IEEE INFOCOM 2019 - IEEE Conference on Computer Communications | 2019

Collaborative Client-Side DNS Cache Poisoning Attack

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


DNS poisoning attacks inject malicious entries into the DNS resolution system, allowing an attacker to redirect clients to malicious servers. These attacks typically target a DNS resolver allowing attackers to poison a DNS entry for all machines that use the compromised resolver. However, recent defenses can effectively protect resolvers rendering classical DNS poisoning attacks ineffective. In this paper, we present a new class of DNS poisoning attacks targeting the client-side DNS cache. The attack initiates DNS poisoning on the client cache, which is used in all main stream operating systems to improve DNS performance, circumventing defenses targeting resolvers. Our attack allows an off-path attacker to collaborate with a piece of an unprivileged malware to poison the OS-wide DNS cache on a client machine. We developed the attack on Windows, Mac OS, and Ubuntu Linux. Interestingly, the behaviors of the three operating systems are distinct and the vulnerabilities require different strategies to exploit. We also generalize the attack to work even when the client is behind a Network Address Translation (NAT) router. Our results show that we can reliably inject malicious DNS mappings, with on average, an order of tens of seconds. Finally, we propose a defense against this type of poisoning attacks.

Volume None
Pages 1153-1161
DOI 10.1109/INFOCOM.2019.8737514
Language English
Journal IEEE INFOCOM 2019 - IEEE Conference on Computer Communications

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