Objects > Security Profiles > Vulnerability Protection
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9.1 (EoL)
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End-of-Life (EoL)
Objects > Security Profiles > Vulnerability Protection
A Security policy rule can include specification of
a Vulnerability Protection profile that determines the level of protection
against buffer overflows, illegal code execution, and other attempts
to exploit system vulnerabilities. There are two predefined profiles
available for the Vulnerability Protection feature:
- The default profile applies the default action to all client and server critical, high, and medium severity vulnerabilities. It does not detect low and informational vulnerability protection events.
- The strict profile applies the block response to all client and server critical, high and medium severity spyware events and uses the default action for low and informational vulnerability protection events.
Customized profiles can be used to minimize vulnerability checking
for traffic between trusted security zones, and to maximize protection
for traffic received from untrusted zones, such as the Internet,
as well as the traffic sent to highly sensitive destinations, such
as server farms. To apply Vulnerability Protection profiles to Security
policies, refer to Policies
> Security.
Apply a Vulnerability Protection profile
to every Security Policy rule that allows traffic to protect against
buffer overflows, illegal code execution, and other attempts to
exploit client- and server-side vulnerabilities.
The Rules settings specify collections of signatures to enable,
as well as actions to be taken when a signature within a collection
is triggered.
The Exceptions settings allows you to change the response to
a specific signature. For example, you can block all packets that
match a signature, except for the selected one, which generates
an alert. The Exception tab supports filtering
functions.
The Vulnerability Protection page presents
a default set of columns. Additional columns of information are
available by using the column chooser. Click the arrow to the right
of a column header and select the columns from the Columns sub-menu.
The following tables describe the Vulnerability Protection profile settings:
Vulnerability Protection
Profile Settings | Description |
---|---|
Name | Enter a profile name (up to 31 characters).
This name appears in the list of Vulnerability Protection profiles
when defining security policies. The name is case-sensitive and
must be unique. Use only letters, numbers, spaces, hyphens, periods,
and underscores. |
Description | Enter a description for the profile (up
to 255 characters). |
Shared (Panorama only) | Select this option if you want the profile
to be available to:
|
Disable override (Panorama only) | Select this option to prevent administrators
from overriding the settings of this Vulnerability Protection profile
in device groups that inherit the profile. This selection is cleared
by default, which means administrators can override the settings
for any device group that inherits the profile. |
Rules Tab | |
Rule Name | Specify a name to identify the rule. |
Threat Name | Specify a text string to match. The firewall
applies a collection of signatures to the rule by searching signature
names for this text string. |
CVE List | Specify common vulnerabilities and exposures
(CVEs) if you want to limit the signatures to those that also match
the specified CVEs. Each CVE is in the format CVE-yyyy-xxxx,
where yyyy is the year and xxxx is the unique identifier. You can
perform a string match on this field. For example, to find vulnerabilities
for the year 2011, enter “2011”. |
Host Type | Specify whether to limit the signatures
for the rule to those that are client side, server side, or either (any). |
Severity | Select severities to match (informational, low, medium, high,
or critical) if you want to limit the signatures
to those that also match the specified severities. |
Action | Choose the action to take when the rule
is triggered. For a list of actions, see Actions
in Security Profiles. The Default action
is based on the pre-defined action that is part of each signature
provided by Palo Alto Networks. To view the default action for a
signature, select ObjectsSecurity ProfilesVulnerability Protection and Add or
select an existing profile. Click the Exceptions tab
and then click Show all signatures to see
a list of all signatures and the associated Action. For the best security, set the Action for both
client and server critical, high, and medium severity events to reset-both and
use the default action for Informational and Low severity events. |
Packet Capture | Select this option if you want to capture
identified packets. Select single-packet to
capture one packet when a threat is detected, or select the extended-capture option
to capture from 1 to 50 packets (default is 5 packets). Extended-capture
provides more context to the threat when analyzing the threat logs.
To view the packet capture, select MonitorLogsThreat and
locate the log entry you are interested in and then click the green down
arrow in the second column. To define the number of packets that
should be captured, select DeviceSetupContent-ID and
then edit the Content-ID Settings. If the action for a given
threat is allow, the firewall does not trigger a Threat log and
does not capture packets. If the action is alert, you can set the
packet capture to single-packet or extended-capture. All blocking
actions (drop, block, and reset actions) capture a single packet.
The content package on the device determines the default action. Enable extended-capture for critical, high,
and medium severity events and single-packet capture for low severity
events. Use the default extended-capture value of 5 packets, which
provides enough information to analyze the threat in most cases. (Too
much packet capture traffic may result in dropping packet captures.)
Don’t enable packet capture for informational events because it’s
not very useful compared to capturing information about higher severity
events and creates a relatively high volume of low-value traffic. Apply
extended packet capture using the same logic you use to decide what
traffic to log—take extended captures of the traffic you log, including
traffic you block. |
Exceptions Tab | |
Threats | Only create a threat
exception if you are sure an identified threat is not a threat (false
positive). If you believe you have discovered a false positive,
open a support case with TAC so Palo Alto Networks can investigate
the incorrectly identified threat. When the issue is resolved, remove
the exception from the profile immediately. Select Enable for
each threat for which you want to assign an action, or select All to respond
to all listed threats. The list depends on the selected host, category,
and severity. If the list is empty, there are no threats for the current
selections. Choose an action from the drop-down, or choose
from the Action drop-down at the top of the
list to apply the same action to all threats. If you selected Show All,
then all signatures are listed. If not, only the signatures that
are exceptions are listed. Select Packet Capture if
you want to capture identified packets. The vulnerability
signature database contains signatures that indicate a brute force
attack; for example, Threat ID 40001 triggers on an FTP brute force
attack. Brute-force signatures trigger when a condition occurs in
a certain time threshold. The thresholds are pre-configured for
brute force signatures, and can be changed by clicking edit ( Thresholds
can be applied on a source IP, destination IP or a combination of
source IP and destination IP. The default action is shown
in parentheses. The CVE column shows identifiers for common vulnerabilities
and exposures (CVE). These unique, common identifiers are for publicly
known information security vulnerabilities. Click into the
IP Address Exemptions column to Add IP address
filters to a threat exception. When you add an IP address to a threat
exception, the threat exception action for that signature will take
precedence over the rule's action only if the signature is triggered
by a session with either a source or destination IP address matching
an IP address in the exception. You can add up to 100 IP addresses
per signature. You must enter a unicast IP address (that is, an
address without a netmask), such as 10.1.7.8 or 2001:db8:123:1::1.
By adding IP address exemptions, you do not have to create a new
policy rule and new vulnerability profile to create an exception
for a specific IP address. |
Vendor ID | Specify vendor IDs if you want to limit
the signatures to those that also match the specified vendor IDs. For
example, the Microsoft vendor IDs are in the form MSyy-xxx, where
yy is the two-digit year and xxx is the unique identifier. For example,
to match Microsoft for the year 2009, enter “MS09” in the Search
field. |
Category | Select a vulnerability category if you want
to limit the signatures to those that match that category. |