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I just implemented AWS X-Ray on my web application. But I noticed traces for domains that are not mine. How can this happen?

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These are not my websites ... how can its traces enter my account?

After further checks, it seems like this particular IP did hit my server from what I can see from NGINX logs ... but now I am just wondering why? Did someone point his DNS/host file to my IP address or something?

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    Are you sure those requests did not reach your servers? (you can specify any Host in the request).
    – zerkms
    Jul 1, 2018 at 3:13
  • @zerkms, I updated my post. It appears these requests did hit my NGINX but now I am just wondering why? Isit some bot just trying to hack into the server or something like that?
    – Jiew Meng
    Jul 1, 2018 at 3:27
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    You don't even need to change dns - you just query against an IP address and put a particular value in the Host header. Who knows why they did it. It's also possible it was DNS misconfiguration somewhere, but there is no way to find it out.
    – zerkms
    Jul 1, 2018 at 3:28
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    For nginx it would be stackoverflow.com/q/47237633/251311 or serverfault.com/q/708446/45086
    – zerkms
    Jul 1, 2018 at 3:48
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    Or if you're using an Application Load Balancer, serverfault.com/a/918342/153161 Jul 1, 2018 at 4:08

1 Answer 1

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As we have found in the comments:

  1. Those requests reached your servers - hence they are in the aws x-ray

  2. It's not possible to find out why it had happened: it could be malicious requests, when somebody deliberately connected to your ip addresses and specified arbitrary Host header; or it could be misconfigured DNS somewhere. Either way - it's not possible to know.

  3. It's possible to restrict your webserver or load balancer to only accept requests for the hostnames you care about, see:

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