IRC flood

Internet Relay Chat Flooding/Scrolling on an IRC network is a method of disconnecting users from an IRC server (a form of Denial of Service), exhausting bandwidth which causes network latency ('lag'), or just disrupting users. Floods can either be done by scripts (written for a given client) or by external programs.

History

The history of Internet Relay Chat flooding started as a method of taking over an IRC channel from the original founders of the channel. The first attacks generally used a modified IRC client or an application to flood a channel or a user. Later they started to be based on bots and scripts. This later moved on to starting IRC-based botnets which were capable of DDoS and IRC floods.

Types of floods

A post flood on an IRC channel, repeating the term "OMG" several hundred times

Connect flood

Connecting and disconnecting from a channel as fast as possible, therefore spamming the channel with dis/connect messages also called q/j flooding.

CTCP flood

Since CTCP is implemented in almost every client, most users respond to CTCP requests. By sending too many requests, after a couple of answers they get disconnected from the IRC server. The most widely used type is CTCP PING, although some clients also implement other CTCP replies.

DCC flood

This type consists of initiating many DCC requests simultaneously. Theoretically it can also be used to disconnect users, because the target client sends information back about what port is intended to be used during the DCC session.

ICMP flood

Typically referred to as a ping flood. This attack overloads the victim's internet connection with an amount of ICMP data exceeding the connection's capacity, potentially causing a disconnection from the IRC network. For the duration of the attack, the user's internet connection remains hindered. Technically speaking, this is not an IRC flood, as the attack itself doesn't traverse the IRC network at all, but operates entirely independent of anything but the raw internet connection and its IP protocol (of which ICMP is a subset). Even so, the actual IP address to flood (the address of the victim's connection) is frequently obtained by looking at the victim's user information (e.g. through the /whois or /dns command) on the IRC network.

Invite flood

Sending disruptive numbers of invites to a certain channel.

Post flood

This is the simplest type of IRC flooding. It involves posting large numbers of posts or one very long post with repetitive text. This type of flood can be achieved, for example, by copying and pasting one short word repeatedly.

Example of a message flood using over 50 clones.

Message flood

Sending massive numbers of private messages to the victim, mainly from different connections called clones (see below). Since some clients separate the private conversations into another window, each new message could open a new window for every new user a message is received from. This is exploitable by sending messages from multiple names, causing the target client to open many new windows and potentially swamping the user with boxes. Sometimes the easiest way to close all the windows is to restart the IRC client, although scripts (client extensions) exist to 'validate' unknown nicknames before receiving messages from them.

Notice flood

Similar to the message, but uses the "notice" command.

Nick flood

Changing the nick as fast as possible, thus disrupting conversation in the channel.

See also

  • Computer security
  • Flood
  • Smurf attack
  • WinNuke

References

  • Pioch, Nicolas (1993-02-28). "A short IRC primer". Archived from the original on 2009-08-14. Retrieved 2009-05-25.
  • "Logging and Reporting IRC Abuses". Archived from the original on 2009-08-15. Retrieved 2009-05-25.
  • Brinton, Aaron (August 1997). "IRC Operators Guide". Archived from the original on 2009-08-14. Retrieved 2009-05-25.
  • Powers, Ray (1998-07-30). "The myths of opers..." Archived from the original on 2009-08-15. Retrieved 2009-05-25.
  • Reed, Darren (May 1992). A Discussion on Computer Network Conferencing: 5.2.6 Network Friendliness. IETF. doi:10.17487/RFC1324. RFC 1324. Retrieved 2009-05-25.
  • Oikarinen, Jarkko; Reed, Darren (May 1993). Internet Relay Chat Protocol: 8.10 Flood control of clients. IETF. doi:10.17487/RFC1459. RFC 1459. Retrieved 2009-05-25.
  • Kalt, Christophe (April 2000). Internet Relay Chat: Server Protocol: 5.8 Flood control of clients. IETF. doi:10.17487/RFC2813. RFC 2813. Retrieved 2009-05-25.
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External links

  • mIRC script database
  • Flood protection and ignoring information
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