Defend against DoS attacks
Big picture​
Calico automatically enforces specific types of deny-list policies at the earliest possible point in the packet processing pipeline, including offloading to NIC hardware whenever possible.
Value​
During a DoS attack, a cluster can receive massive numbers of connection requests from attackers. The faster these connection requests are dropped, the less flooding and overloading to your hosts. When you define DoS mitigation rules in Calico network policy, Calico enforces the rules as efficiently as possible to minimize the impact.
Concepts​
Earliest packet processing​
The earliest point in the packet processing pipeline that packets can be dropped, depends on the Linux kernel version and the capabilities of the NIC driver and NIC hardware. Calico automatically uses the fastest available option.
Processed by... | Used by Calico if... | Performance |
---|---|---|
NIC hardware | The NIC supports XDP offload mode. | Fastest |
NIC driver | The NIC driver supports XDP native mode. | Faster |
Kernel | The kernel supports XDP generic mode and Calico is configured to explicitly use it. This mode is rarely used and has no performance benefits over iptables raw mode below. To enable, see Felix Configuration. | Fast |
Kernel | If none of the modes above are available, iptables raw mode is used. | Fast |
XDP modes require Linux kernel v4.16 or later.
How to​
The high-level steps to defend against a DoS attack are:
- Step 1: Create host endpoints
- Step 2: Add CIDRs to deny-list in a global network set
- Step 3: Create deny incoming traffic global network policy
Best practice​
The following steps walk through the above required steps, assuming no prior configuration is in place. A best practice is to proactively do these steps before an attack (create the host endpoints, network policy, and global network set). In the event of a DoS attack, you can quickly respond by just adding the CIDRs that you want to deny-list to the global network set.
Step 1: Create host endpoints​
First, you create the HostEndpoints corresponding to the network interfaces where you want to enforce DoS mitigation rules. In the following example, the HostEndpoint secures the interface named eth0 with IP 10.0.0.1 on node jasper.
apiVersion: projectcalico.org/v3
kind: HostEndpoint
metadata:
name: production-host
labels:
apply-dos-mitigation: 'true'
spec:
interfaceName: eth0
node: jasper
expectedIPs: ['10.0.0.1']
Step 2: Add CIDRs to deny-list in a global network set​
Next, you create a Calico GlobalNetworkset, adding the CIDRs that you want to deny-list. In the following example, the global network set deny-lists the CIDR ranges 1.2.3.4/32 and 5.6.0.0/16:
apiVersion: projectcalico.org/v3
kind: GlobalNetworkSet
metadata:
name: dos-mitigation
labels:
dos-deny-list: 'true'
spec:
nets:
- '1.2.3.4/32'
- '5.6.0.0/16'
Step 3: Create deny incoming traffic global network policy​
Finally, create a Calico GlobalNetworkPolicy adding the GlobalNetworkSet label (dos-deny-list in the previous step) as a selector to deny ingress traffic. To more quickly enforce the denial of forwarded traffic to the host at the packet level, use the doNotTrack and applyOnForward options.
apiVersion: projectcalico.org/v3
kind: GlobalNetworkPolicy
metadata:
name: dos-mitigation
spec:
selector: apply-dos-mitigation == 'true'
doNotTrack: true
applyOnForward: true
types:
- Ingress
ingress:
- action: Deny
source:
selector: dos-deny-list == 'true'