Skip to content

IPv4 and IPv6 address rate limiting evasion tool

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

CarsonSallis/freebind

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

28 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Freebind

Make use of any IP address from a prefix that is routed to your machine.

With the introduction of IPv6, single machines often get prefixes with more than one IP address assigned. However, without AnyIP and socket freebinding, many applications lack support to dynamically bind to arbitrary unconfigured addresses within these prefixes. Freebind enables the IP_FREEBIND socket option by hooking into socket library calls using LD_PRELOAD.

IPv6 services employing rate limiting often ban per /128 or per /64 in order to minimize collateral damage. If you have a statically routed prefix that is smaller than the prefix being banned, you can make use of freebind, which will bind sockets to random IP addresses from specified prefixes.

Usage

Installing

Clone and cd into the git repository, then run make install. In order for packetrand to be built successfully, libnetfilter-queue-dev is required.

Setup

Assume your ISP has assigned the subnet 2a00:1450:4001:81b::/64 to your server. In order to make use of freebinding, you first need to configure the Linux AnyIP kernel feature in order to be able to bind a socket to an arbitrary IP address from this subnet as follows:

ip -6 route add local 2a00:1450:4001:81b::/64 dev lo

Example

Having set up AnyIP, the following command will bind wget's internal socket to a random address from the specified subnet:

freebind -r 2a00:1450:4001:81b::/64 wget -qO- ipv6.wtfismyip.com/text

In practice, running this command multiple times will yield a new IP address every time.

UDP per packet randomization

The freebind program is only suitable for assigning one IP address per socket. It will not assign a random IP address per packet. Therefore, packetrand making use of the netfilter API is included for use in scenarios that require a fresh IP address per outgoing packet.

Setup

Imagine you want to randomize source addresses for DNS resolving. The following command has iptables pass outgoing DNS packets to the packetrand userspace program:

ip6tables -I OUTPUT -j NFQUEUE -p udp --dport 53 --queue-num 0 --queue-bypass
ip6tables -I INPUT -j NFQUEUE -p udp --sport 53 --queue-num 0 --queue-bypass

Afterwards, the packetrand daemon could be invoked as follows, where 0 is the netfilter queue number:

packetrand 0 2a00:1450:4001:81b:: 2a00:1450:4001:81b::/64

This will cause packetrand to rewrite the source address of outgoing packets to a random address from the specified prefix and translate back the destination address of incoming packets to 2a00:1450:4001:81b:: which is supposed to be the address which the socket is bound to.

Source port randomization

You can use the -r switch in order to randomize source ports per packet.

packetrand 0 -r 53

In this case, all outgoing UDP packets that are handled by the queue have their source port randomized and 53 is the port number for incoming packets to be rewritten to.

Limitations

  • IPv6 extension headers are not yet supported

Notes

The application will only work if your internet service provider provides you with a routed prefix.

About

IPv4 and IPv6 address rate limiting evasion tool

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • C 98.0%
  • Makefile 2.0%