Varnish a reverse proxy which gives you a real speed boost to WordPress. Running Varnish on this web server means I get a second load time, without Varnish the page load time would be 3+ seconds due to the slowness of PHP and all the WordPress plugins I use. Luckily, I host on a Digital Ocean VPS where you can install and configure Varnish very easily. I was recently DDoSed for the first time and wanted to use something besides Cloudflare for DDoS protection. Varnish 3 had many firewall vmods to deal with threats. In this tutorial I use the vsthrottle vmod and the Shield vmod. Throttle detects if there are too many requests per second and shield resets the connection if the request threshold has been reached. I will assume you already have Varnish 4 configured and working. This guide will work behind CloudFlare and with Varnish 4.0 and Varnish 4.1.

WordPress DDoS Attack Protection with Varnish 4 Firewall vmods

This is not a substitute for a full web application firewall but will do a good job of mitigating WordPress DDoS attacks. There is likely possible improvement to the vcl code so please share your thoughts in the comments. The vsthrottle vmod measures the requests per second and the shield vmod can reset the connection of the request threshold has been reached.

Install Varnish 4 vmod dependencies

You probably already have Varnish 4 installed in which case you just need to install these vmod buildling dependencies

sudo apt-get install libvarnishapi-dev dpkg-dev pkg-config build-essential -y

Install libvmod-shield

Installing libvmod-shield which resets the attacker's connection. If you are using Varnish 4.1 change 4.0 to 4.1

sudo apt-get install git autotools-dev automake libtool -y cd ~ git clone -b 4.0 https://github.com/varnish/libvmod-shield cd libvmod-shield sh autogen.sh ./configure sudo make make install

Install vsthrottle

Install vsthrottle which detects how many requests per second the attacker is making. If you are using Varnish 4.1 change 4.0 to 4.1

cd ~ git clone -b 4.0 https://github.com/varnish/libvmod-vsthrottle cd libvmod-vsthrottle sh autogen.sh ./configure sudo make make install

Create the Varnish Rules

Open your Varnish vcl file

sudo nano /etc/varnish/default.vcl

At the top you need these lines to use the Varnish vsthrottle and shield vmods, do it under the vcl 4.0; line

vcl 4.0; import vsthrottle; import shield;

In your sub vcl_recv section put the red lines at the bottom of your sub vcl_recv . It is using vsthrottle to detect the number of requests and if it exceeds 15 requests per 10 seconds the shield vmod is used to reset the connection. You can also change the error message Too Many Requests to whatever you want. Only the red section is necessary.

sub vcl_recv { # Extracts first IP from header, works with and without CloudFlare set req.http.X-Actual-IP = regsub(req.http.X-Forwarded-For, "[, ].*$", ""); #Prevent hammering on wp-login page and users doing excessive searches (2 per second) if(vsthrottle.is_denied(req.http.X-Actual-IP, 2, 1s) && (req.url ~ "xmlrpc|wp-login.php|\?s\=")) { return (synth(429, "Too Many Requests")); # Use shield vmod to reset connection shield.conn_reset(); } #Prevent users from making excessive POST requests that aren't for admin-ajax if(vsthrottle.is_denied(req.http.X-Actual-IP, 15, 10s) && ((!req.url ~ "\/wp-admin\/|(xmlrpc|admin-ajax)\.php") && (req.method == "POST"))){ return (synth(429, "Too Many Requests")); # Use shield vmod to reset connection shield.conn_reset(); } }

Test your Varnish vcl file works

varnishd -C -f /etc/varnish/default.vcl

If there were no errors then reload Varnish 4 so it uses the new vcl file

sudo service varnish reload

Test Varnish 4 DDoS Protection

It is time to test the Varnish DDoS protection using Apache benchmark utility as a quick proof of concept

sudo apt-get install apache2-utils -y

We are going to test the web server first (apache or nginx on port 8080) by simulating 100 requests with 10 concurrent connections

ab -n 100 -c 10 localhost:8080/wp-login.php

Output

Server Software: Apache/2.4.10 Server Hostname: localhost Server Port: 8080 Document Path: / Document Length: 11104 bytes Concurrency Level: 200 Time taken for tests: 3.907 seconds Complete requests: 20000 Failed requests: 0 Total transferred: 227560000 bytes HTML transferred: 222080000 bytes Requests per second: 5118.76 [#/sec] (mean)

Now hit the Varnish DDoS protection with apache benchmark

ab -n 100 -c 10 localhost:80/wp-login.php

The results will look something like this showing that shield is working

Benchmarking www.htpcguides.com (be patient) apr_socket_recv: Connection reset by peer (104)

Or look something like this, notice there are now 85 failed requests because Varnish 4 has blocked them using the vmods

Server Software: Varnish Server Hostname: localhost Server Port: 80 Document Path: / Document Length: 156589 bytes Concurrency Level: 10 Time taken for tests: 0.911 seconds Complete requests: 100 Failed requests: 85 (Connect: 0, Receive: 0, Length: 984, Exceptions: 0) Non-2xx responses: 85 Total transferred: 8925166 bytes HTML transferred: 8432056 bytes Requests per second: 1097.38 [#/sec] (mean) Time per request: 9.113 [ms] (mean) Time per request: 0.911 [ms] (mean, across all concurrent requests) Transfer rate: 9564.74 [Kbytes/sec] received

You can also test your Varnish DDoS Protection by opening your browser, open your Wordpress site's login page and hit refresh like crazy.

You will see this error after not too long sans the logo