Ok, it’s me again. I’ve been checking the sampled logs on my cloudflare website and I’ve noticed some very particular requests:
Some context: I’m hosting my own static website (a personal blog) at home and serving it to the internet through a Cloudflare tunnel.
Upon inspecting them it seems like they are bots and web-crawlers trying to access directories and files that don’t exist on my server, (since I’m not using wordpress). While I don’t really have any credentials or anything to lose on my website and these attacks are harmless so far, this is kinda scary.
Should I worry? Is this normal internet behaviour? Should I expect even worse kinds of attacks? What can I do to improve security on my website and try to block these kinds of requests/attacks?
I’m still a noob, so this is a good opportunity for learning.
Thanks
Yes it’s normal. Attackers are scanning everything, all the time.
Those attacks you see are mostly (close to 100%) harmless bots, scripts. Yes they are trying default passwords and exploits that got patched years ago.
If you do not use default credentials and do run up to date software there is nothing to worry about.
Even brute force attacks are rare.
This is just “noise” so to speak.
If you are scared by this, you should reconsider hosting something on the internet. Yes things like fail2ban can help but only if they knock on your server multiple times and mostly only to keep your logs clean.
Yeah, it was kinda scary. I had never hosted anything online, and all of the sudden I get bombarded with scans and attacks from everywhere.
But I know I can’t lose anything important, and that this is expected on the internet.
It was just, uh… You know the feeling when someone tells you something is heavy, then they give it to you, and it’s a bit heavier than you expected? And they go: “I told you it was heavy”. And it’s not a big deal, because in the end you just adjust your strenght to match that weight. But there’s that one second of realisation where you go “ooop! What’s this?”. Yeah, it was kinda that.
I used to have SQL commands via URL parameters back in the early 2000s. I had no SQL things running, so no problem there :)