bunkerized-nginx/docs/troubleshooting.md

11 KiB

Troubleshooting

!!! info "BunkerWeb Panel" If you are unable to resolve your problems, you can contact us directly via our panel. This centralises all requests relating to the BunkerWeb solution.

Logs

When troubleshooting, logs are your best friends. We try our best to provide user-friendly logs to help you understand what's happening.

Please note that you can set LOG_LEVEL setting to info (default : notice) to increase the verbosity of BunkerWeb.

Here is how you can access the logs, depending on your integration :

=== "Docker"

!!! tip "List containers"
	To list the running containers, you can use the following command :
	```shell
	docker ps
	```

You can use the `docker logs` command (replace `mybunker` with the name of your container) :
```shell
docker logs mybunker
```

Here is the docker-compose equivalent (replace `mybunker` with the name of the services declared in the docker-compose.yml file) :
```shell
docker-compose logs mybunker
```

=== "Docker autoconf"

!!! tip "List containers"
	To list the running containers, you can use the following command :
	```shell
	docker ps
	```

You can use the `docker logs` command (replace `mybunker` and `myautoconf` with the name of your containers) :
```shell
docker logs mybunker
docker logs myautoconf
```

Here is the docker-compose equivalent (replace `mybunker` and `myautoconf` with the name of the services declared in the docker-compose.yml file) :
```shell
docker-compose logs mybunker
docker-compose logs myautoconf
```

=== "Swarm"

!!! tip "List services"
	To list the services, you can use the following command :
	```shell
	docker service ls
	```

You can use the `docker service logs` command (replace `mybunker` and `myautoconf` with the name of your services) :
```shell
docker service logs mybunker
docker service logs myautoconf
```

=== "Kubernetes"

!!! tip "List pods"
	To list the pods, you can use the following command :
	```shell
	kubectl get pods
	```
You can use the `kubectl logs` command (replace `mybunker` and `myautoconf` with the name of your pods) :
```shell
kubectl logs mybunker
kubectl logs myautoconf
```

=== "Linux"

For errors related to BunkerWeb services (e.g. not starting), you can use `journalctl` :
```shell
journalctl -u bunkerweb --no-pager
```

Common logs are located inside the `/var/log/bunkerweb` directory :
```shell
cat /var/log/bunkerweb/error.log
cat /var/log/bunkerweb/access.log
```

=== "Ansible"

For errors related to BunkerWeb services (e.g. not starting), you can use `journalctl` :
```shell
ansible -i inventory.yml all -a "journalctl -u bunkerweb --no-pager" --become
```

Common logs are located inside the `/var/log/bunkerweb` directory :
```shell
ansible -i inventory.yml all -a "cat /var/log/bunkerweb/error.log" --become
ansible -i inventory.yml all -a "cat /var/log/bunkerweb/access.log" --become
```

=== "Vagrant"

For errors related to BunkerWeb services (e.g. not starting), you can use `journalctl` :
```shell
journalctl -u bunkerweb --no-pager
```

Common logs are located inside the `/var/log/bunkerweb` directory :
```shell
cat /var/log/bunkerweb/error.log
cat /var/log/bunkerweb/access.log
```

Permissions

Don't forget that BunkerWeb runs as an unprivileged user for obvious security reasons. Double-check the permissions of files and folders used by BunkerWeb, especially if you use custom configurations (more info here). You will need to set at least RW rights on files and RWX on folders.

ModSecurity

The default BunkerWeb configuration of ModSecurity is to load the Core Rule Set in anomaly scoring mode with a paranoia level (PL) of 1 :

  • Each matched rule will increase an anomaly score (so many rules can match a single request)
  • PL1 includes rules with fewer chances of false positives (but less security than PL4)
  • the default threshold for anomaly score is 5 for requests and 4 for responses

Let's take the following logs as an example of ModSecurity detection using default configuration (formatted for better readability) :

2022/04/26 12:01:10 [warn] 85#85: *11 ModSecurity: Warning. Matched "Operator `PmFromFile' with parameter `lfi-os-files.data' against variable `ARGS:id' (Value: `/etc/passwd' )
	[file "/usr/share/bunkerweb/core/modsecurity/files/coreruleset/rules/REQUEST-930-APPLICATION-ATTACK-LFI.conf"]
	[line "78"]
	[id "930120"]
	[rev ""]
	[msg "OS File Access Attempt"]
	[data "Matched Data: etc/passwd found within ARGS:id: /etc/passwd"]
	[severity "2"]
	[ver "OWASP_CRS/3.3.2"]
	[maturity "0"]
	[accuracy "0"]
	[tag "application-multi"]
	[tag "language-multi"]
	[tag "platform-multi"]
	[tag "attack-lfi"]
	[tag "paranoia-level/1"]
	[tag "OWASP_CRS"]
	[tag "capec/1000/255/153/126"]
	[tag "PCI/6.5.4"]
	[hostname "172.17.0.2"]
	[uri "/"]
	[unique_id "165097447014.179282"]
	[ref "o1,10v9,11t:utf8toUnicode,t:urlDecodeUni,t:normalizePathWin,t:lowercase"],
	client: 172.17.0.1, server: localhost, request: "GET /?id=/etc/passwd HTTP/1.1", host: "localhost"
2022/04/26 12:01:10 [warn] 85#85: *11 ModSecurity: Warning. Matched "Operator `PmFromFile' with parameter `unix-shell.data' against variable `ARGS:id' (Value: `/etc/passwd' )
	[file "/usr/share/bunkerweb/core/modsecurity/files/coreruleset/rules/REQUEST-932-APPLICATION-ATTACK-RCE.conf"]
	[line "480"]
	[id "932160"]
	[rev ""]
	[msg "Remote Command Execution: Unix Shell Code Found"]
	[data "Matched Data: etc/passwd found within ARGS:id: /etc/passwd"]
	[severity "2"]
	[ver "OWASP_CRS/3.3.2"]
	[maturity "0"]
	[accuracy "0"]
	[tag "application-multi"]
	[tag "language-shell"]
	[tag "platform-unix"]
	[tag "attack-rce"]
	[tag "paranoia-level/1"]
	[tag "OWASP_CRS"]
	[tag "capec/1000/152/248/88"]
	[tag "PCI/6.5.2"]
	[hostname "172.17.0.2"]
	[uri "/"]
	[unique_id "165097447014.179282"]
	[ref "o1,10v9,11t:urlDecodeUni,t:cmdLine,t:normalizePath,t:lowercase"],
	client: 172.17.0.1, server: localhost, request: "GET /?id=/etc/passwd HTTP/1.1", host: "localhost"
2022/04/26 12:01:10 [error] 85#85: *11 [client 172.17.0.1] ModSecurity: Access denied with code 403 (phase 2). Matched "Operator `Ge' with parameter `5' against variable `TX:ANOMALY_SCORE' (Value: `10' )
	[file "/usr/share/bunkerweb/core/modsecurity/files/coreruleset/rules/REQUEST-949-BLOCKING-EVALUATION.conf"]
	[line "80"]
	[id "949110"]
	[rev ""]
	[msg "Inbound Anomaly Score Exceeded (Total Score: 10)"]
	[data ""]
	[severity "2"]
	[ver "OWASP_CRS/3.3.2"]
	[maturity "0"]
	[accuracy "0"]
	[tag "application-multi"]
	[tag "language-multi"]
	[tag "platform-multi"]
	[tag "attack-generic"]
	[hostname "172.17.0.2"]
	[uri "/"]
	[unique_id "165097447014.179282"]
	[ref ""],
	client: 172.17.0.1, server: localhost, request: "GET /?id=/etc/passwd HTTP/1.1", host: "localhost"

As we can see, there are 3 different logs :

  1. Rule 930120 matched
  2. Rule 932160 matched
  3. Access denied (rule 949110)

One important thing to understand is that rule 949110 is not a "real" one : it's the one that will deny the request because the anomaly threshold is reached (which is 10 in this example). You should never remove the 949110 rule !

If it's a false-positive, you should then focus on both 930120 and 932160 rules. ModSecurity and/or CRS tuning is out of the scope of this documentation but don't forget that you can apply custom configurations before and after the CRS is loaded (more info here).

Bad Behavior

A common false-positive case is when the client is banned because of the "bad behavior" feature which means that too many suspicious HTTP status codes were generated within a time period (more info here). You should start by reviewing the settings and then edit them according to your web application(s) like removing a suspicious HTTP code, decreasing the count time, increasing the threshold, ...

IP unban

You can manually unban an IP which can be useful when doing some tests but it needs the setting USE_API set to yes (which is not the default) so you can contact the internal API of BunkerWeb (replace 1.2.3.4 with the IP address to unban) :

=== "Docker"

You can use the `docker exec` command (replace `mybunker` with the name of your container) :
```shell
docker exec mybunker bwcli unban 1.2.3.4
```

Here is the docker-compose equivalent (replace `mybunker` with the name of the services declared in the docker-compose.yml file) :
```shell
docker-compose exec mybunker bwcli unban 1.2.3.4
```

=== "Docker autoconf"

You can use the `docker exec` command (replace `myautoconf` with the name of your container) :
```shell
docker exec myautoconf bwcli unban 1.2.3.4
```

Here is the docker-compose equivalent (replace `myautoconf` with the name of the services declared in the docker-compose.yml file) :
```shell
docker-compose exec myautoconf bwcli unban 1.2.3.4
```

=== "Swarm"

You can use the `docker exec` command (replace `myautoconf` with the name of your service) :
```shell
docker exec $(docker ps -q -f name=myautoconf) bwcli unban 1.2.3.4
```

=== "Kubernetes"

You can use the `kubectl exec` command (replace `myautoconf` with the name of your pod) :
```shell
kubectl exec myautoconf bwcli unban 1.2.3.4
```

=== "Linux"

You can use the `bwcli` command (as root) :
```shell
sudo bwcli unban 1.2.3.4
```

=== "Ansible"

You can use the `bwcli` command :
```shell
ansible -i inventory.yml all -a "bwcli unban 1.2.3.4" --become
```

=== "Vagrant"

You can use the `bwcli` command (as root) :
```shell
sudo bwcli unban 1.2.3.4
```

Whitelisting

If you have bots that need to access your website, the recommended way to avoid any false positive is to whitelist them using the whitelisting feature. We don't recommend using the WHITELIST_URI* or WHITELIST_USER_AGENT* settings unless they are set to secret and unpredictable values. Common use cases are :

  • Healthcheck / status bot
  • Callback like IPN or webhook
  • Social media crawler

Timezone

When using container-based integrations, the timezone of the container may not match the one of the host machine. To resolve that, you can set the TZ environment variable to the timezone of your choice on your containers (e.g. TZ=Europe/Paris). You will find the list of timezone identifiers here.