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SYNCACHE(4) BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual SYNCACHE(4)

NAME

syncache, syncookiessysctl(8) MIBs for controlling TCP SYN caching

SYNOPSIS

sysctl net.inet.tcp.syncookies
sysctl net.inet.tcp.syncookies_only

sysctl net.inet.tcp.syncache.hashsize
sysctl net.inet.tcp.syncache.bucketlimit
sysctl net.inet.tcp.syncache.cachelimit
sysctl net.inet.tcp.syncache.rexmtlimit
sysctl net.inet.tcp.syncache.count

DESCRIPTION

The syncache sysctl(8) MIB is used to control the TCP SYN caching in the system, which is intended to handle SYN flood Denial of Service attacks.

When a TCP SYN segment is received on a port corresponding to a listen socket, an entry is made in the syncache, and a SYN,ACK segment is returned to the peer. The syncache entry holds the TCP options from the initial SYN, enough state to perform a SYN,ACK retransmission, and takes up less space than a TCP control block endpoint. An incoming segment which contains an ACK for the SYN,ACK and matches a syncache entry will cause the system to create a TCP control block with the options stored in the syncache entry, which is then released.

The syncache protects the system from SYN flood DoS attacks by minimizing the amount of state kept on the server, and by limiting the overall size of the syncache.

Syncookies provides a way to virtually expand the size of the syncache by keeping state regarding the initial SYN in the network. Enabling syncookies sends a cryptographic value in the SYN,ACK reply to the client machine, which is then returned in the client’s ACK. If the corresponding entry is not found in the syncache, but the value passes specific security checks, the connection will be accepted. This is only used if the syncache is unable to handle the volume of incoming connections, and a prior entry has been evicted from the cache.

Syncookies have a certain number of disadvantages that a paranoid administrator may wish to take note of. Since the TCP options from the initial SYN are not saved, they are not applied to the connection, precluding use of features like window scale, timestamps, or exact MSS sizing. As the returning ACK establishes the connection, it may be possible for an attacker to ACK flood a machine in an attempt to create a connection. While steps have been taken to mitigate this risk, this may provide a way to bypass firewalls which filter incoming segments with the SYN bit set.

To disable the syncache and run only with syncookies, set net.inet.tcp.syncookies_only to 1.

The syncache implements a number of variables in the net.inet.tcp.syncache branch of the sysctl(3) MIB. Several of these may be tuned by setting the corresponding variable in the loader(8).

hashsize

Size of the syncache hash table, must be a power of 2. Read-only, tunable via loader(8).

bucketlimit

Limit on the number of entries permitted in each bucket of the hash table. This should be left at a low value to minimize search time. Read-only, tunable via loader(8).

cachelimit

Limit on the total number of entries in the syncache. Defaults to (hashsize × bucketlimit), may be set lower to minimize memory consumption. Read-only, tunable via loader(8).

rexmtlimit

Maximum number of times a SYN,ACK is retransmitted before being discarded. The default of 3 retransmits corresponds to a 45 second timeout, this value may be increased depending on the RTT to client machines. Tunable via sysctl(3).

count

Number of entries present in the syncache (read-only).

Statistics on the performance of the syncache may be obtained via netstat(1), which provides the following counts:

syncache entries added

Entries successfully inserted in the syncache.

retransmitted

SYN,ACK retransmissions due to a timeout expiring.

dupsyn

Incoming SYN segment matching an existing entry.

dropped

SYNs dropped because SYN,ACK could not be sent.

completed

Successfully completed connections.

bucket overflow

Entries dropped for exceeding per-bucket size.

cache overflow

Entries dropped for exceeding overall cache size.

reset

RST segment received.

stale

Entries dropped due to maximum retransmissions or listen socket disappearance.

aborted

New socket allocation failures.

badack

Entries dropped due to bad ACK reply.

unreach

Entries dropped due to ICMP unreachable messages.

zone failures

Failures to allocate new syncache entry.

cookies received

Connections created from segment containing ACK.

SEE ALSO

netstat(1), tcp(4), loader(8), sysctl(8)

HISTORY

The existing syncache implementation first appeared in FreeBSD 4.5. The original concept of a syncache originally appeared in BSD/OS, and was later modified by NetBSD, then further extended here.

AUTHORS

The syncache code and manual page were written by Jonathan Lemon 〈jlemon AT FreeBSD DOT org〉.

BSD January 22, 2008 BSD

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