Dynamic Arp Inspection - Dell S4048–ON Configuration Manual

Hide thumbs Also See for S4048–ON:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

However, DHCP release and decline packets are allowed so that the DHCP snooping table can decrease in size. After the table usage falls
below the maximum limit of 4000 entries, new IP address assignments are allowed.
To view the number of entries in the table, use the show ip dhcp snooping binding command. This output displays the snooping
binding table created using the ACK packets from the trusted port.
Dell#show ip dhcp snooping binding
Codes : S - Static D - Dynamic
IP Address
MAC Address
================================================================
10.1.1.251
00:00:4d:57:f2:50
10.1.1.252
00:00:4d:57:e6:f6
10.1.1.253
00:00:4d:57:f8:e8
10.1.1.254
00:00:4d:69:e8:f2
Total number of Entries in the table : 4

Dynamic ARP Inspection

Dynamic address resolution protocol (ARP) inspection prevents ARP spoofing by forwarding only ARP frames that have been validated
against the DHCP binding table.
ARP is a stateless protocol that provides no authentication mechanism. Network devices accept ARP requests and replies from any device.
ARP replies are accepted even when no request was sent. If a client receives an ARP message for which a relevant entry already exists in
its ARP cache, it overwrites the existing entry with the new information.
The lack of authentication in ARP makes it vulnerable to spoofing. ARP spoofing is a technique attackers use to inject false IP-to-MAC
mappings into the ARP cache of a network device. It is used to launch man-in-the-middle (MITM), and denial-of-service (DoS) attacks,
among others.
A spoofed ARP message is one in which the MAC address in the sender hardware address field and the IP address in the sender protocol
field are strategically chosen by the attacker. For example, in an MITM attack, the attacker sends a client an ARP message containing the
attacker's MAC address and the gateway's IP address. The client then thinks that the attacker is the gateway, and sends all internet-bound
packets to it. Likewise, the attacker sends the gateway an ARP message containing the attacker's MAC address and the client's IP address.
The gateway then thinks that the attacker is the client and forwards all packets addressed to the client to it. As a result, the attacker is able
to sniff all packets to and from the client.
Other attacks using ARP spoofing include:
Broadcast
An attacker can broadcast an ARP reply that specifies FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF as the gateway's MAC address, resulting
in all clients broadcasting all internet-bound packets.
MAC flooding
An attacker can send fraudulent ARP messages to the gateway until the ARP cache is exhausted, after which,
traffic from the gateway is broadcast.
Denial of service
An attacker can send a fraudulent ARP messages to a client to associate a false MAC address with the gateway
address, which would blackhole all internet-bound packets from the client.
310
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP)
Expires(Sec) Type VLAN
172800
D
Vl 10
172800
D
Vl 10
172740
D
Vl 10
172740
D
Vl 10
Interface
Te 1/2
Te 1/1
Te 1/3
Te 1/5

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

S4048t-on

Table of Contents