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ModSecurity 2 Data Formats
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Version 2.5.10-dev5 (March 22, 2011)
Copyright © 2004-2011 Trustwave Holdings, Inc. https://www.trustwave.com/
The purpose of this document is to describe the formats of the ModSecurity alert messages, transaction logs and communication protocols, which would not only allow for a better understanding what ModSecurity does but also for an easy integration with third-party tools and products.
As part of its operations ModSecurity will emit alerts, which are either warnings (non-fatal) or errors (fatal, usually leading to the interception of the transaction in question). Below is an example of a ModSecurity alert entry:
<pre class="programlisting">Access denied with code 505 (phase 1). Match of "rx ^HTTP/(0\\\\.9|1\\\\.[01])$" against "REQUEST_PROTOCOL" required. [id "960034"] [msg "HTTP protocol version is not allowed by policy"] [severity "CRITICAL"] [uri "/"] [unique_id "PQaTTVBEUOkAAFwKXrYAAAAM"]
- Note : Alerts will only ever contain one line of text but we've broken the above example into multiple lines to make it fit into the page.
Access denied with code 505 (phase 1). Match of "rx ^HTTP/(0\\\\.9|1\\\\.[01])$" against "REQUEST_PROTOCOL" required.
The first part of the engine message tells you whether ModSecurity acted to interrupt transaction or rule processing:
-
If the alert is only a warning, the first sentence will simply say Warning.
-
If the transaction was intercepted, the first sentence will begin with Access denied. What follows is the list of possible messages related to transaction interception:
-
Access denied with code %0 - a response with status code
%0
was sent. -
Access denied with connection close - connection was abruptly closed.
-
Access denied with redirection to %0 using status %1 - a redirection to URI
%0
was issued using status%1
.
-
-
There is also a special message that ModSecurity emits where an
allow
action is executed. There are three variations of this type of message:-
Access allowed - rule engine stopped processing rules (transaction was unaffected).
-
Access to phase allowed - rule engine stopped processing rules in the current phase only. Subsequent phases will be processed normally. Transaction was not affected by this rule but it may be affected by any of the rules in the subsequent phase.
-
Access to request allowed - rule engine stopped processing rules in the current phase. Phases prior to request execution in the backend (currently phases 1 and 2) will not be processed. The response phases (currently phases 3 and 4) and others (currently phase 5) will be processed as normal. Transaction was not affected by this rule but it may be affected by any of the rules in the subsequent phase.
-
The second part of the engine message explains why the alert was generated. Since it is automatically generated from the rules it will be very technical in nature, talking about operators and their parameters and give you insight into what the rule looked like. But this message cannot give you insight into the reasoning behind the rule. A well-written rule will always specify a human-readable message (using the msg
action) to provide further information.
The format of the second part of the engine message depends on whether it was generated by the operator (which happens on a match) or by the rule processor (which happens where there is not a match, but the negation was used):
-
@beginsWith
- String match %0 at %1. -
@contains
- String match %0 at %1. -
@containsWord
- String match %0 at %1. -
@endsWith
- String match %0 at %1. -
@eq
- Operator EQ matched %0 at %1. -
@ge
- Operator GE matched %0 at %1. -
@geoLookup
- Geo lookup for %0 succeeded at %1. -
@inspectFile
- File %0 rejected by the approver script %1: %2 -
@le
- Operator LE matched %0 at %1. -
@lt
- Operator LT matched %0 at %1. -
@rbl
- RBL lookup of %0 succeeded at %1. -
@rx
- Pattern match %0 at %1. -
@streq
- String match %0 at %1. -
@validateByteRange
- Found %0 byte(s) in %1 outside range: %2. -
@validateDTD
- XML: DTD validation failed. -
@validateSchema
- XML: Schema validation failed. -
@validateUrlEncoding
-
Invalid URL Encoding: Non-hexadecimal digits used at %0.
-
Invalid URL Encoding: Not enough characters at the end of input at %0.
-
-
@validateUtf8Encoding
-
Invalid UTF-8 encoding: not enough bytes in character at %0.
-
Invalid UTF-8 encoding: invalid byte value in character at %0.
-
Invalid UTF-8 encoding: overlong character detected at %0.
-
Invalid UTF-8 encoding: use of restricted character at %0.
-
Invalid UTF-8 encoding: decoding error at %0.
-
-
@verifyCC
- CC# match %0 at %1.
Messages not related to operators:
-
When
SecAction
directive is processed - Unconditional match in SecAction. -
When
SecRule
does not match but negation is used - Match of %0 against %1 required.
- Note : The parameters to the operators
@rx
and@pm
(regular expression and text pattern, respectively) will be truncated to 252 bytes if they are longer than this limit. In this case the parameter in the alert message will be terminated with three dots.
The metadata fields are always placed at the end of the alert entry. Each metadata field is a text fragment that consists of an open bracket followed by the metadata field name, followed by the value and the closing bracket. What follows is the text fragment that makes up the id
metadata field.
[id "960034"]
The following metadata fields are currently used:
-
offset
- The byte offset where a match occured within the target data. This is not always available. -
id
- Unique rule ID, as specified by theid
action. -
rev
- Rule revision, as specified by therev
action. -
msg
- Human-readable message, as specified by themsg
action. -
severity
- Event severity as text, as specified by theseverity
action. The possible values (with their corresponding numberical values in brackets) areEMERGENCY
(0),ALERT
(1),CRITICAL
(2),ERROR
(3),WARNING
(4),NOTICE
(5),INFO
(6) andDEBUG
(7). -
unique_id
- Unique event ID, generated automatically. -
uri
- Request URI. -
logdata
- contains transaction data fragment, as specified by thelogdata
action.
ModSecurity alerts will always contain text fragments that were taken from configuration or the transaction. Such text fragments escaped before they are user in messages, in order to sanitise the potentially dangerous characters. They are also sometimes surrounded using double quotes. The escaping algorithm is as follows:
-
Characters
0x08
(BACKSPACE
),0x0a
(NEWLINE
),0x10
(CARRIAGE RETURN
),0x09
(HORIZONTAL TAB
) and0x0b
(VERTICAL TAB
) will be represented as\b
,\n
,\r
,\t
and\v
, respectively. -
Bytes from the ranges
0-0x1f
and0x7f-0xff
(inclusive) will be represented as\xHH
, whereHH
is the hexadecimal value of the byte. -
Backslash characters (
\
) will be represented as\\
. -
Each double quote character will be represented as
\"
, but only if the entire fragment is surrounded with double quotes.
Every ModSecurity alert conforms to the following format when it appears in the Apache error log:
[Sun Jun 24 10:19:58 2007] [error] [client 192.168.0.1] ModSecurity: ALERT_MESSAGE
The above is a standard Apache error log format. The ModSecurity:
prefix is specific to ModSecurity. It is used to allow quick
identification of ModSecurity alert messages when they appear in the same file next
to other Apache messages.
The actual message (ALERT_MESSAGE
in the example above) is in
the same format as described in the Alerts section.
- Note : Apache further escapes ModSecurity alert messages before writing them to the error log. This means that all backslash characters will be doubled in the error log. In practice, since ModSecurity will already represent a single backslash within an untrusted text fragment as two backslashes, the end result in the Apache error log will be four backslashes. Thus, if you need to interpret a ModSecurity message from the error log, you should decode the message part after the
ModSecurity:
prefix first. This step will peel the first encoding layer.
Alerts are transported in the H
section of the ModSecurity Audit Log. Alerts will appear each on a separate line and in the order they were generated by ModSecurity. Each line will be in the following format:
Message: ALERT_MESSAGE
Below is an example of an H
section that contains two alert
messages:
--c7036611-Z--
ModSecurity records one transaction in a single audit log file. Below is an example:
--c7036611-F-- HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found Content-Length: 223 Connection: close Content-Type: text/html; charset=iso-8859-1 --c7036611-H-- Message: Warning. Match of "rx ^apache.*perl" against "REQUEST_HEADERS:User-Agent" required. [id "990011"] [msg "Request Indicates an automated program explored the site"] [severity "NOTICE"] Message: Warning. Pattern match "(?:\\b(?:(?:s(?:elect\\b(?:.{1,100}?\\b (?:(?:length|count|top)\\b.{1,100}?\\bfrom|from\\b.{1,100}?\\bwhere) |.*?\\b(?:d(?:ump\\b.*\\bfrom|ata_type)|(?:to_(?:numbe|cha)|inst)r))|p_ (?:(?:addextendedpro|sqlexe)c|(?:oacreat|prepar)e|execute(?:sql)?| makewebt ..." at ARGS:c. [id "950001"] [msg "SQL Injection Attack. Matched signature: union select"] [severity "CRITICAL"] Stopwatch: 1199881676978327 2514 (396 2224 -) Producer: ModSecurity v2.x.x (Apache 2.x) Server: Apache/2.x.x --c7036611-Z--
The file consist of multiple sections, each in different format. Separators are used to define sections:
--c7036611-A--
A separator always begins on a new line and conforms to the following format:
-
Two dashes
-
Unique boundary, which consists from several hexadecimal characters.
-
One dash character.
-
Section identifier, currently a single uppercase letter.
-
Two trailing dashes.
Refer to the documentation for SecAuditLogParts
for the explanation
of each part.
This section documents the audit log parts available in ModSecurity 2.x. They are:
-
A
- audit log header -
B
- request headers -
C
- request body -
D
- intended response headers (NOT IMPLEMENTED) -
E
- intended response body -
F
- response headers -
G
- response body (NOT IMPLEMENTED) -
H
- audit log trailer -
I
- reduced multipart request body -
J
- multipart files information (NOT IMPLEMENTED) -
K
- matched rules information -
Z
- audit log footer
ModSecurity 2.x audit log entries always begin with the header part. For example:
--c7036611-A-- [09/Jan/2008:12:27:56 +0000] OSD4l1BEUOkAAHZ8Y3QAAAAH 209.90.77.54 64995 80.68.80.233 80
The header contains only one line, with the following information on it:
-
Timestamp
-
Unique transaction ID
-
Source IP address (IPv4 or IPv6)
-
Source port
-
Destination IP address (IPv4 or IPv6)
-
Destination port
The request headers part contains the request line and the request headers. The information present in this part will not be identical to that sent by the client responsible for the transaction. ModSecurity 2.x for Apache does not have access to the raw data; it sees what Apache itself sees. While the end result may be identical to the raw request, differences are possible in some areas:
-
If any of the fields are
NUL
-terminated, Apache will only see the content prior to the NUL. -
Headers that span multiple lines (feature known as header folding) will be collapsed into a single line.
-
Multiple headers with the same name will be combined into a single header (as allowed by the HTTP RFC).
This part contains the request body of the transaction, after dechunking and decompression (if applicable).
This part contains the status line and the request headers that would have been delivered to the client had ModSecurity not intervened. Thus this part makes sense only for transactions where ModSecurity altered the data flow. By differentiating before the intended and the final response headers, we are able to record what was internally ready for sending, but also what was actually sent.
- Note : This part is reserved for future use. It is not implemented in ModSecurity 2.x.
This part contains the transaction response body (before compression and
chunking, where used) that was either sent or would have been sent had
ModSecurity not intervened. You can find whether interception took place by
looking at the Action
header of the part H
. If that header is present, and the interception took place in
phase 3 or 4 then the E
part contains the intended response
body. Otherwise, it contains the actual response body.
- Note : Once the
G
(actual response body) part is implemented, partE
will be present only in audit logs that contain a transaction that was intercepted, and there will be no need for further analysis.
This part contains the actual response headers sent to the client. Since
ModSecurity 2.x for Apache does not access the raw connection data, it
constructs part F
out of the internal Apache data structures
that hold the response headers.
Some headers (the Date
and Server
response headers) are generated just before they are sent and ModSecurity is not
able to record those. You should note than ModSecurity is working as part of a
reverse proxy, the backend web server will have generated these two servers, and
in that case they will be recorded.
When implemented, this part will contain the actual response body before compression and chunking.
- Note : This part is reserved for future use. It is not implemented in ModSecurity 2.x.
Part H
contains additional transaction meta-data that was
obtained from the web server or from ModSecurity itself. The part contains a
number of trailer headers, which are similar to HTTP headers (without support
for header folding):
-
Action
-
Apache-Error
-
Message
-
Producer
-
Response-Body-Transformed
-
Sanitised-Args
-
Sanitised-Request-Headers
-
Sanitised-Response-Headers
-
Server
-
Stopwatch
-
WebApp-Info
The Action
header is present only for the transactions
that were intercepted:
Action: Intercepted (phase 2)
The phase information documents the phase in which the decision to intercept took place.
The Apache-Error header contains Apache error log messages observed by ModSecurity, excluding those sent by ModSecurity itself. For example:
Apache-Error: [file "/tmp/buildd/apache2-2.0.54/build-tree/apache2/server/ core.c"] [line 3505] [level 3] File does not exist: /var/www/www. modsecurity.org/fst/documentation/modsecurity-apache/2.5.0-dev2
Zero or more Message
headers can be present in any
trailer, and each such header will represent a single ModSecurity warning or
error, displayed in the order they were raised.
The example below was broken into multiple lines to make it fit this page:
Message: Access denied with code 400 (phase 2). Pattern match "^\w+:/" at REQUEST_URI_RAW. [file "/etc/apache2/rules-1.6.1/modsecurity_crs_20_ protocol_violations.conf"] [line "74"] [id "960014"] [msg "Proxy access attempt"] [severity "CRITICAL"] [tag "PROTOCOL_VIOLATION/PROXY_ACCESS"]
The Producer
header identifies the product that
generated the audit log. For example:
Producer: ModSecurity for Apache/2.5.5 (http://www.modsecurity.org/).
ModSecurity allows rule sets to add their own signatures to the Producer
information (this is done using the SecComponentSignature
directive). Below is an example of the
Producer
header with the signature of one component
(all one line):
Producer: ModSecurity for Apache/2.5.5 (http://www.modsecurity.org/); MyComponent/1.0.0 (Beta).
This header will appear in every audit log that contains a response body:
Response-Body-Transformed: Dechunked
The contents of the header is constant at present, so the header is only useful as a reminder that the recorded response body is not identical to the one sent to the client. The actual content is the same, except that Apache may further compress the body and deliver it in chunks.
The Sanitised-Args
header contains a list of arguments
that were sanitised (each byte of their content replaced with an asterisk)
before logging. For example:
Sanitised-Args: "old_password", "new_password", "new_password_repeat".
The Sanitised-Request-Headers
header contains a list of
request headers that were sanitised before logging. For example:
Sanitised-Request-Headers: "Authentication".
The Sanitised-Response-Headers
header contains a list
of response headers that were sanitised before logging. For example:
Sanitised-Response-Headers: "My-Custom-Header".
The Server
header identifies the web server. For
example:
Server: Apache/2.0.54 (Debian GNU/Linux) mod_ssl/2.0.54 OpenSSL/0.9.7e
This information may sometimes be present in any of the parts that contain response headers, but there are a few cases when it isn't:
-
None of the response headers were recoreded.
-
The information in the response headers is not accurate because server signature masking was used.
The Stopwatch
header provides certain diagnostic
information that allows you to determine the performance of the web server
and of ModSecurity itself. It will typically look like this:
Stopwatch&#58; 1222945098201902 2118976 (770&#42; 4400 &#45;)
Each line can contain up to 5 different values. Some values can be absent; each absent value will be replaced with a dash.
The meanings of the values are as follows (all values are in microseconds):
-
Transaction timestamp in microseconds since January 1st, 1970.
-
Transaction duration.
-
The time between the moment Apache started processing the request and until phase 2 of ModSecurity began. If an asterisk is present that means the time includes the time it took ModSecurity to read the request body from the client (typically slow). This value can be used to provide a rough estimate of the client speed, but only with larger request bodies (the smaller request bodies may arrive in a single TCP/IP packet).
-
The time between the start of processing and until phase 2 was completed. If you substract the previous value from this value you will get the exact duration of phase 2 (which is the main rule processing phase).
-
The time between the start of request processing and util we began sending a fully-buffered response body to the client. If you substract this value from the total transaction duration and divide with the response body size you may get a rough estimate of the client speed, but only for larger response bodies.
The WebApp&amp;&#35;45&#59;Info
header contains information on the
application to which the recorded transaction belongs. This information will
appear only if it is known, which will happen if SecWebAppId
was set, or setsid
or setuid
executed in the transaction.
The header uses the following format:
WebApp&amp;&#35;45&#59;Info&amp;&#35;58&#59; &amp;quot&#59;WEBAPPID&amp;quot&#59; &amp;quot&#59;SESSIONID&amp;quot&#59; &amp;quot&#59;USERID&amp;quot&#59;
Each unknown value is replaced with a dash.
Transactions that deal with file uploads tend to be large, yet the file
contents is not always relevant from the security point of view. The I
part was designed to avoid recording raw multipart/form&amp;&#35;45&#59;data
request bodies, replacing them with a
simulated application/x&amp;&#35;45&#59;www&amp;&#35;45&#59;form&amp;&#35;45&#59;urlencoded
body that
contains the same key-value parameters.
The reduced multipart request body will not contain any file information. The
J
part (currently not implemented) is intended to carry
the file metadata.
The purpose of part J
is to record the information on the
files contained in a multipart/form&amp;&#35;45&#59;data
request body. This
is handy in the cases when the original request body was not recorded, or when
only a reduced version was recorded (e.g. when part I
was
used instead of part C
).
- Note : This part is reserved for future use. It is not implemented in ModSecurity 2.x.
The matched rules part contains a record of all ModSecurity rules that matched during transaction processing. You should note that if a rule that belongs to a chain matches then the entire chain will be recorded. This is because, even though the disruptive action may not have executed, other per-rule actions have, and you will need to see the entire chain in order to understand the rules.
This part is available starting with ModSecurity 2.5.x.
Part Z
is a special part that only has a boundary but no
content. Its only purpose is to signal the end of an audit log.
ModSecurity supports two audit log storage formats:
-
Serial audit log format - multiple audit log files stored in the same file.
-
Concurrent audit log format - one file is used for every audit log.
The serial audit log format stores multiple audit log entries within the same file (one after another). This is often very convinent (audit log entries are easy to find) but this format is only suitable for light logging in the current ModSecurity implementation because writing to the file is serialised: only one audit log entry can be written at any one time.
The concurrent audit log format uses one file per audit log entry, and allows many transactions to be recorded at once. A hierarchical directory structure is used to ensure that the number of files created in any one directory remains relatively small. For example:
$LOGGING&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;45&amp;&#35;59&#59;HOME/20081128/20081128&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;45&amp;&#35;59&#59;1414/20081128&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;45&amp;&#35;59&#59;141417&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;45&amp;&#35;59&#59; egDKy38AAAEAAAyMHXsAAAAA
The current time is used to work out the directory structure. The file name is constructed using the current time and the transaction ID.
The creation of every audit log in concurrent format is recorded with an entry in the concurrent audit log index file. The format of each line resembles the common web server access log format. For example:
192.168.0.111 192.168.0.1 &amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;45&amp;&#35;59&#59; &amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;45&amp;&#35;59&#59; &amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;91&amp;&#35;59&#59;28/Nov/2008&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;58&amp;&#35;59&#59;15&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;58&amp;&#35;59&#59;06&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;58&amp;&#35;59&#59;32 +0000&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;93&amp;&#35;59&#59; &amp;amp&#59;quot&amp;&#35;59&#59;GET /?p&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;61&amp;&#35;59&#59;\\ HTTP/1.1&amp;amp&#59;quot&amp;&#35;59&#59; 200 69 &amp;amp&#59;quot&amp;&#35;59&#59;&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;45&amp;&#35;59&#59;&amp;amp&#59;quot&amp;&#35;59&#59; &amp;amp&#59;quot&amp;&#35;59&#59;&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;45&amp;&#35;59&#59;&amp;amp&#59;quot&amp;&#35;59&#59; NOfRx38AAAEAAAzcCU4AAAAA &amp;amp&#59;quot&amp;&#35;59&#59;&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;45&amp;&#35;59&#59;&amp;amp&#59;quot&amp;&#35;59&#59; /20081128/20081128&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;45&amp;&#35;59&#59;1506/20081128&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;45&amp;&#35;59&#59;150632&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;45&amp;&#35;59&#59;NOfRx38AAAEAAAzcCU4AAAAA 0 1183 md5&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;58&amp;&#35;59&#59;ffee2d414cd43c2f8ae151652910ed96
The tokens on the line are as follows:
-
Hostname (or IP address, if the hostname is not known)
-
Source IP address
-
Remote user (from HTTP Authentication)
-
Local user (from identd)
-
Timestamp
-
Request line
-
Response status
-
Bytes sent (in the response body)
-
Referrer information
-
User-Agent information
-
Transaction ID
-
Session ID
-
Audit log file name (relative to the audit logging home, as configured using the
SecAuditLogStorageDir
directive) -
Audit log offset
-
Audit log size
-
Audit log hash (the has begins with the name of the algorithm used, followed by a colon, followed by the hexadecimal representation of the hash itself); this hash can be used to verify that the transaction was correctly recorded and that it hasn't been modified since.
- Note : Lines in the index file will be up to 3980 bytes long, and the information logged will be reduced to fit where necessary. Reduction will occur within the individual fields, but the overall format will remain the same. The character
L
will appear as the last character on a reduced line. A space will be the last character on a line that was not reduced to stay within the limit.
Audit logs generated in multi-sensor deployments are of little use if left on the sensors. More commonly, they will be transported to a central logging server using the transport protocol described in this section:
-
The transport protocol is based on the HTTP protocol.
-
The server end is an SSL-enabled web server with HTTP Basic Authentication configured.
-
Clients will open a connection to the centralisation web server and authenticate (given the end-point URI, the username and the password).
-
Clients will submit every audit log in a single
PUT
transaction, placing the file in the body of the request and additional information in the request headers (see below for details). -
Server will process each submission and respond with an appropriate status code:
-
200 (OK) - the submission was processed; the client can delete the corresponding audit log entry if it so desires. The same audit log entry must not be submitted again.
-
409 (Conflict) - if the submission is in invalid format and cannot be processed. The client should attempt to fix the problem with the submission and attempt delivery again at a later time. This error is generally going to occur due to a programming error in the protocol implementation, and not because of the content of the audit log entry that is being transported.
-
500 (Internal Server Error) - if the server was unable to correctly process the submission, due to its own fault. The client should re-attempt delivery at a later time. A client that starts receiving 500 reponses to all its submission should suspend its operations for a period of time before continuing.
-
- Note : Server implementations are advised to accept all submissions that correctly implement the protocol. Clients are unlikely to be able to overcome problems within audit log entries, so such problems are best resolved on the server side.
- Note : When en error occurs, the server may place an explanation of the problem in the text part of the response line.
Each audit log entry submission must contain additional information in the request headers:
-
Header
X&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;45&amp;&#35;59&#59;Content&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;45&amp;&#35;59&#59;Hash
must contain the audit log entry hash. Clients should expect the audit log entries to be validated against the hash by the server. -
Header
X&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;45&amp;&#35;59&#59;ForensicLog&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;45&amp;&#35;59&#59;Summary
must contain the entire concurrent format index line. -
The
Content&amp;amp&#59;&amp;&#35;35&#59;45&amp;&#35;59&#59;Lenght
header must be present and contain the length of the audit log entry.