Q. How do I verify that my ISP or my own recursive resolvers are free from DNS cache poisoning bug that is promised full disclosure of the flaw by Dan on August 7 at the Black Hat conference? How do I test my dns server for DNS cache pollution or DNS Cache Poisoning bug?
A. DNS cache poisoning (also known as DNS cache pollution) is a maliciously created or unintended situation that provides data to a Domain Name Server that did not originate from authoritative DNS sources. It occur if DNS “spoofing attack” has been encountered. An attacker will send malicious data / non-secure data in response to a DNS query. For example dns query for www.linuxbabu.net can be redirected to www.redhat.com.
how do I find out if my DNS server is open to such attack or not?
Visit Dan Kaminsky java script page to check your DNS
You can also use following command dig command, enter:$ dig +short @{name-server-ip} porttest.dns-oarc.net txt
Sample output:
$ dig +short @ns1.example.com porttest.dns-oarc.net txt
$ dig +short @208.67.222.222 porttest.dns-oarc.net txt
z.y.x.w.v.u.t.s.r.q.p.o.n.m.l.k.j.i.h.g.f.e.d.c.b.a.pt.dns-oarc.net.
"208.67.222.222 is GOOD: 26 queries in 0.1 seconds from 26 ports with std dev 17746.18"
Another test,$ dig +short @125.22.47.125 porttest.dns-oarc.net txt
Output:
z.y.x.w.v.u.t.s.r.q.p.o.n.m.l.k.j.i.h.g.f.e.d.c.b.a.pt.dns-oarc.net.
"125.22.47.139 is POOR: 42 queries in 8.4 seconds from 1 ports with std dev 0.00"
FIX :
Run yum updateyum update
Open named.conf file and comment out following two lines:query-source port 53;
Make sure recursion is limited to your LAN only. Set ACL. Restart bind to take effect:
query-source-v6 port 53;rndc reloadÂ
service named restart