On Feb 21, 2014, at 3:41 AM, Edward Roels <edwardroels@gmail.com> wrote:
From my brief testing it seems 90 bytes for IPv4 and 110 bytes for IPv6 are typical for a client to successfully synchronize to an NTP server.
Correct. 90 bytes = 76 bytes + Ethernet framing. Filtering out packets this size from UDP/anything to UDP/123 allows time-sync requests and responses to work, but squelches both the level-6/-7 commands used to trigger amplification as well as amplified attack traffic. Operators are using this size-based filtering to effect without breaking the world. Be sure to pilot this first, and understand whether packet-size classification on your hardware of choice includes framing or not. Also, note that this filtering should be utilized to mitigate attacks, not as a permanent policy. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Roland Dobbins <rdobbins@arbor.net> // <http://www.arbornetworks.com> Luck is the residue of opportunity and design. -- John Milton