Catalog
concept#Security#Reliability#Observability

Denial of Service (DoS)

An attack that aims to render services unreachable by exhausting resources or saturating network capacity. Impacts availability, operations, and business continuity.

Denial of Service (DoS) is an attack category that aims to render services unavailable by exhausting resources or network capacity.
Established
High

Classification

  • High
  • Business
  • Architectural
  • Intermediate

Technical context

CDN providers and anycast routingWAF and API gateway solutionsSIEM and incident management systems

Principles & goals

Availability first: design for degradation instead of complete failure.Defense-in-depth: combine network, perimeter and application protection.Measurability: monitoring and baselines are prerequisites for detection.
Run
Enterprise, Domain, Team

Use cases & scenarios

Compromises

  • Extended outages with revenue loss.
  • Reputational damage and customer churn.
  • Misconfiguration of mitigations can worsen the situation.
  • Combine automated detection with escalating mitigations.
  • Implement traffic shaping and prioritize critical paths.
  • Perform regular incident drills and postmortem analyses.

I/O & resources

  • Traffic and flow logs (NetFlow, sFlow)
  • Application and WAF logs
  • Baseline traffic profiles and SLAs
  • Alerts and incident tickets
  • Applied throttling or blocking rules
  • Post-incident analysis and lessons-learned report

Description

Denial of Service (DoS) is an attack category that aims to render services unavailable by exhausting resources or network capacity. It includes volumetric, protocol and application-layer techniques and impacts availability, security and business continuity. Mitigation requires detection, rate limiting, architectural resilience and coordinated incident response.

  • Reduced downtime and improved business continuity.
  • Improved customer trust through more stable services.
  • Lower risk of financial loss and SLA violations.

  • Complete protection is rarely possible; very large attacks can overwhelm resources.
  • False positives can impact legitimate traffic.
  • Costs for permanent high availability and DDoS services can be significant.

  • Mean Time to Detect (MTTD)

    Average time to detect a DoS incident.

  • Mean Time to Mitigate (MTTM)

    Average time until mitigation measures are effective.

  • Availability rate during incident

    Percentage of time critical services remain available during an attack.

Dyn DDoS 2016 (Mirai)

Large-scale botnet attack using IoT devices that targeted DNS infrastructure and temporarily disrupted many services.

Estonia 2007

Politically motivated DDoS campaigns against government and media sites causing significant infrastructure strain.

Targeted API attacks

Several companies documented targeted, resource-intensive API requests that led to outages and performance degradation.

1

Establish normal traffic baselines and define thresholds.

2

Configure monitoring and alerting rules; prepare playbooks.

3

Implement protection layers: CDN, WAF, rate limiting, backpressure.

4

Conduct regular tests and simulations to validate measures.

⚠️ Technical debt & bottlenecks

  • Monolithic components without horizontal scaling.
  • Incomplete observability and missing logs.
  • Outdated network devices with limited filtering capacity.
Network bandwidthStateful firewall capacityUpstream provider coordination
  • Accidentally blocking legitimate traffic due to overly strict filters.
  • Relying on costly always-on services without needs analysis.
  • Disabling detection to boost performance and missing attacks.
  • Lack of coordination with upstream providers delays mitigation.
  • Overreliance on signature-based detection alone.
  • Untested playbooks fail to work reliably in live incidents.
Network and infrastructure engineeringSecurity analysis and forensicsIncident response and communications management
High availability of critical servicesScalability and elastic capacity planningFast detection and response to anomalies
  • Limited budgets for permanent DDoS defense
  • Legacy infrastructure without horizontal scaling
  • Legal restrictions on traffic filtering