Browsing articles tagged with " Flooding attack"
Jan
5
2009

Protecting against MAC flooding attack

In a typical MAC flooding attack, a switch is flooded with packets, each containing different source MAC addresses. The intention is to consume the limited memory set aside in the switch to store the MAC address-to-physical port translation table. The result of this attack causes the switch to enter a state called failopen mode, in which all incoming packets are broadcast out on all ports (as with a hub), instead of just down the correct port as per normal operation. A malicious user could then use a packet sniffer running in promiscuous mode to capture sensitive data from other computers, [...]