:...)

mz is the match zone, defining which part of the request will be inspected by the rule (or the whitelist, it works in the same way).

mz:BODY|URL|ARGS|$HEADERS_VAR:Cookie means that pattern will be searched in the whole body (content and name of each var), as well as in url (before the '?') and in the get arguments (content and name of each var).

$HEADERS_VAR:Cookie means that the pattern will be as well applied to the HTTP header named Cookie. Filenames of file uploads can be check as well with the FILE_EXT zone.

See Whitelists generation, as same mz: usage applies. ie. mz:$URL:/foo|$ARGS_VAR:arg42 will create a rule that will only be looked against GET argument arg42 of request to URL /foo. (fixed in >= 0.55rc2)

You can as well use the _X (>= 0.52) equivalents, that allows you to create matchzone matching regular expressions, for example: mz:$URL_X:^/foobar[0-9]+$ to match URLs such as foobar1, foobar000, etc. However, because of a known limitation, you can't use | character in your _X regular expressions, because it is used as a field separator by naxsi rule parsing.

Starting from naxsi 0.55rc0, for unknown content-types, you can use the RAW_BODY match-zone. RAW_BODY rules looks like that:

MainRule id:4241 s:DROP str:RANDOMTHINGS mz:RAW_BODY;

Rules in the RAW_BODY zone will only applied when:

  • The Content-type is unknown (which means naxsi doesn't know how to properly parse the request)
  • id 11 (which is the internal blocking rule for 'unknown content-type') is whitelisted.

Then, the full body (url decoded and with null-bytes replaced by '0') is passed to this set of rules. The full body is matched again the regexes or string matches.

Whitelists for RAW_BODY rules are actually written just like normal body rules, such as:

BasicRule wl:4241 "mz:$URL:/rata|BODY";

Valid mz

  • URL Full URI (server-path of a request)
  • ARGS Request-Arguments (all the things behind the ? character in a GET-Request)
  • BODY Request-Data from a POST-Request
  • HEADERS
  • $HEADERS_VAR:[value] any HTTP-HEADERS-var that is available, eg
    • $HEADERS_VAR:User-Agent
    • $HEADERS_VAR:Cookie
    • $HEADERS_VAR:Content-Type
    • $HEADERS_VAR:Connection
    • $HEADERS_VAR:Accept-Encoding
  • FILE_EXT Filename (in a multipart POST containing a file)

For rules, each item of the match zone is considered inclusive OR (with the exception of $URL / $URL_X that must be satisfied if present in match-zone).

ID (id:...)

id is the ID of the rule, that will be used in NAXSI_FMT or to whitelist it.

IDs inferior to 1000 are reserved for naxsi internal rules (protocol mismatch etc.)

Negative Keyword (negative)

negative is a keyword that can be used to make a negative rule. Score is applied when the rule doesn't match :

MainRule negative "rx:multipart/form-data|application/x-www-form-urlencoded" "msg:Content is neither mulipart/x-www-form.." "mz:$HEADERS_VAR:Content-type" "s:$EVADE:4" id:1402;

Examples

This will look for the string Submit=Run on the url /script, with the POST variable Submit present:

MainRule "msg:detection Submit=Run in POST" "str:Submit=Run" "mz:$URL:/script|$BODY_VAR:Submit" "s:$ATTACK" id: 1230001;

This will look for accesses on the /hidden.html url:

MainRule "msg:detection URL-Access" "str:/hidden.html" "mz:URL" "s:$ATTACK" id:1230002;

This will detect the string jjoplmh in the cms GET variable:

MainRule "str:jjoplmh" "msg:Possible Wordpress-Plugin-Backdoor detected" "mz:$ARGS_VAR:cms" "s:$UWA:8" id:42000347;

naxsi_core.rules contains examples of rules. See as well mex's Doxi rules for more rules examples (doxi is third party rules that will focus on emerging threats).