I got bit this week... was on holiday and when getting home, my Internet allowance was used up - 27GB in 2 days.
To cut a long story short, it was my fault - years ago I had a server with the NTP pool. Trouble was, I never changed the conf, so it was always open.
Anyway, after sorting that out, and locking down the door, I was still being hit by 100's of requests a minute.
The only way out was to get an IP change - sorted.
Here is a mail I got - please read to make sure you don't get hit by this - your ISP may not be so good to help out:
==================================
The following free online tool can be used to check your IP address:
http://support.ntp.org/ntpq.php
Administrators:
1. If you run ntpd, upgrading to the latest version, which removes the
"monlist" command that is used for these attacks; alternately, disabling the
monitoring function by adding "disable monitor" to your /etc/ntp.conf file.
2. Setting the NTP installation to act as a client only. With ntpd, that can
be done with "restrict default ignore" in /etc/ntp.conf; other daemons
should have a similar configuration option. More information on configuring
different devices can be found here:
https://www.team-cymru.org/ReadingRoom/Templates/sec...
3. Adjusting your firewall or NTP server configuration so that it only
serves your users and does not respond to outside IP addresses.
If you don't mean to run a public NTP server, we recommend #1 and #2. If you
do mean to run a public NTP server, we recommend #1, and also that you
rate-limit responses to individual source IP addresses -- silently
discarding those that exceed a low number, such as one request per IP
address per second. Rate-limit functionality is built into many
recently-released NTP daemons, including ntpd, but needs to be enabled; it
would help with different types of attacks than this one.
Fixing open NTP servers is important; with the 400x+ amplification factor of
NTP DRDoS attacks -- one 40-byte-long request usually generates 18252 bytes
worth of response traffic -- it only takes one machine on an unfiltered 1
Gbps link to create a 450+ Gbps attack!
============================================
Nick



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