ModSecurity Reference ManualVersion 2.1.0 / (February 23, 2007)2004-2007Breach Security, Inc. (http://www.breach.com)IntroductionModSecurityis a web application
firewall (WAF). With over 70% of all attacks now carried out over the web
application level, organisations need every help they can get in making
their systems secure. WAFs are deployed to establish an external security
layer that increases security, detects, and prevents attacks before they
reach web applications. It provides protection from a range of attacks
against web applications and allows for HTTP traffic monitoring and
real-time analysis with little or no changes to existing
infrastructure.HTTP Traffic LoggingWeb servers are typically well-equipped to log traffic in a form
useful for marketing analyses, but fall short when it comes to logging
of traffic to web applications. In particular, most are not capable of
logging the request bodies. Your adversaries know this, and that is why
most attacks are now carried out via POST requests, rendering your
systems blind. ModSecurity makes full HTTP transaction logging possible,
allowing complete requests and responses to be logged. Its logging
facilities also allow fine-grained decisions to be made about exactly
what is logged and when, ensure only the relevant data is
recorded.Real-Time Monitoring and Attack DetectionIn addition to providing logging facilities, ModSecurity can
monitor the HTTP traffic in real time in order to detect attacks. In
this case ModSecurity operates as a web intrusion detection tool,
allowing you to react to suspicious events that take place at your web
systems.Attack Prevention and Just-in-time PatchingModSecurity can also act immediately to prevent attacks from
reaching your web applications. There are three commonly used
approaches:Negative security model. Negative security model monitors
requests for anomalies, unusual behaviour, and common web
application attacks. It keeps anomaly scores for each request, IP
addresses, application sessions, and user accounts. Requests with
high anomaly scores are either logged or rejected altogether.Positive security model. When positive security model is
deployed, only requests that are known to be valid are accepted,
with everything else rejected. This approach works best with
applications that are heavily used but rarely updated.Known weaknesses and vulnerabilities. Its rule language makes
ModSecurity an ideal external patching tool. External patching is
all about reducing the window of opportunity. Time needed to patch
application vulnerabilities often runs to weeks in many
organisations. With ModSecurity, applications can be patched from
the outside, without touching the application source code (and even
without any access to it), making your systems secure until a proper
patch is produced.Flexible Rule EngineA flexible rule engine sits in the heart of ModSecurity. It
implements the ModSecurity Rule Language, which is a specialised
programming language designed to work with HTTP transaction data. The
ModSecurity Rule Language was designed to be easy to use, yet flexible:
common operations are simple while complex operations are possible.
Certified ModSecurity Rules, included with subscription to ModSecurity,
contain a comprehensive set of rules that implement general-purpose
hardening, common web application security issues. Heavily commented,
these rules can be used as a learning tool.Embedded-mode DeploymentModSecurity is an embeddable web application firewall, which means
it can be deployed as part of your existing web server infrastructure
provided your web servers are Apache-based. This deployment method has
certain advantages:No changes to existing network. It only takes a few minutes to
add ModSecurity to your existing web servers. And because it was
designed to be completely passive by default, you are free to deploy
it incrementally and only use the features you need. It is equally
easy to remove or deactivate it should decide you don't want it any
more.No single point of failure. Unlike with network-based
deployments, you will not be introducing a new point of failure to
your system.Implicit load balancing and scaling. Because it works embedded
in web servers, ModSecurity will automatically take advantage of the
additional load balancing and scalability features. You will not
need to think of load balancing and scaling unless your existing
system needs them.Minimal overhead. Because it works from inside the web server
process there is no overhead for network communication and minimal
overhead in parsing and data exchange.No problem with encrypted or compressed content. Many IDS
systems have difficulties analysing SSL traffic. This is not a
problem for ModSecurity because it is positioned to work when the
traffic is decrypted and decompressed.ModSecurity is known to work well on a wide range of operating
systems. Our customers are successfully running it on Linux, Windows,
Solaris, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, AIX, Mac OS X, and HP-UX.Network-based DeploymentModSecurity works equally well when deployed as part of an
Apache-based reverse proxy server, and many of our customers choose to
do so. In this scenario, one installation of ModSecurity can protect any
number of web servers (even the non-Apache ones).LicensingModSecurity is available under two licenses. Users can choose to
use the software under the terms of the GNU General Public License
(http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html),as
an Open Source / Free Software product. A range of commercial licenses
is also available, together with a range of commercial support
contracts. For more information on commercial licensing please contact
Breach Security.ModSecurity, mod_security, and ModSecurity Pro are trademarks or
registered trademarks of Breach Security, Inc.ModSecurity Core RulesOverviewModSecurity is a web application firewall engine that provides
very little protection on its own. In order to become useful,
ModSecurity must be configured with rules. In order to enable users to
take full advantage of ModSecurity out of the box, Breach Security Inc.
is providing a free certified rule set for ModSecurity 2.0. Unlike
intrusion detection and prevention systems, which rely on signature
specific to known vulnerabilities, the Core Rules provide generic
protection from unknown vulnerabilities often found in web applications,
which are in most cases custom coded. The Core Rules are heavily
commented to allow it to be used as a step-by-step deployment guide for
ModSecurity. The latest Core Rules can be found at the ModSecurity
website - http://www.modsecurity.org/projects/rules/.Core Rules StructureIf you expect a single pack of Apache configuration files, you are
right, and wrong. A ModSecurity rule set includes information about
different areas:The logic required to detect attacks.A policy setting the actions to perform if an attack is
detected.Information regarding attacks.In order to allow separate management of the different parts, the
Core Rules are based on templates that are generated into a run-time
rule set by inserting policy, patterns and event information. The Core
Rules package includes these templates, the generation script (written
in Perl) and data files required to generate a useful rule set. It also
includes a bunch of pre-generated rule sets for different policies. The
generation script also allows two optimizations:Optimal use of regular expressions. Since regular expressions
are much more efficient if assembled into a single expression and
optimized, the generation script takes the list of patterns that are
required for a rule and optimize them into a most efficient regular
expression.Removal of rules that are not utilized by a specific
policy.Core Rules ContentIn order to provide generic web applications protection, the Core
Rules use the following techniques:HTTP protection - detecting violations of the HTTP protocol
and a locally defined usage policy.Common Web Attacks Protection - detecting common web
application security attack.Automation detection - Detecting bots, crawlers, scanners and
other surface malicious activity.Trojan Protection - Detecting access to Trojans horses.Error Hiding - Disguising error messages sent by the
server.InstallationModSecurity installation consists of the following steps:ModSecurity 2.x works with Apache 2.0.x or better.Make sure you have mod_unique_id installed.(Optional) Install the latest version of libxml2, if it isn't
already installed on the server.Unpack the ModSecurity archiveEdit Makefile to configure the path to the Apache ServerRoot
directory. You can check this by identifying the ServerRoot directive
setting in your httpd.conf file. This is the path that was specified
with the "--install-path=" configuration flag during compilation (for
example, in Fedora Core4: top_dir =
/etc/httpd).(Optional) Edit Makefile to enable ModSecurity to use libxml2
(uncomment line DEFS =
-DWITH_LIBXML2) and configure the include path (for example:
INCLUDES=-I/usr/include/libxml2)Compile with makeStop ApacheInstall with make
install(Optional) Add one line to your configuration to load libxml2:
LoadFile
/usr/lib/libxml2.soAdd one line to your configuration to load ModSecurity: LoadModule security2_module
modules/mod_security2.soConfigure ModSecurityStart ApacheYou now have ModSecurity 2.x up and running.If you have compiled Apache yourself you might experience problems
compiling ModSecurity against PCRE. This is because Apache bundles PCRE
but this library is also typically provided by the operating system. I
would expect most (all) vendor-packaged Apache distributions to be
configured to use an external PCRE library (so this should not be a
problem).You want to avoid Apache using the bundled PCRE library and
ModSecurity linking against the one provided by the operating system.
The easiest way to do this is to compile Apache against the PCRE library
provided by the operating system (or you can compile it against the
latest PCRE version you downloaded from the main PCRE distribution
site). You can do this at configure time using the --with-pcre switch. If you are not in a
position to recompile Apache then, to compile ModSecurity successfully,
you'd still need to have access to the bundled PCRE headers (they are
available only in the Apache source code) and change the include path
for ModSecurity (as you did in step 7 above) to point to them.Do note that if your Apache is using an external PCRE library you
can compile ModSecurity with WITH_PCRE_STUDY defined,which would possibly
give you a slight performance edge in regular expression
processing.Configuration DirectivesThe following section outlines all of the ModSecurity directives.
Most of the ModSecurity directives can be used inside the various Apache
Scope Directives such as VirtualHost,
Location, LocationMatch,
Directory, etc... There are others, however, that can
only be used once in the main configuration file. This information is
specified in the Scope sections below.These rules, along with the Core rules files, should be contained is
files outside of the httpd.conf file and called up with Apache "Include"
directives. This allows for easier updating/migration of the rules. If you
create your own custom rules that you would like to use with the Core
rules, you should create a file called -
modsecurity_crs_15_customrules.conf and place it in
the same directory as the Core rules files. By using this file name, your
custom rules will be called up after the standard ModSecurity Core rules
configuration file but before the other Core rules. This allows your rules
to be evaluate first which can be useful if you need to implement specific
"allow" rules or to correct any false positives in the Core rules as they
are applied to your site.NoteIt is highly encouraged that you do not edit the Core rules files
themselves but rather place all changes (such as
SecRuleRemoveByID, etc...) in your custom rules file.
This will allow for easier upgrading as newer Core rules are released by
Breach Security on the ModSecurity website.SecActionDescription: Unconditionally
processes the action list it receives as the first and only parameter.
It accepts one parameter, the syntax of which is identical to the third
parameter of SecRule.Syntax:SecAction action1,action2,action2Example Usage:SecAction
nolog,redirect:http://www.hostname.comProcessingPhase:AnyScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: NoneSecAction is best used when you uncondiationally execute an
action. This is explicit triggering whereas the normal Actions are
conditional based on data inspection of the request/response. This is a
useful directive when you want to run certian actions such as initcol to
initialize collections.SecArgumentSeparatorDescription: Specifies which
character to use as separator for
application/x-www-form-urlencoded content. Defaults to
&. Applications are sometimes
(very rarely) written to use a semicolon (;).Syntax:SecArgumentSeparator characterExample Usage:SecArgumentSeparator ;Processing Phase: AnyScope:MainDependencies/Notes: NoneThis directive is needed if a backend web appliaction is using a
non-standard argument separator. If this directive is not set properly
for each web app, then ModSecurity will not be able to parse the
arguements appropriately and the effectiveness of the rule matching will
be significantly decreased.SecAuditEngineDescription: Configures the audit
logging engine.Syntax:SecAuditEngine On|Off|RelevantOnlyExample Usage:SecAuditEngine OnProcessing Phase: N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: Can be
set/changed with the "ctl" action for the current transaction.Example: The following example shows the various audit directives
used together.SecAuditEngine RelevantOnly
SecAuditLog logs/audit/audit.log
SecAuditLogParts ABCFHZ
SecAuditLogType concurrent
SecAuditLogStorageDir logs/audit
SecAuditLogRelevantStatus ^[45]Possible values are:On - log all transactions
by default.Off - do not log
transactions by default.RelevantOnly - by default
only log transactions that have triggered a warning or an error, or
have a status code that is considered to be relevant (see SecAuditLogRelevantStatus).SecAuditLogDescription: Defines the path to
the main audit log file.Syntax:SecAuditLog /path/to/auditlogExample Usage:SecAuditLog
/usr/local/apache/logs/audit.logProcessing Phase: N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: This file is
open on startup when the server typically still runs as
root. You should not allow non-root users to have write
privileges for this file or for the directory it is stored in..This file will be used to store the audit log entries if serial
audit logging format is used. If concurrent audit logging format is used
this file will be used as an index, and contain a record of all audit
log files created. If you are planning to use Concurrent audit logging
and sending your audit log data off to a remote Console host, then you
will need to use the modsec-auditlog-collector.pl script and use the
following format:SecAuditLog \
"|/path/modsec-auditlog-collector.pl /path/SecAuditLogDataDir /path/SecAuditLog"SecAuditLogPartsDescription: Defines the path to
the main audit log file.Syntax:SecAuditLogParts PARTSExample Usage:SecAuditLogParts ABCFHZProcessing Phase: N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: At this time
ModSecurity does not log response bodies of stock Apache responses (e.g.
404), or the Server and Date response headers.Default: ABCFHZ.Available audit log parts:A – audit log header
(mandatory)B – request headersC – request body (present
only if the request body exists and ModSecurity is configured to
intercept it)D - RESERVED for
intermediary response headers, not implemented yet.E – intermediary response
body (present only if ModSecurity is configured to intercept
response bodies, and if the audit log engine is configured to record
it). Intermediary response body is the same as the actual response
body unless ModSecurity intercepts the intermediary response body,
in which case the actual response body will contain the error
message (either the Apache default error message, or the
ErrorDocument page).F – final response headers
(excluding the Date and Server headers, which are always added by
Apache in the late stage of content delivery).G – RESERVED for the actual
response body, not implemented yet.H - audit log
trailerI - This part is a
replacement for part C. It will log the same data as C in all cases
except whenmultipart/form-dataencoding in used. In
this case it will log a fake
application/x-www-form-urlencoded body that contains the
information about parameters but not about the files. This is handy
if you don't want to have (often large) files stored in your audit
logs.J - RESERVED. This part,
when implemented, will contain information about the files uploaded
using multipart/form-data encoding.Z – final boundary,
signifies the end of the entry (mandatory)SecAuditLogRelevantStatusDescription: Configures which
response status code is to be considered relevant for the purpose of
audit logging.Syntax:SecAuditLogRelevantStatus REGEXExample Usage:SecAuditLogRelevantStatus ^[45]Processing Phase: N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: Must have the
SecAuditEngine set to RelevantOnly. The parameter is a regular
expression.The main purpose of this directive is to allow you to configure
audit logging for only transactions that generate the specified HTTP
Response Status Code. This directive is often used to the decrease the
total size of the audit log file. Keep in mind that if this parameter is
used, then successful attacks that result in a 200 OK status code will
not be logged.SecAuditLogStorageDirDescription: Configures the
storage directory where concurrent audit log entries are to be
stored.Syntax:SecAuditLogStorageDir
/path/to/storage/dirExample Usage:SecAuditLogStorageDir
/usr/local/apache/logs/auditProcessing Phase: N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes:
SecAuditLogType must be set to Concurrent. The directory must already be
created before starting Apache and it must be writable by the web server
user as new files are generated at runtime.As with all logging mechanisms, ensure that you specify a file
system location that has adequate disk space and is not on the root
partition.SecAuditLogTypeDescription: Configures the type
of audit logging mechanism to be used.Syntax:SecAuditLogType Serial|ConcurrentExample Usage:SecAuditLogType SerialProcessing Phase: N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: Must specify
SecAuditLogStorageDir if you use concurrent logging.Possible values are:Serial - all audit log
entries will be stored in the main audit logging file. This is more
convenient for casual use but it is slower as only one audit log
entry can be written to the file at any one file.Concurrent - audit log
entries will be stored in separate files, one for each transaction.
Concurrent logging is the mode to use if you are going to send the
audit log data off to a remote ModSecurity Console host.SecChrootDirDescription: Configures the
directory path that will be used to jail the web server process.Syntax:SecChrootDir /path/to/chroot/dirExample Usage:SecChrootDir /chrootProcessing Phase: N/AScope:MainDependencies/Notes: The internal
chroot functionality provided by ModSecurity works great for simple
setups. One example of a simple setup is Apache serving static files
only, or running scripts using modules. For more complex setups you
should consider building a jail the old-fashioned way. The internal
chroot feature should be treated as somewhat experimental. Due to the
large number of default and third-party modules available for the Apache
web server, it is not possible to verify the internal chroot works
reliably with all of them. You are advised to think about your option
and make your own decision. In particular, if you are using any of the
modules that fork in the module initialisation phase (e.g. mod_fastcgi,
mod_fcgid, mod_cgid), you are advised to examine each Apache process and
observe its current working directory, process root, and the list of
open files.SecCookieFormatDescription: Selects the cookie
format that will be used in the current configuration context.Syntax:SecCookieFormat 0|1Example Usage:SecCookieFormat 0Processing Phase: N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: NonePossible values are:0 - use version 0
(Netscape) cookies. This is what most applications use. It is the
default value.1 - use version 1
cookies.SecDataDirDescription: Path where
persistent data (e.g. IP address data, session data, etc) is to be
stored.Syntax:SecDataDir /path/to/dirExample Usage:SecDataDir /usr/local/apache/logs/dataProcessing Phase: N/AScope:MainDependencies/Notes: This
directive is needed when initcol, setsid an setuid are used. Must be
writable by the web server user.SecDebugLogDescription: Path to the
ModSecurity debug log file.Syntax:SecDebugLog /path/to/modsec-debug.logExample Usage:SecDebugLog
/usr/local/apache/logs/modsec-debug.logProcessing Phase: N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: NoneSecDebugLogLevelDescription: Configures the
verboseness of the debug log data.Syntax:SecDebugLogLevel 0|1|2|3|4|5|6|7|8|9Example Usage:SecDebugLogLevel 4Processing Phase: N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: Levels
1-3
are always sent to the Apache error log. Therefore you can
always use level 0 as the default
logging level in production. Level 5
is useful when debugging. It is not advisable to use higher
logging levels in production as excessive logging can slow down server
significantly.Possible values are:0 - no logging.1 - errors (intercepted
requests) only.2 - warnings.3 - notices.4 - details of how
transactions are handled.5 - as above, but including
information about each piece of information handled.9 - log everything,
including very detailed debugging information.SecDefaultActionDescription: Defines the default
action to take on a rule match.Syntax:SecDefaultAction
action1,action2,action3Example Usage:SecDefaultAction
log,auditlog,deny,status:403,phase:2,t:lowercaseProcessing Phase: AnyScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: Rules
following a SecDefaultAction directive will inherit this setting unless
a specific action is specified for an indivdual rule or until another
SecDefaultAction is specified.The default value is:SecDefaultAction log,auditlog,deny,status:403,phase:2,t:noneNoteSecDefaultAction must specify a disruptive action and a processing
phase.SecGuardianLogDescription: Configuration
directive to use the httpd-guardian script to monitor for Denial of
Service (DoS) attacks.Syntax:SecGuardianLog |/path/to/httpd-guardianExample Usage:SecGuardianLog
|/usr/local/apache/bin/httpd-guardianProcessing Phase: N/AScope:MainDependencies/Notes: By default
httpd-guardian will defend against clients that send more 120 requests
in a minute, or more than 360 requests in five minutes.Since 1.9, ModSecurity supports a new directive, SecGuardianLog,
that is designed to send all access data to another program using the
piped logging feature. Since Apache is typically deployed in a
multi-process fashion, making information sharing difficult, the idea is
to deploy a single external process to observe all requests in a
stateful manner, providing additional protection.Development of a state of the art external protection tool will be
a focus of subsequent ModSecurity releases. However, a fully functional
tool is already available as part of the Apache httpd tools project
(http://www.apachesecurity.net/tools/).
The tool is called httpd-guardian and can be used to defend against
Denial of Service attacks. It uses the blacklist tool (from the same
project) to interact with an iptables-based (Linux) or pf-based (*BSD)
firewall, dynamically blacklisting the offending IP addresses. It can
also interact with SnortSam (http://www.snortsam.net). Assuming
httpd-guardian is already configured (look into the source code for the
detailed instructions) you only need to add one line to your Apache
configuration to deploy it:SecGuardianLog |/path/to/httpd-guardianSecRequestBodyAccessDescription: Configures whether
request bodies will be buffered and processed by ModSecurity by
default.Syntax:SecRequestBodyAccess On|OffExample Usage:SecRequestBodyAccess OnProcessing Phase: N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: This
directive is required if you plan to inspect POST_PAYLOADS of requests.
This directive must be used along with the "phase:2" processing phase
action and REQUEST_BODY variable/location. If any of these 3 parts are
not configured, you will not be able to inspect the request
bodies.Possible values are:On - access request
bodies.Off - do not attempt to
access request bodies.SecRequestBodyLimitDescription: Configures the
maximum request body size ModSecurity will accept for buffering.Syntax:SecRequestBodyLimit NUMBER_IN_BYTESExample Usage:SecRequestBodyLimit 134217728Processing Phase: N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: 131072 KB
(134217728 bytes) is the default setting. Anything over this limit will
be rejected with status code 413 Request Entity Too Large. There is a
hard limit of 1 GB.SecRequestBodyInMemoryLimitDescription: Configures the
maximum request body size ModSecurity will store in memory.Syntax:SecRequestBodyInMemoryLimit
NUMBER_IN_BYTESExample Usage:SecRequestBodyInMemoryLimit 131072Processing Phase: N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: NoneBy default the limit is 128 KB:# Store up to 128 KB in memory
SecRequestBodyInMemoryLimit 131072SecResponseBodyLimitDescription: Configures the
maximum response body size that will be accepted for buffering.Syntax:SecResponseBodyLimit NUMBER_IN_BYTESExample Usage:SecResponseBodyLimit 524228Processing Phase: N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: Anything over
this limit will be rejected with status code 500 Internal Server Error.
This setting will not affect the responses with MIME types that are not
marked for buffering. There is a hard limit of 1 GB.By default this limit is configured to 512 KB:# Buffer response bodies of up to 512 KB in length
SecResponseBodyLimit 524288SecResponseBodyMimeTypeDescription: Configures
which MIME types are to be considered
for response body buffering.Syntax:SecResponseBodyMimeType mime/typeExample Usage:SecResponseBodyMimeType text/plain
text/htmlProcessing Phase: N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes:
Multiple SecResponseBodyMimeType
directives can be used to add MIME
types.The default value is text/plaintext/html:SecResponseBodyMimeType text/plain text/htmlSecResponseBodyMimeTypesClearDescription: Clears the list of
MIME types considered for response
body buffering, allowing you to start populating the list from
scratch.Syntax:SecResponseBodyMimeTypesClearExample Usage:SecResponseBodyMimeTypesClearProcessing Phase: N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: NoneSecResponseBodyAccessDescription: Configures whether
response bodies are to be buffer and analysed or not.Syntax:SecResponseBodyAccess On|OffExample Usage:SecResponseBodyAccess OnProcessing Phase: N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: This
directive is required if you plan to inspect html responses. This
directive must be used along with the "phase:4" processing phase action
and RESPONSE_BODY variable/location. If any of these 3 parts are not
configured, you will not be able to inspect the response bodies.Possible values are:On - access response bodies
(but only if the MIME type matches, see above).Off - do not attempt to
access response bodies.SecRuleDescription:SecRuleis the main ModSecurity directive. It
is used to analyse data and perform actions based on the results.Syntax:SecRule VARIABLES OPERATOR [ACTIONS]Example Usage:SecRule REQUEST_URI "attack"Processing Phase: AnyScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: NoneIn general, the format of this rule is as follows:SecRule VARIABLES OPERATOR [ACTIONS]The second part, OPERATOR,
specifies how they are going to be checked. The third (optional) part,
ACTIONS, specifies what to do
whenever the operator used performs a successful match against a
variable.Variables in rulesThe first part, VARIABLES,
specifies which variables are to be checked. For example, the
following rule will reject a transaction that has the word
dirty in the URI:SecRule REQUEST_URI dirtyEach rule can specify one or more variables:SecRule REQUEST_URI|QUERY_STRING dirtyThere is a third format supported by the selection operator -
XPath expression. XPath expressions can only used against the special
variable XML, which is available only of the request body was
processed as XML.SecRule XML:/xPath/Expression dirtyAs you have just seen, not all collections support all
selection operator format types. You should refer to the
documentation of each collection to determine what is and isn't
supported.Operators in rulesIn the simplest possible case you will use a regular expression
pattern as the second rule parameter. This is what we've done in the
examples above. If you do this ModSecurity assumes you want to use
the rx operator. You can explicitly
specify the operator you want to use by using @ as the first character in the second rule
parameter:SecRule REQUEST_URI "@rx dirty"Note how we had to use double quotes to delimit the second rule
parameter. This is because the second parameter now has a whitespace
in it. Any number of whitespace characters can follow the name of the
operator. If there are any non-whitespace characters there, they will
all be treated as a special parameter to the operator. In the case of
the regular expression operator the special parameter is the pattern
that will be used for comparison.The @ can be the second character if you are using negation to
negate the result returned by the operator:SecRule &ARGS "!@rx ^0$"Actions in rulesThe third parameter, ACTIONS,
can be omitted only because there is a helper feature that specifies
the default action list. If the parameter isn't omitted the actions
specified in the parameter will be merged with the default action list
to create the actual list of actions that will be processed on a rule
match.SecRuleInheritanceDescription: Configures whether
the current context will inherit rules from the parent context
(configuration options are inherited in most cases - you should look up
the documentation for every directive to determine if it is inherited or
not).Syntax:SecRuleInheritance On|OffExample Usage:SecRuleInheritance OffProcessing Phase: AnyScope:AnyDependencies/Notes:
Resource-specific contexts (e.g.
Location, Directory, etc)
cannot override phase1 rules configured in the main
server or in the virtual server. This is because phase 1 is run early in
the request processing process, before Apache maps request to resource.
Virtual host context can override phase 1 rules configured in the main
server.Example: The following example shows where ModSecurity may be
enabled in the main Apache configuration scope, however you might want
to configure your VirtualHosts differently. In the first example, the
first virtualhost is not inheriting the ModSecurity main config
directives and in the second one it is.SecRuleEnine On
SecDefaultAction log,pass,phase:2
...
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName app1.com
ServerAlias www.app1.com
SecRuleInheritance Off
SecDefaultAction log,deny,phase:1,redirect:http://www.site2.com
...
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName app2.com
ServerAlias www.app2.com
SecRuleInheritance On
SecRule ARGS "attack"
...
</VirtualHost>Possible values are:On - inherit rules from the
parent context.Off - do not inherit rules
from the parent context.SecRuleEngineDescription: Configures the rules
engine.Syntax:SecRuleEngine On|Off|DetectionOnlyExample Usage:SecRuleEngine OnProcessing Phase: AnyScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: Thisdirective
can also be controled by the ctl action (ctl:ruleEngine=off) for per
rule processing.Possible values are:On - process rules.Off - do not process
rules.DetectionOnly - process
rules but never intercept transactions, even when rules are
configured to do so.SecRuleRemoveByIdDescription: Removes matching
rules from the parent contexts.Syntax:SecRuleRemoveById RULEIDExample Usage:SecRuleRemoveByID 1 2 "9000-9010"Processing Phase: AnyScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: This
directive supports multiple parameters, where each parameter can either
be a rule ID, or a range. Parameters that contain spaces must be
delimited using double quotes.SecRuleRemoveById 1 2 5 10-20 "400-556" 673SecRuleRemoveByMsgDescription: Removes matching
rules from the parent contexts.Syntax:SecRuleRemoveByMsg REGEXExample Usage:SecRuleRemoveByMsg "FAIL"Processing Phase: AnyScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: This
directive supports multiple parameters. Each parameter is a regular
expression that will be applied to the message (specified using the
msg action).SecServerSignatureDescription: Instructs
ModSecurity to change the data presented in the "Server:" response
header token.Syntax:SecServerSignature "WEB SERVER
SOFTWARE"Example Usage:SecServerSignature
"Netscape-Enterprise/6.0"Processing Phase: N/AScope:MainDependencies/Notes: In order for
this directive to work, you must set the Apache ServerTokens directive
to Full. ModSecurity will overwrite the server signature data held in
this memory space with the data set in this directive. If ServerTokens
is not set to Full, then the memory space is most likely not large
enough to hold the new data we are looking to insert.SecTmpDirDescription: Configures the
directory where temporary files will be created.Syntax:SecTmpDir /path/to/dirExample Usage:SecTmpDir /tmpProcessing Phase: N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: Needs to be
writable by the Apache user process. This is the directory location
where Apache will swap data to disk if it runs out of memory (more data
than what was specified in the SecRequestBodyInMemoryLimit directive)
during inspection.SecUploadDirDescription: Configures the
directory where intercepted files will be stored.Syntax:SecUploadDir /path/to/dirExample Usage:SecUploadDir /tmpProcessing Phase: N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: This
directory must be on the same filesystem as the temporary directory
defined with SecTmpDir. This
directive is used with SecUploadKeepFiles.SecUploadKeepFilesDescription: Configures whether
or not the intercepted files will be kept after transaction is
processed.Syntax:SecUploadKeepFiles On|Off|RelevantOnlyExample Usage:SecUploadKeepFiles OnProcessing Phase: N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: This
directive requires the storage directory to be defined (using SecUploadDir).Possible values are:On - Keep uploaded
files.Off - Do not keep uploaded
files.RelevantOnly - This will
keep only those files that belong to requests that are deemed
relevant.SecWebAppIdDescription: Creates a partition
on the server that belongs to one web application.Syntax:SecWebAppId "NAME"Example Usage:SecWebAppId "WebApp1"Processing Phase:N/AScope:AnyDependencies/Notes: Partitions
are used to avoid collisions between session IDs and user IDs. This
directive must be used if there are multiple applications deployed on
the same server. If it isn't used, a collision between session IDs might
occur. The default value is default.
Example:<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName app1.com
ServerAlias www.app1.com
SecWebAppId "App1"
SecRule REQUEST_COOKIES:PHPSESSID !^$ chain,nolog,pass
SecAction setsid:%{REQUEST_COOKIES.PHPSESSID}
...
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName app2.com
ServerAlias www.app2.com
SecWebAppId "App2"
SecRule REQUEST_COOKIES:PHPSESSID !^$ chain,nolog,pass
SecAction setsid:%{REQUEST_COOKIES.PHPSESSID}
...
</VirtualHost>In the two examples configurations shown, SecWebAppId is being
used in conjuction with the Apache VirtualHost directives. What this
achieves is to create more unique collection names when being hosted on
one server. Normally, when setsid is used, ModSecurity will create a
collection with the name "SESSION" and it will hold the value specified.
With using SecWebAppId as shown in the examples, however, the name of
the collection would become "App1_SESSION" and "App2_SESSION".SecWebAppId is relevant in two cases:You are logging transactions/alerts to the ModSecurity Console
and you want to use the web application ID to search only the
transactions belonging to that application.You are using the data persistence facility (collections
SESSION and USER) and you need to avoid collisions between sessions
and users belonging to different applications.Processing PhasesModSecurity 2.x allows rules to be placed in one of the following
five phases:Request headersRequest bodyResponse headersResponse bodyLoggingModSecurity Processing Phases
DiagramBelow is a diagram of the standard Apache
Request Cycle. In the diagram, the 5 ModSecurity processing phases are
shown.In order to select the phase a rule executes during, use the phase
action either directly in the rule or in using the
SecDefaultAction directive:SecDefaultAction "log,pass,phase:2"
SecRule HTTP_Host "!^$" "deny,phase:1"Note on Rule and PhasesKeep in mind that rules are executed according to phases, so even if
two rules are adjacent in a configuration file, but are set to execute in
different phases, they would not happen one after the other. The order of
rules in the configuration file is important only within the rules of each
phase. This is especially important when using the skip
action.Phase Request HeadersRules in this phase are processed immediately after Apache
completes reading the request headers (post-read-request phase). At this
point the request body has not been read yet, meaning not all request
arguments are available. Rules should be placed in this phase if you
need to have them run early (before Apache does something with the
request), to do something before the request body has been read,
determine whether or not the request body should be buffered, or decide
how you want the request body to be processed (e.g. whether to parse it
as XML or not).NoteRules in this phase can not leverage Apache scope directives
(Directory, Location, LocationMatch, etc...) as the post-read-request
hook does not have this information yet. The exception here is the
VirtualHost directive. If you want to use ModSecurity rules inside
Apache locations, then they should run in Phase 2. Refer to the Apache
Request Cycle/ModSecurity Processing Phases diagram.Phase Request BodyThis is the general-purpose input analysis phase. Most of the
application-oriented rules should go here. In this phase you are
guaranteed to have received the request argument (provided the request
body has been read). ModSecurity supports three encoding types for the
request body phase:application/x-www-form-urlencoded - used to transfer form
datamultipart/form-data – used for file transferstext/xml - used for passing XML dataOther encodings are not used by most web applications.Phase Response HeadersThis phase takes place just before response headers are sent back
to the client. Run here if you want to observe the response before that
happens, and if you want to use the response headers to determine if you
want to buffer the response body. Note that some response status codes
(such as 404) are handled earlier in the request cycle by Apache and my
not be able to be triggered as expected. Additionally, there are some
response headers that are added by Apache at a later hook (such as Date,
Server and Connection) that we would not be able to trigger on or
sanitize. This should work appropirately in a proxy setup or within
phase:5 (logging).Phase Response BodyThis is the general-purpose output analysis phase. At this point
you can run rules against the response body (provided it was buffered,
of course). This is the phase where you would want to inspect the
outbound html for information discloure, error messages or failed
authentication text.Phase LoggingThis phase is run just before logging takes place. The rules
placed into this phase can only affect how the logging is performed.
This phase can be used to inspect the error messages logged by Apache.
You can not deny/block connections in this phase as it is too late. This
phase also allows for inspection of other response headers that weren't
available during phase:3 or phase:4.VariablesThe following variables are supported in ModSecurity 2.x:ARGSARGS is a collection and can be used on its own
(means all arguments including the POST Payload), with a static
parameter (matches arguments with that name), or with a regular
expression (matches all arguments with name that matches the regular
expression). Note: ARGS:p will not result in any
invocations against the operator if argument p does not exist. Some
variables are actually collections, which are expanded into more
variables at runtime. The following example will examine all request
arguments:SecRule ARGS dirtySometimes,
however, you will want to look only at parts of a collection. This can
be achieved with the help of the selection
operator(colon). The following example will only look at the
arguments named p (do note that, in
general, requests can contain multiple arguments with the same name):
SecRule ARGS:p dirtyIt
is also possible to specify exclusions. The following will examine all
request arguments for the word dirty, except the
ones named z (again, there can be
zero or more arguments named z):
SecRule ARGS|!ARGS:z dirtyThere
is a special operator that allows you to count how many variables there
are in a collection. The following rule will trigger if there is more
than zero arguments in the request (ignore the second parameter for the
time being): SecRule &ARGS !^0$And
sometimes you need to look at an array of parameters, each with a
slightly different name. In this case you can specify a regular
expression in the selection operator itself. The following rule will
look into all arguments whose names begin with id_: SecRule ARGS:/^id_/ dirtyIn ModSecurity 1.X, the ARGS variable stood
for QUERY_STRING + POST_PAYLOAD,
whereas now it expands to to individual variables.ARGS_COMBINED_SIZEThis variable allows you to set more targeted evaluations on the
total size of the Arguments as compared with normal Apache LimitRequest
directives. For example, you could create a rule to ensure that the
total size of the argument data is below a certain threshold (to help
prevent buffer overflow issues). Example: Block request if the size of
the arguments is above 25 characters.SecRule REQUEST_FILENAME "^/cgi-bin/login\.php$" "chain,log,deny,phase:2"
SecRule ARGS_COMBINED_SIZE "@gt 25"ARGS_NAMESIs a collection of the argument names. You can search for specific
argument names that you want to block. In a positive policy scenario,
you can also whitelist (using an inverted rule with the ! character)
only authorized argument names. Example: This example rule will only
allow 2 argument names - p and a. If any other argument names are
injected, it will be blocked.SecRule REQUEST_FILENAME "/index.php" "chain,log,deny,status:403,phase:2"
SecRule ARGS_NAMES "!^(p|a)$"AUTH_TYPEThis variable holds the authentication method used to validate a
user. Example:SecRule AUTH_TYPE "basic" log,deny,status:403,phase:1,t:lowercaseNoteThis data will not be available in a proxy-mode deployment as the
authentication is not local. In a proxy-mode deployment, you would need
to inpect the REQUEST_HEADERS:Authorization
header.ENVCollection, requires a single parameter (after a colon character).
The ENV variable is set with setenv and does not give access to the CGI
environment variables. Example:SecRule REQUEST_FILENAME "printenv" pass,setenv:tag=suspicious
SecRule ENV:tag "suspicious"FILESCollection. Contains a collection of original file names (as they
were called on the remote user's file system). Note: only available if
files were extracted from the request body. Example:SecRule FILES "\.conf$" log,deny,status:403,phase:2FILES_COMBINED_SIZESingle value. Total size of the uploaded files. Note: only
available if files were extracted from the request body. Example:SecRule FILES_COMBINED_SIZE "@gt 1000" log,deny,status:403,phase:2FILES_NAMESCollection w/o parameter. Contains a list of form fields that were
used for file upload. Note: only available if files were extracted from
the request body. Example:SecRule FILES_NAMES "^upfile$" log,deny,status:403,phase:2FILES_SIZESCollection. Contains a list of file sizes. Useful for implementing
a size limitation on individual uploaded files. Note: only available if
files were extracted from the request body. Example:SecRule FILES_SIZES "@gt 100" log,deny,status:403,phase:2FILES_TMPNAMESCollection. Contains a collection of temporary files' names on the
disk. Useful when used together with @inspectFile. Note: only available if files
were extracted from the request body. Example:SecRule FILES_TMPNAMES "@inspectFile /path/to/inspect_script.pl"HTTP_This variable is a special prefix that is followed by a header
name and can be used to access any request header. Example:SecRule HTTP_REFERER "www\.badsite\.com"NoteThis variable is for backward-compatibilty with ModSecurity 1.X
rules. It has been superceded by the REQUEST_HEADERS variable
(REQUEST_HEADERS:Headername)PATH_INFOBesides passing query information to a script/handler, you can
also pass additional data, known as extra path information, as part of
the URL. Example:SecRule PATH_INFO "^/(bin|etc|sbin|opt|usr)"QUERY_STRINGThis variable holds form data passed to the script/handler by
appending data after a question mark. Example:SecRule QUERY_STRING "attack"REMOTE_ADDRThis variable holds the IP address of the remote client.
Example:SecRule REMOTE_ADDR "^192\.168\.1\.101$"REMOTE_HOSTIf HostnameLookUps are set to On, then this variable will hold the
DNS resolved remote host name. If it is set to Off, then it will hold
the remote IP address. Possible uses for this variable would be to deny
known bad client hosts or network blocks, or conversely, to allow in
authorized hosts. Example:SecRule REMOTE_HOST "\.evil\.network\org$"REMOTE_PORTThis variable holds information on the source port that the client
used when initiating the connection to our web server. Example: in this
example, we are evaluating to see if the REMOTE_PORT
is less than 1024, which would indicate that the user is a privileged
user (root).SecRule REMOTE_PORT "@lt 1024" phase:1,log,pass,setenv:remote_port=privilegedREMOTE_USERThis variable holds the username of the authenticated user. If
there are no password (basic|digest) access controls in place, then this
variable will be empty. Example:SecRule REMOTE_USER "admin"NoteThis data will not be available in a proxy-mode deployment as the
authentication is not local.REQBODY_PROCESSORBuilt-in processors are URLENCODED,
MULTIPART, and XML.
Example:SecRule REQBODY_PROCESSOR "^XML$ chain
SecRule XML "@validateDTD /opt/apache-frontend/conf/xml.dtd"REQBODY_PROCESSOR_ERROR0 (no error) or 1 (error). If you want to stop processing on an
error you must have an explicit rule in phase 2 to do so.
Example:SecRule REQBODY_PROCESSOR_ERROR "@eq 1" deny,phase:2REQBODY_PROCESSOR_ERROR_MSGEmpty, or contains the error message from the processor.
Example:SecRule REQBODY_PROCESSOR_ERROR_MSG "failed to parse" t:lowercaseREQUEST_BASENAMEThis variable holds just the filename part of
REQUEST_FILENAME (e.g. index.php). Warning: not
urlDecoded. Example:SecRule REQUEST_BASENAME "^login\.php$"REQUEST_BODYThis variable holds the data in the request body (including
POST_PAYLOAD data). REQUEST_BODY should be used if the original order of
the arguements is important (ARGS should be used in all other cases).
Example:SecRule REQUEST_BODY "^username=\w{25,}\&password=\w{25,}\&Submit\=login$"NoteThis variable is only available if the content type is
application/x-www-form-urlencoded.REQUEST_COOKIESThis variable is a collection of all of the cookie data. Example:
the following example is using the Ampersand special operator to count
how many variables are in the collection. In this rule, it would trigger
if the request does not include any Cookie headers.SecRule &REQUEST_COOKIES "@eq 0"REQUEST_COOKIES_NAMESThis variable is a collection of the cookie names in the request
headers. Example: the following rule will trigger if the JSESSIONID
cookie is not present.SecRule &REQUEST_COOKIES_NAMES:JSESSIONID "@eq 0"REQUEST_FILENAMEThis variable holds the relative REQUEST_URI minus the
QUERY_STRING part (e.g. /index.php). Warning: not urlDecoded.
Example:SecRule REQUEST_FILENAME "^/cgi-bin/login\.php$"REQUEST_HEADERSThis variable can be used as either a collection of all of the
Request Headers or can be used to specify indivudual headers (by using
REQUEST_HEADERS:Header-Name). Example: the first
example uses REQUEST_HEADERS as a collection and is applying the
validateUrlEncoding operator against all headers.SecRule REQUEST_HEADERS "@validateUrlEncoding"Example: the second example is targeting only the Host
header.SecRule REQUEST_HEADERS:Host "^[\d\.]+$" \
"deny,log,status:400,msg:'Host header is a numeric IP address'"REQUEST_HEADERS_NAMESThis variable is a collection of the names of all of the Request
Headers. Example:SecRule REQUEST_HEADERS_NAMES "^x-forwarded-for" \
"log,deny,status:403,t:lowercase,msg:'Proxy Server Used'"REQUEST_LINEThis variable holds the complete request line sent to the server
(including the REQUEST_METHOD and HTTP version data). Example: this
example rule will trigger if the request method is something other than
GET, HEAD, POST or if the HTTP is something other than HTTP/0.9, 1.0 or
1.1.SecRule REQUEST_LINE "!(^((?:(?:pos|ge)t|head))|http/(0\.9|1\.0|1\.1)$)"NoteDue to the default action transformation function lowercase, the
regex strings should be in lowercase as well unless the t:none
transformation function is specified for this particular rule.REQUEST_METHODThis variable holds the Request Method used by the client.
Example: the following example will trigger if the Request Method is
either CONNECT or TRACE.SecRule REQUEST_METHOD "^((?:connect|trace))$"NoteDue to the default action transformation function lowercase, the
regex strings should be in lowercase as well unless the t:none
transformation function is specified for this particular rule.REQUEST_PROTOCOLThis variable holds the Request Protocol Version information.
Example:SecRule REQUEST_PROTOCOL "!^http/(0\.9|1\.0|1\.1)$"NoteDue to the default action transformation function lowercase, the
regex strings should be in lowercase as well unless the t:none
transformation function is specified for this particular rule.REQUEST_URIThis variable holds the full URL including the QUERY_STRING data
(e.g. /index.php?p=X), however it will never contain a domain name, even
if it was provided on the request line. Warning: not urlDecoded. It also
does not include either the REQUEST_METHOD or the HTTP version info.
Example:SecRule REQUEST_URI "attack"REQUEST_URI_RAWSame as REQUEST_URI but will contain the domain name if it was
provided on the request line (e.g.
http://www.example.com/index.php?p=X). Warning: not urlDecoded.
Example:SecRule REQUEST_URI_RAW "http:/"RESPONSE_BODYThis variable holds the data for the response payload.
Example:SecRule RESPONSE_BODY "ODBC Error Code"RESPONSE_HEADERSThis variable is similar to the REQUEST_HEADERS variable and can
be used in the same manner. Example:SecRule RESPONSE_HEADERS:X-Cache "MISS"NoteThis variable may not have access to some headers when running in
embedded-mode. Headers such as Server, Date, Connection and Content-Type
are added during a later Apache hook just prior to sending the data to
the client. This data should be available, however, either during
ModSecurity phase:5 (logging) or when running in proxy-mode.RESPONSE_HEADERS_NAMESThis variable is a collection of the response header names.
Example:SecRule RESPONSE_HEADERS_NAMES "Set-Cookie"NoteSame limitations as RESPONSE_HEADERS with regards to access to
some headers in embedded-mode.RESPONSE_PROTOCOLThis variable holds the HTTP Response Protocol information.
Example:SecRule RESPONSE_PROTOCOL "^HTTP\/0\.9"RESPONSE_STATUSThis variable holds the HTTP Response Status Code generated by
Apache. Example:SecRule RESPONSE_STATUS "^[45]"NoteThis directive may not work as expected in embedded-mode as Apache
handles many of the stock response codes (404, 401, etc...) earlier in
Phase 2. This variable should work as expected in a proxy-mode
deployment.RULEThis variable provides access to the id,rev,severity, and msg fields of the rule that triggered the
action. Only available for expansion in action strings (e.g.setvar:tx.varname=%{rule.id}). Example:SecRule &REQUEST_HEADERS:Host "@eq 0" "log,deny,setvar:tx.varname=%{rule.id}"SCRIPT_BASENAMEThis variable holds just the local filename part of
SCRIPT_FILENAME. Example:SecRule SCRIPT_BASENAME "^login\.php$"NoteThis variable is not available in proxy mode.SCRIPT_FILENAMEThis variable holds the full path on the server to the requested
script. (e.g. SCRIPT_NAME plus the server path). Example:SecRule SCRIPT_FILENAME "^/usr/local/apache/cgi-bin/login\.php$"NoteThis variable is not available in proxy mode.SCRIPT_GIDThis variable holds the groupid (numerical value) of the group
owner of the script. Example:SecRule SCRIPT_GID "!^46$"NoteThis variable is not available in proxy mode.SCRIPT_GROUPNAMEThis variable holds the group name of the group owner of the
script. Example:SecRule SCRIPT_GROUPNAME "!^apache$"NoteThis variable is not available in proxy mode.SCRIPT_MODEThis variable holds the script's permissions mode data (numerical
- 1=execute, 2=write, 4=read and 7=read/write/execute). Example: will
trigger if the script has the WRITE permissions set.SecRule SCRIPT_MODE "^(2|3|6|7)$"NoteThis variable is not available in proxy mode.SCRIPT_UIDThis variable holds the userid (numerical value) of the owner of
the script. Example: the example rule below will trigger if the UID is
not 46 (the Apache user).SecRule SCRIPT_UID "!^46$"NoteThis variable is not available in proxy mode.SCRIPT_USERNAMEThis variable holds the username of the owner of the script.
Example:SecRule SCRIPT_USERNAME "!^apache$"NoteThis variable is not available in proxy mode.SERVER_ADDRThis variable contains the IP address of the server.
Example:SecRule SERVER_ADDR "^192\.168\.1\.100$"SERVER_NAMEThis variable contains the server's hostname or IP address.
Example:SecRule SERVER_NAME "hostname\.com$"NoteThis data is taken from the Host header submitted in the client
request.SERVER_PORTThis variable contains the local port that the web server is
listening on. Example:SecRule SERVER_PORT "^80$"SESSIONThis variable is a collection, available only after setsid is executed. Example: the following
example shows how to initialize a SESSION collection with setsid, how to
use setvar to increase the session.score values, how to set the
session.blocked variable and finally how to deny the connection based on
the session:blocked value.SecRule REQUEST_COOKIES:PHPSESSID !^$ chain,nolog,pass
SecAction setsid:%{REQUEST_COOKIES.PHPSESSID}
SecRule REQUEST_URI "^/cgi-bin/finger$" "pass,log,setvar:session.score=+10"
SecRule SESSION:SCORE "@gt 50" "pass,log,setvar:session.blocked=1"
SecRule SESSION:BLOCKED "@eq 1" "log,deny,status:403"SESSIONIDThis variable is the value set with setsid. Example:SecRule SESSIONID !^$ chain,nolog,pass
SecRule REQUEST_COOKIES:PHPSESSID !^$
SecAction setsid:%{REQUEST_COOKIES.PHPSESSID}TIMEThis variable holds a formatted string representing the time
(hour:minute:second). Example:SecRule TIME "^(([1](8|9))|([2](0|1|2|3))):\d{2}:\d{2}$"TIME_DAYThis variable holds the current date (1-31). Example: this rule
would trigger anytime between the 10th and 20th days of the
month.SecRule TIME_DAY "^(([1](0|1|2|3|4|5|6|7|8|9))|20)$"TIME_EPOCHThis variable holds the time in seconds since 1970.
Example:SecRule TIME_EPOCH "@gt 1000"TIME_HOURThis variable holds the current hour (0-23). Example: this rule
would trigger during "off hours".SecRule TIME_HOUR "^(0|1|2|3|4|5|6|[1](8|9)|[2](0|1|2|3))$"TIME_MINThis variable holds the current minute (0-59). Example: this rule
would trigger during the last half hour of every hour.SecRule TIME_MIN "^(3|4|5)"TIME_MONThis variable holds the current month (0-11). Example: this rule
would match if the month was either November (10) or December
(11).SecRule TIME_MON "^1"TIME_SECThis variable holds the current second count (0-59).
Example:SecRule TIME_SEC "@gt 30"TIME_WDAYThis variable holds the current weekday (0-6). Example: this rule
would trigger only on week-ends (Saturday and Sunday).SecRule TIME_WDAY "^(0|6)$"TIME_YEARThis variable holds the current four-digit year data.
Example:SecRule TIME_YEAR "^2006$"TXTransaction Collection. This is used to store pieces of data,
create a transaction anomaly score, and so on. Transaction variables are
set for 1 request/response cycle. The scoring and evaluation will not
last past the current request/response process. Example: In this
example, we are using setvar to increase the tx.score value by 5 points.
We then have a follow-up run that will evaluate the transactional score
this this request and then it will decided whether or not to allow/deny
the request through.SecRule WEBSERVER_ERROR_LOG "does not exist" "phase:5,pass,setvar:tx.score=+5"
SecRule TX:SCORE "@gt 20" deny,logUSERIDThis variable is the value set with setuid. Example:SecAction setuid:%{REMOTE_USER},nolog
SecRule USERID "Admin"WEBAPPIDThis variable is the value set with SecWebAppId. Example:SecWebAppId "WebApp1"
SecRule WEBAPPID "WebApp1" "chain,log,deny,status:403"
SecRule REQUEST_HEADERS:Transfer-Encoding "!^$"WEBSERVER_ERROR_LOGContains zero or more error messages produced by the web server.
Access to this variable is in phase:5 (logging). Example:SecRule WEBSERVER_ERROR_LOG "File does not exist" "phase:5,setvar:tx.score=+5"XMLCan be used standalone (as a target for validateDTD and
validateSchema) or with an XPath expression parameter (which makes it a
valid target for any function that accepts plain text). Example using
XPath:SecDefaultAction log,deny,status:403,phase:2
SecRule REQUEST_HEADERS:Content-Type ^text/xml$ \
phase:1,t:lowercase,nolog,pass,ctl:requestBodyProcessor=XML
SecRule REQBODY_PROCESSOR "!^XML$" skip:2
SecRule XML:/employees/employee/name/text() Fred
SecRule XML:/xq:employees/employee/name/text() Fred \
xmlns:xq=http://www.example.com/employeesTransformation functionsWhen ModSecurity receives request or response information, it makes
a copy of this data and places it into memory. It is on this data in
memory that transformation functions are applied. The raw request/response
data is never altered. Transformation functions are used to transform a
variable before testing it in a rule.NoteThe default transformation function setting is - lowercase,
replaceNulls and compressWhitespace (in this order).The following rule will ensure that an attacker does not use mixed
case in order to evade the ModSecurity rule:SecRule ARG:p "xp_cmdshell" "t:lowercase"multiple
tranformation actions can be used in the same rule, for example the
following rule also ensures that an attacker does not use URL encoding
(%xx encoding) for evasion. Note the order of the transformation
functions, which ensures that a URL encoded letter is first decoded and
than translated to lower case.SecRule ARG:p "xp_cmdshell" "t:urlDecode,t:lowercase"One can use the SetDefaultAction command to ensure the translation
occurs for every rule until the next. Note that translation actions are
additive, so if a rule explicitly list actions, the translation actions
set by SetDefaultAction are still performed.SecDefaultAction t:urlDecode,t:lowercaseThe following transformation functions are supported:base64DecodeThis function decoes a base64-encoded string.base64EncodeThis function encodes input string using base64 encoding.compressWhitespaceThis function is enabled by default. It converts whitespace
characters (32, \f, \t, \n, \r, \v, 160) to spaces (ASCII 32) and then
compresses multiple space characters into only one.escapeSeqDecodeThis function decode ANSI C escape sequences: \a, \b,
\f, \n, \r,
\t, \v, \\,
\?, \', \",
\xHH(hexadecimal), \0OOO(octal). Invalid encodings are left in
the output.hexDecodeThis function decodes a hex-encoded string.hexEncodeThis function encodes input as hex-encoded string.htmlEntityDecodeThis function decodes HTML entities present in input. The
following variants are supported:&#xHH and &#xHH; (where H is any hexadecimal
number)&#DDD and &#DDD; (where D is any decimal
number)" and "  and < and <> and >lowercaseThis function is enabled by default. It converts all charactes to
lowercase using the current C locale.md5This function calculates an MD5 hash from input.noneThis not an actual transformation function but an instruction to
ModSecurity to remove all transformation functions associated with the
current rule and start from scratch.normalisePathThis function will remove multiple slashes, self-references and
directory back-references (except when they are at the beginning of the
path).normalisePathWinSame as normalisePath, but will first convert backslash characters
to forward slashes.removeNullsThis function removes NULL bytes from input.removeWhitespaceThis function removes all whitespace characters.replaceCommentsThis function replaces each occurence of a C-style comments
(/* ... */) with a single space
(multiple consecutive occurences of a space will not be compressed).
Unterminated comments will too be replaced with a space (ASCII 32).
However, a standalone termination of a comment (*/) will not be acted upon.replaceNullsThis function is enabled by default. It replaces NULL bytes in
input with spaces (ASCII 32).urlDecodeThis function decodes an URL-encoded input string. Invalid
encodings (i.e. the ones that use non-hexadecimal characters, or the
ones that are at the end of string and have one or two characters
missing) will not be converted. If you want to detect invalid encodings
use the @validateUrlEncoding
operator. The transformational function should not be used against
variables that have already been URL-decoded unless it is your intention
to perform URL decoding twice!urlDecodeUniIn addition to decoding %xx like urlDecode, urlDecodeUni also decodes%uXXXXencoding (only the
lower byte will be used, the higher byte will be discarded).urlEncodeThis function encodes input using URL encoding.sha1This function calculates a SHA1 hash from input.ActionsEach action belongs to one of five groups:Disruptive actions- are those actions where
ModSecurity will intercept the data. They can only appear in the first
rule in a chain.Non-disruptive actions; can appear
anywhere.Flow actions; can appear only in the first
rule in a chain.Meta-data actions(id,
rev, severity, msg); can only appear in the first rule in
a chain.Data actions- can appear anywhere; these
actions are completely passive and only serve to carry data used by
other actions.allowDescription: Stops processing on
a successful match and allows transaction to proceed.Action Group: DisruptiveExample:SecRule REMOTE_ADDR "^192\.168\.1\.100$" nolog,phase:1,allowNoteThe allow action only applies to the current processing phase. If
your intent is to explicitly allow a request, then you should use the
"ctl" action to turn the ruleEngine off -
ctl:ruleEngine=Off.auditlogDescription: Marks the
transaction for logging in the audit log.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample:SecRule REMOTE_ADDR "^192\.168\.1\.100$" auditlog,phase:1,allowNoteThe auditlog action is now explicit if log is already
specified.captureDescription: When used together
with the regular expression operator, capture action will create copies
of regular expression captures and place them into the transaction
variable collection. Up to ten captures will be copied on a successful
pattern match, each with a name consisting of a digit from 0 to
9.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample:SecRule REQUEST_BODY "^username=(\w{25,})" phase:2,capture,t:none,chain
SecRule TX:1 "(?:(?:a(dmin|nonymous)))"NoteThe 0 data captures the entire REGEX match and 1 captures the data
in the first parantheses, etc...chainDescription: Chains the rule
where the action is placed with the rule that immediately follows it.
The result is called a rule chain. Chained rules
allow for more complex rule matches where you want to use a number of
different VARIABLES to create a better rule and to help prevent false
positives.Action Group: FlowExample:# Refuse to accept POST requests that do
# not specify request body length
SecRule REQUEST_METHOD ^POST$ chain
SecRule REQUEST_HEADER:Content-Length ^$NoteIn programming language concepts, think of chained rules somewhat
similar to AND conditional statements. The actions specified in the
first portion of the chained rule will only be triggered if all of the
variable checks return positive hits. If one aspect of the chained rule
is negative, then the entire rule chain is negative. Also note that
disruptive actions, execution phases, metadata actions (id, rev, msg)
and skip actions can only be specified on by the chain starter
rule.ctlDescription: The ctl action
allows configuration options to be updated for the transaction.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample:# Parse requests with Content-Type "text/xml" as XML
SecRule REQUEST_CONTENT_TYPE ^text/xml nolog,pass,ctl:requestBodyProcessor=XMLNoteThe following configuration options are supported:auditEngineauditLogPartsdebugLogLevelrequestBodyAccessrequestBodyLimitrequestBodyProcessorresponseBodyAccessresponseBodyLimitruleEngineWith the exception of
requestBodyProcessor, each configuration option corresponds to
one configuration directive and the usage is identical.The requestBodyProcessor option allows you to configure the
request body processor. By default ModSecurity will use the URLENCODED and
MULTIPART processors to process an application/x-www-form-urlencoded and a
multipart/form-data body,
respectively. A third processor, XML, is also supported, but it is never
used implicitly. Instead you must tell ModSecurity to use it by placing
a few rules in the REQUEST_HEADERS
processing phase. After the request body was processed as XML you will
be able to use the XML-related features to inspect it.Request body processors will not interrupt a transaction if an
error occurs during parsing. Instead they will set variables REQBODY_PROCESSOR_ERROR and REQBODY_PROCESSOR_ERROR_MSG. These variables
should be inspected in the REQUEST_BODY phase and an appropriate action
taken.denyDescription: Stops rule
processing and intercepts transaction.Action Group: DisruptiveExample:SecRule REQUEST_HEADERS:User-Agent "nikto" log,deny,msg:'Nikto Scanners Identified"deprecatevarDescription: Decrement counter
based on its age.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample: The following example will decrement the counter by 60
every 300 seconds.SecAction deprecatevar:session.score=60/300NoteCounter values are always positive, meaning the value will never
go below zero.dropDescription: Immediately initiate
a "connection close" action to tear down the TCP connection by sending a
FIN packet.Action Group: DisruptiveExample: The following example initiates an IP collection for
tracking Basic Authentication attempts. If the client goes over the
threshold of more than 25 attempts in 2 minutes, it will DROP subsequent
connections.SecAction initcol:ip=%{REMOTE_ADDR},nolog
SecRule ARGS:login "!^$" \
nolog,phase:1,setvar:ip.auth_attempt=+1,deprecatevar:ip.auth_attempt=20/120
SecRule IP:AUTH_ATTEMPT "@gt 25" \
log,drop,phase:1,msg:'Possible Brute Force Attack"NoteThis action is extremely useful when responding to both Brute
Force and Denial of Service attacks in that, in both cases, you want to
minimize both the network bandwidth and the data returned to the client.
This action causes error message to appear in the log "(9)Bad file
descriptor: core_output_filter: writing data to the network"execDescription: Executes an external
script/binary supplied as parameter.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample:SecRule REQUEST_URI "^/cgi-bin/script\.pl" \
"log,exec:/usr/local/apache/bin/test.sh,phase:1"NoteThis directive does not effect a primary action if it exists. This
action will always call script with no parameters, but providing all
information in the environment. All the usual CGI environment variables
will be there. You can have one binary executed per filter match.
Execution will add the header mod_security-executed to the list of
request headers. You should be aware that forking a threaded process
results in all threads being replicated in the new process. Forking can
therefore incur larger overhead in multithreaded operation. The script
you execute must write something (anything) to stdout. If it doesn't
ModSecurity will assume execution didn't work.expirevarDescription: Configurescollection
variable to expire after the given time in seconds.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample:SecRule REQUEST_COOKIES:JSESSIONID "!^$" nolog,phase:1,pass,chain
SecAction setsid:%{REQUEST_COOKIES:JSESSIONID}
SecRule REQUEST_URI "^/cgi-bin/script\.pl" \
"log,allow,setvar:session.suspicious=1,expirevar:session.suspicious=3600,phase:1"NoteYou should use expirevar actions at the same time that you use
setvar actions in order to keep the indended expiration time. If they
are used on their own (perhaps in a SecAction directive) the expire time
could get re-set. When variables are removed from collections, and there
are no other changes, collections are not written to disk at the end of
request. This is because the variables can always be expired again when
the collection is read again on a subsequent request.idDescription: Assigns a unique ID
to the rule or chain.Action Group: MetadataExample:SecRule &REQUEST_HEADERS:Host "@eq 0" \
"log,id:60008,severity:2,msg:'Request Missing a Host Header'"NoteThese are the reserved ranges:1 – 99999; reserved for your internal needs, use as you see
fit but don't publish them to others100,000-199,999; reserved for internal use of the engine, to
assign to rules that do not have explicit IDs200,000-299,999; reserved for rules published at
modsecurity.org300,000-399,999; reserved for rules published at
gotroot.com400,000 and above; unreserved range.initcolDescription: Initialises a named
persistent collection, either by loading data from storage or by
creating a new collection in memory.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample: The following example initiates IP address
tracking.SecAction initcol:ip=%{REMOTE_ADDR},nologNoteEvery collection contains several built-in variables that are
read-only:CREATE_TIME - date/time of
the creation of the collection.KEY - the value of the
initcol variable (the client's IP address in the example).LAST_UPDATE_TIME -
date/time of the last update to the collection.TIMEOUT- date/time in
seconds when the collection will be updated on disk from memory (if
no other updates occur).UPDATE_COUNTER - how many
times the collection has been updated since creation.UPDATE_RATE - is the
average rate updates per minute since creation.Collections are loaded into memory when the initcol action is
encountered. The collection in storage will be updated (and the
appropriate counters increased) only if it was
changed during transaction processing.To create a collection to hold session variables (SESSION) use action setsid. To create a collection to hold user
variables (USER) use action
setuid.At this time it is only possible to have three
collections: IP, SESSION, and USER.logDescription: Indicates that a
successful match of the rule needs to be logged.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample:SecAction initcol:ip=%{REMOTE_ADDR},logNoteThis action will log matches to the Apache error log file and the
ModSecurity audit log.msgDescription: Assigns a custom
message to the rule or chain.Action Group: MetadataExample:SecRule &REQUEST_HEADERS:Host "@eq 0" \
"log,id:60008,severity:2,msg:'Request Missing a Host Header'"NoteThe msg information appears in the error and/or audit log files
and is not sent back to the client in response headers.multiMatchDescription: If enabled
ModSecurity will perform multiple operator invocations for every target,
before and after every anti-evasion transformation is performed.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample:SecDefaultAction log,deny,phase:1,t:removeNulls,t:lowercase
SecRule ARGS "attack" multiMatchNoteNormally, variables are evaluated once, only after all
transformation functions have completed. With multiMatch, variables are
checked against the operator before and after every transformation
function that changes the input.noauditlogDescription: Indicates that a
successful match of the rule should not be used as criteria whether the
transaction should be logged to the audit log.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample:SecRule REQUEST_HEADERS:User-Agent "Test" allow,noauditlogNoteIf the SecAuditEngine is set to On, all of the transactions will
be logged. If it is set to RelevantOnly, then you can control it with
the noauditlog action. Even if the noauditlog action is applied to a
specific rule and a rule either before or after triggered an audit
event, then the tranaction will be logged to the audit log. The correct
way to disable audit logging for the entire transaction is to use
"ctl:auditEngine=Off"nologDescription: Prevents rule
matches from appearing in both the error and audit logs.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample:SecRule REQUEST_HEADERS:User-Agent "Test" allow,nologNoteThe nolog action also implies noauditlog.passDescription: Continues processing
with the next rule in spite of a successful match.Action Group: DisruptiveExample:SecRule REQUEST_HEADERS:User-Agent "Test" log,passNoteTransaction will not be interrupted but it will be logged (unless
logging has been suppressed).pauseDescription: Pauses transaction
processing for the specified number of milliseconds.Action Group: DisruptiveExample:SecRule REQUEST_HEADERS:User-Agent "Test" log,deny,status:403,pause:5000NoteThis feature can be of limited benefit for slowing down Brute
Force Scanners, however use with care. If you are under a Denial of
Service type of attack, the pause feature may make matters worse as this
feature will cause child processes to sit idle until the pause is
completed.phaseDescription: Places the rule (or
the rule chain) into one of five available processing phases.Action Group: DisruptiveExample:SecDefaultAction log,deny,phase:1,t:removeNulls,t:lowercase
SecRule REQUEST_HEADERS:User-Agent "Test" log,deny,status:403NoteKeep in mind that is you specify the incorrect phase, the target
variable that you specify may be empty. This could lead to a false
negative situation where your variable and operator (RegEx) may be
correct, but it misses malicious data because you specified the wrong
phase.proxyDescription: Intercepts
transaction by forwarding request to another web server using the proxy
backend.Action Group: DisruptiveExample:SecRule REQUEST_HEADERS:User-Agent "Test" log,proxy:http://www.honeypothost.com/NoteFor this action to work, mod_proxy must also be installed. This
action is useful if you would like to proxy matching requests onto a
honeypot webserver.redirectDescription: Intercepts
transaction by issuing a redirect to the given location.Action Group: DisruptiveExample:SecRule REQUEST_HEADERS:User-Agent "Test" \
log,redirect:http://www.hostname.com/failed.htmlNoteIf the status action is present
and its value is acceptable (301, 302, 303, or 307) it will be used for
the redirection. Otherwise status code 302 will be used.revDescription: Specifies rule
revision.Action Group: MetadataExample:SecRule REQUEST_METHOD "^PUT$" "id:340002,rev:1,severity:2,msg:'Restricted HTTP function'"NoteThis action is used in combination with the id action to allow the same rule ID to be used
after changes take place but to still provide some indication the rule
changed.sanitiseArgDescription: Sanitises (replaces
each byte with an asterisk) a named request argument prior to audit
logging.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample:SecAction nolog,phase:2,sanitiseArg:passwordNoteThe sanitize actions do not sanitize any data within the actual
raw requests but only on the copy of data within memory that is set to
log to the audit log. It will not sanitize the data in the
modsec_debug.log file (if the log level is set high enough to capture
this data).sanitiseMatchedDescription: Sanitises the
variable (request argument, request header, or response header) that
caused a rule match.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample: This action can be used to sanitise arbitrary transaction
elements when they match a condition. For example, the example below
will sanitise any argument that contains the word
password in the name.SecRule ARGS_NAMES password nolog,pass,sanitiseMatchedNoteSame note as sanitiseArg.sanitiseRequestHeaderDescription: Sanitises a named
request header.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample: This will sanitise the data in the Authorization
header.SecAction log,phase:1,sanitiseRequestHeader:AuthorizationNoteSame note as sanitiseArg.sanitiseResponseHeaderDescription: Sanitises a named
response header.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample: This will sanitise the Set-Cookie data sent to the
client.SecAction log,phase:3,sanitiseResponseHeader:Set-CookieNoteSame note as sanitiseArg.severityDescription: Assigns severity to
the rule it is placed with.Action Group: MetadataExample:SecRule REQUEST_METHOD "^PUT$" "id:340002,rev:1,severity:2,msg:'Restricted HTTP function'"NoteThe severity numbers follow the Syslog convention:0 = EMERGENCY1 = ALERT2 = CRITICAL3 = ERROR4 = WARNING5 = NOTICE6 = INFO7 = DEBUGsetuidDescription: Special-purpose
action that initialises the USER
collection.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample:SecAction setuid:%{REMOTE_USER},nologNoteAfter initialisation takes place the variable USERID will be available for use in the
subsequent rules.setsidDescription:
Special-purposeaction that initialises the SESSION collection.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample:# Initialise session variables using the session cookie value
SecRule REQUEST_COOKIES:PHPSESSID !^$ chain,nolog,pass
SecAction setsid:%{REQUEST_COOKIES.PHPSESSID}NoteOn first invocation of this action the collection will be empty
(not taking the pre-defined variables into account - see initcol for more information). On subsequent
invocations the contents of the collection (session, in this case) will
be retrieved from storage. After initialisation takes place the
variable SESSIONID will be available
for use in the subsequent rules.This action understands each application
maintains its own set of sessions. It will utilise the current web
application ID to create a session namespace.setenvDescription: Creates, removes, or
updates an environment variable.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExamples:To create a new variable (if you omit the value 1 will be used):setenv:name=valueTo remove a variable:setenv:!nameNoteThis action can be used to establish communication with other
Apache modules.setvarDescription: Creates, removes, or
updates a variable in the specified collection.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExamples:To create a new variable:setvar:tx.score=10To remove a variable prefix the name with exclamation mark:setvar:!tx.scoreTo increase or decrease variable value use+and-characters in front of a numerical
value:setvar:tx.score=+5skipDescription: Skips one or more
rules (or chains) on successful match.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample:SecRule REQUEST_URI "^/$" "chain,skip:2"
SecRule REMOTE_ADDR "^127\.0\.0\.1$" "chain"
SecRule REQUEST_HEADERS:User-Agent "^Apache \(internal dummy connection\)$" "t:none"
SecRule &REQUEST_HEADERS:Host "@eq 0" \
"deny,log,status:400,id:960008,severity:4,msg:'Request Missing a Host Header'"
SecRule &REQUEST_HEADERS:Accept "@eq 0" \
"log,deny,log,status:400,id:960015,msg:'Request Missing an Accept Header'"NoteSkip only applies to the current processing phase and not
necessarily the order in which the rules appear in the configuration
file. If you group rules by processing phases, then skip should work as
expected. This action can not be used to skip rules within one chain.
Accepts a single paramater denoting the number of rules (or chains) to
skip.statusDescription: Specifies the
response status code to use with actions
deny and redirect.Action Group: DisruptiveExample:SecDefaultAction log,deny,status:403,phase:1NoteStaus actions defined in Apache scope locations (such as
Directory, Location, etc...) may be superceded by phase:1 action
settings. The Apache ErrorDocument directive will be triggered if
present in the configuration. Therefore if you have previously defined a
custom error page for a given status then it will be executed and its
output presented to the user.tDescription: This action can be
used which transformation function should be used against the specified
variables before they (or the results, rather) are run against the
operator specified in the rule.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample:SecDefaultAction log,deny,phase:1,t:removeNulls,t:lowercase
SecRule REQUEST_COOKIES:SESSIONID "47414e81cbbef3cf8366e84eeacba091" \
log,deny,status:403,t:md5NoteAny transformation functions that you specify in a SecRule will be
in addtion to previous ones specified in SecDefaultAction. Use of
"t:none" will remove all transformation functions for the specified
rule.xmlnsDescription: This action should
be used together with an XPath expression to register a
namespace.Action Group:
Non-DisruptiveExample:SecRule REQUEST_HEADERS:Content-Type "text/xml" \
phase:1,pass,ctl:requestBodyProcessor=XML,ctl:requestBodyAccess=On,xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
SecRule XML:/soap:Envelope/soap:Body/q1:getInput/id() "123" phase:2,denyOperatorsA number of operators can be used in rules, as documented below. The
operator syntax used the "@" symbol followed by the specific operator
name.eqDescription: This operator is a
numerical comparison and stands for "equal to."Example:SecRule &REQUEST_HEADERS_NAMES "@eq 15"geDescription: This operator is a
numerical comparison and stands for "greater than or equal to."Example:SecRule &REQUEST_HEADERS_NAMES "@ge 15"gtDescription: This operator is a
numerical comparison and stands for "greater than."Example:SecRule &REQUEST_HEADERS_NAMES "@gt 15"inspectFileDescription: Executes the
external script/binary given as parameter to the operator against every
file extracted from the request.Example:SecRule FILES_TMPNAMES "@inspectFile /opt/apache/bin/inspect_script.pl"leDescription: This operator is a
numerical comparison and stands for "less than or equal to."Example:SecRule &REQUEST_HEADERS_NAMES "@le 15"ltDescription: This operator is a
numerical comparison and stands for "less than."Example:SecRule &REQUEST_HEADERS_NAMES "@lt 15"rblDescription: Look up the
parameter in the RBL given as parameter. Parameter can be an IPv4
address, or a hostname.Example:SecRule REMOTE_ADDR "@rbl sc.surbl.org"rxDescription: Regular expression
operator. This is the default operator, so if the "@" operator is not
defined, it is assumed to be rx.Example:SecRule REQUEST_HEADERS:User-Agent "@rx nikto"NoteRegular expressions are handled by the PCRE library (http://www.pcre.org). ModSecurity
compiles its regular expressions with the following settings:The entire input is treated as a single line, even when there
are newline characters present.All matches are case-sensitive. If you do not care about case
sensitivity you either need to implement the lowercase transformational function, or
use the per-pattern(?i)modificator, as allowed by
PCRE.The PCRE_DOTALL and
PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY flags are set
during compilation, meaning a single dot will match any character,
including the newlines and a $
end anchor will not match a trailing newline charater.validateByteRangeDescription: Validates the byte
range used in the variable falls into the specified range.Example:SecRule ARG:text "@validateByteRange 10, 13, 32-126"NoteYou can force requests to consist only of bytes from a certain
byte range. This can be useful to avoid stack overflow attacks (since
they usually contain "random" binary content). Default range values are
0 and 255, i.e. all byte values are allowed. This directive does not
check byte range in a POST payload when multipart/form-data encoding
(file upload) is used. Doing so would prevent binary files from being
uploaded. However, after the parameters are extracted from such request
they are checked for a valid range.validateByteRange is similar to the ModSecurity 1.X
SecFilterForceByteRange Directive however since it works in a rule
context, it has the following differences:You can specify a different range for different
variables.It has an "event" context (id, msg....)It is executed in the flow of rules rather than being a built
in pre-check.validateDTDDescription: This operator
requires the request body to be processed as XML.Example:SecDefaultAction log,deny,status:403,phase:2
SecRule REQUEST_HEADERS:Content-Type ^text/xml$ \
phase:1,t:lowercase,nolog,pass,ctl:requestBodyProcessor=XML
SecRule REQBODY_PROCESSOR "!^XML$" nolog,pass,skip:1
SecRule XML "@validateDTD /path/to/apache2/conf/xml.dtd"validateSchemaDescription: This operator
requires the request body to be processed as XML.Example:SecDefaultAction log,deny,status:403,phase:2
SecRule REQUEST_HEADERS:Content-Type ^text/xml$ \
phase:1,t:lowercase,nolog,pass,ctl:requestBodyProcessor=XML
SecRule REQBODY_PROCESSOR "!^XML$" nolog,pass,skip:1
SecRule XML "@validateSchema /path/to/apache2/conf/xml.xsd"This operator requires request body to be processed as XML.validateUrlEncodingDescription: Verifies the
encodings used in the variable (if any) are valid.Example:SecRule ARGS "@validateUrlEncoding"NoteURL encoding is an HTTP standard for encoding byte values within a
URL. The byte is escaped with a % followed by two hexadecimal values
(0-F). This directive does not check encoding in a POST payload when the
multipart/form-data encoding (file upload) is used. It is not necessary
to do so because URL encoding is not used for this encoding.validateUtf8EncodingDescription: Verifies the
variable is a valid UTF-8 encoded string.Example:SecRule ARGS "@validateUtf8Encoding"NoteUTF-8 encoding is valid on most web servers. Integer values
between 0-65535 are encoded in a UTF-8 byte sequence that is escaped by
percents. The short form is two bytes in length.check for three types of errors:Not enough bytes. UTF-8 supports two, three, four, five, and
six byte encodings. ModSecurity will locate cases when a byte or
more is missing.Invalid encoding. The two most significant bits in most
characters are supposed to be fixed to 0x80. Attackers can use this
to subvert Unicode decoders.Overlong characters. ASCII characters are mapped directly into
the Unicode space and are thus represented with a single byte.
However, most ASCII characters can also be encoded with two, three,
four, five, and six characters thus tricking the decoder into
thinking that the character is something else (and, presumably,
avoiding the security check).