Difference between revisions of "Mod security"

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m (Disable Mod_security rules for a specific application)
m (Disable Mod_security rules on a specific application, for a list of IPs)
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Whats important to remember is that the LocationMatch variable must match the URL, not the path on the system.
 
Whats important to remember is that the LocationMatch variable must match the URL, not the path on the system.
  
== Disable Mod_security rules on a specific application, for a list of IPs ==
+
== Disable Mod_security rules by domain, for a specific application, for a list of IPs ==
  
 
Step 1) edit the vhost/vhost_ssl.conf for the domain
 
Step 1) edit the vhost/vhost_ssl.conf for the domain

Revision as of 11:24, 30 November 2009

Contents

Disabling Mod_Security Globally

Step 1) Disable config file

 mv /etc/httpd/conf.d/00_mod_security.conf /etc/httpd/conf.d/00_mod_security.conf.disabled

Step 2) Restart Apache

 /etc/init.d/httpd restart


Disabling Mod_security per domain

Step 1) edit the vhost/vhost_ssl.conf for the domain

 vim /var/www/vhosts/<DOMAINNAME>/conf/vhost.conf

Step 2) Add the following

 SecRuleEngine Off

Step 3) Add vhost.conf to domain config

 /usr/local/psa/admin/bin/websrvmng -a

Step 4) Restart Apache

 /etc/init.d/httpd restart


Disable Mod_security on a global URL

Step 1) Create a global exclude file

 vim /etc/httpd/modsecurity.d/00_asl_custom_exclude.conf

Step 2) Add the LocationMatch for the url to exclude. Example: /server.php

 <LocationMatch /server.php>
     SecRuleEngine Off
 </LocationMatch>

Step 3) Restart apache

 /etc/init.d/httpd restart


Disable a Mod_security rule (or rules) for all applications in a single domain

Step 1) edit the vhost/vhost_ssl.conf for the domain

 vim /var/www/vhosts/<DOMAINNAME>/conf/vhost.conf

Step 2) Add the LocationMatch for the rule to exclude. Example, ruleid 950005

 <LocationMatch .*>
       SecRuleRemoveById 950005
 </LocationMatch>

If you want to disable multiple rules:

Step 2) Add the LocationMatch for the rule to exclude. Example, ruleids 950005 and 950006

 <LocationMatch .*>
       SecRuleRemoveById 950005
       SecRuleRemoveById 950006
 </LocationMatch>

Disable Mod_security rule for a specific application in a single domain

Step 1) edit the vhost/vhost_ssl.conf for the domain

 vim /var/www/vhosts/<DOMAINNAME>/conf/vhost.conf

Step 2) Add the LocationMatch for the rule to exclude. Example, ruleid 950005

 <LocationMatch /URL/path/to/application.php>
       SecRuleRemoveById 950005
 </LocationMatch>

Disable Mod_security rule for all domains

Use ASL utility to disable rule by ID. Example: 950005

 asl --disable-signature 950005

Note: This requires that Atomic Secured Linux be installed.

If you do not have Atomic Secured Linux you can disable a rule globally manually by adding a rule like this:


 <LocationMatch .*>
 SecRuleRemoveById 340000
 </LocationMatch>

Disable Mod_security rules globally for a specific application

Add this to either you vhost.conf file, or if your want to make this global make sure this exclusion is loaded after your rules are loaded. A good place to add this in the 999_asl_user_exclude.conf file. If you don't have this file, just create it. The system is smart enough to know to load it.

 <LocationMatch /url/to/your/application>
 SecRuleRemoveById 1234567
 SecRuleRemoveById 9999999
 </LocationMatch>

Whats important to remember is that the LocationMatch variable must match the URL, not the path on the system.

Disable Mod_security rules by domain, for a specific application, for a list of IPs

Step 1) edit the vhost/vhost_ssl.conf for the domain

 vim /var/www/vhosts/<DOMAINNAME>/conf/vhost.conf

Step 2) Add the LocationMatch for the rule to exclude.

 <LocationMatch /foo/bar.php>
       SecRule REMOTE_ADDR "@pmFromFile /etc/asl/whitelist" "nolog,phase:1,allow"
 </LocationMatch>

Step 3) Add IP to /etc/asl/whitelist

 echo "10.11.12.13" >> /etc/asl/whitelist

Or:

If you want to create a special whitelist for just that application:

Step 1) edit the vhost/vhost_ssl.conf for the domain

 vim /var/www/vhosts/<DOMAINNAME>/conf/vhost.conf

Step 2) Add the LocationMatch for the rule to exclude.

 <LocationMatch /foo/bar.php>
       SecRule REMOTE_ADDR "@pmFromFile /path/to/your/custom/whitelist_for_this_application" "nolog,phase:1,allow"
 </LocationMatch>

Step 3) Create your custom whitelist and add IP to /etc/asl/whitelist

 echo "10.11.12.13" >> /path/to/your/custom/whitelist_for_this_application

Keep in mind these custom lists are *not* managed by ASL, so if you want to add IPs to these lists you will need to do it from the command line.

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