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Bro: A System for Detecting Network Intruders in Real-Time
Vern Paxson, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
We describe Bro, a stand-alone system for detecting network intruders in real-time by passively monitoring a network link over which the intruder's traffic transits. We give an overview of the system's design, which emphasizes high-speed (FDDI-rate) monitoring, real-time notification, clear separation between mechanism and policy, and extensibility. To achieve these ends, Bro is divided into an "event engine" that reduces a kernel-filtered network traffic stream into a series of higher-level events, and a "policy script interpreter" that interprets event handlers written in a specialized language used to express a site's security policy. Event handlers can update state information, synthesize new events, record information to disk, and generate real-time notifications via syslog. We also discuss a number of attacks that attempt to subvert passive monitoring systems and defenses against these, and give particulars of how Bro analyzes the four applications integrated into it so far: Finger, FTP, Portmapper and Telnet. The system is publicly available in source code form.
author = {Vern Paxson},
title = {Bro: A System for Detecting Network Intruders in {Real-Time}},
booktitle = {7th USENIX Security Symposium (USENIX Security 98)},
year = {1998},
address = {San Antonio, TX},
url = {https://www.usenix.org/conference/7th-usenix-security-symposium/bro-system-detecting-network-intruders-real-time},
publisher = {USENIX Association},
month = jan
}
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