| Home > To block or not to block: Rogue containment methods | |
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Wired containment First, identify the target switch port by scanning the wired LAN to find a device with the rogue's MAC address. Or associate with the rogue AP, then use traceroute to establish the rogue's path back into your network. Your Wireless IDS (WIDS) may support one or both "connectivity check" methods, launched from a sensor near the rogue. If the switch port used by the rogue can be identified, your WIDS may be able to send that switch an SNMP request to disable that port. Alternatively, it may be able to send such a request to a Network Management System -- for example, AirDefense can send wired block requests to Cisco WLSE. Wired containment may require some pre-configuration, like adding managed subnets and SNMP community strings to your WIDS so that it can discover switches, or adding specific switches to a search list. In some cases, switches may not be SNMP-managed, or may be located in subnets that cannot be reached from a WIDS sensor or server. Also, even when wired containment is technically possible, it may not be permissible due to organizational policies.
Wireless containment
Considerations It is therefore essential to understand what containment features do before invoking them. Experiment with containment features in isolated test WLANs until you understand intended impacts and unintended consequences. When you move to a production WLAN, apply containment sparingly at first. Automate containment only after careful analysis and management approval. Develop a policy for when to use containment, and who is authorized to make containment decisions. For example, you may require human investigation for all but the highest-priority rogue incidents, such as those involving mission-critical systems or restricted areas. Or you may decide to automate conservative containment scenarios, while reserving more aggressive methods for escalation. For example, disabling your own switch ports or selectively deauthenticating rogues from your own APs may be considered well within your jurisdiction, and unlikely to accidentally impact your neighbors. Also, define when containment measures should be removed or made permanent. For example, wireless containment is frequently a stop-loss tactic, imposed for a short period, or until the rogue gets discouraged and moves on. But Wireless Intrusion Prevention Systems can also use containment to persistently enforce authorized usage policies -- for example, by preventing legitimate stations from ever maintaining associations with unauthorized APs. Remember, a double-edged sword in skilled hands can be a powerful tool. Containment can be extremely valuable in the war against rogues, so long as you treat these "strike back" capabilities with the respect and care they deserve. >> Read the next tip: Overlay vs. embedded WIDS sensors
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