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

  • KazuchijouNo@lemy.lolOP
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    14 days ago

    Thanks! I’ll keep all of that in mind. I knew there were a lot of bots and scripts running rampant on the internet, but I was really surprised when I put my website online and suddendly became a target.

    It’s good to know I’m not really at risk and that this is expected. I’ll try to learn more about cybersecurity

    • K3CAN@lemmy.radio
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      edit-2
      11 days ago

      You’re not a “target” as much as you are “a thing that exists.” These aren’t targeted attacks.

      That said, you can look into adding some additional measures to your webserver if you haven’t already, like dropping connections if a client requests a location they shouldn’t, like trying to access /admin, /…/…, /.env, and so on.

      On nginx, it could be something like:

      location ^/\.|)/admin|/login {
          return 444;
      }
      

      Of course, that should be modified to match whatever application you’re actually using.