Title: Multiple blocks &#8211; same IP, same timestamp
Last modified: May 1, 2025

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# Multiple blocks – same IP, same timestamp

 *  Resolved [Sunfire](https://wordpress.org/support/users/chillsunfire/)
 * (@chillsunfire)
 * [1 year, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/multiple-blocks-same-ip-same-timestamp/)
 * As of late I have noticed there’s been a significant increase in the blocks that
   Wordfence creates. This is not surprising as the client has been targeted before
   and I have adjusted the rate limiting to BLOCK with have fairly restrictive limits.
 * What IS surprising to me is that the exact same IP is showing as a separate block
   with the exact same time stamp. As sample of the log follows…
 *     ```wp-block-code
       Block Type	Detail	        Rule Added	        Reason	       Expiration	Block Count	Last AttemptIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	1	April 29, 2025 7:10 amIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	0	NeverIP Block	91.108.241.124	April 29, 2025 7:10 am	Exceeded the maximum number of page requests per minute for humans.	May 4, 2025 7:10 am	4	April 29, 2025 7:10 am
       ```
   
 * How is it possible that the exact same IP is being blocked MULTIPLE TIMES at 
   the exact same timestamp?
 * And is there anything I can do (whether in the website or at the hosting level)
   to curb such behavior? It’s happening on a near-hourly basis and bogging down
   the server with excessive requests such that the site times out for legitimate
   users.

Viewing 4 replies - 1 through 4 (of 4 total)

 *  Plugin Support [wfpeter](https://wordpress.org/support/users/wfpeter/)
 * (@wfpeter)
 * [1 year, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/multiple-blocks-same-ip-same-timestamp/#post-18447030)
 * Hi [@chillsunfire](https://wordpress.org/support/users/chillsunfire/), thanks
   for reaching out.
 * What Rate Limiting settings do you have for “**If anyone’s requests exceed**“,“**
   If a human’s page views exceed**“, and “**If a human’s pages not found (404s)
   exceed**“? I’m assuming from the block length shown it’s implementing a 5 day
   block when one of the rules is broken.
 * Wordfence, as an endpoint firewall cannot stop a bot or human from _trying_ to
   visit your website altogether, but rather deal with the visits appropriately 
   based on your settings and their behavior. Usually high volume hits such as this
   are done with no prior knowledge of the platform or plugins you’re running. If
   the hits are causing high CPU/bandwidth use even when rate limiting is active,
   your host may be able to help by adjusting the server firewall – or you can implement
   blocks for troublesome IPs in .htaccess, or a CDN like Cloudflare (if present)
   to stop them reaching the site. In a case such as that, Wordfence won’t see the
   IP as they’ll have been stopped before PHP loads.
 * Thanks,
   Peter.
 *  Thread Starter [Sunfire](https://wordpress.org/support/users/chillsunfire/)
 * (@chillsunfire)
 * [1 year, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/multiple-blocks-same-ip-same-timestamp/#post-18447045)
 * As I mentioned, yes, my Rate Limiting rules are a bit strict. To answer your 
   specifics, they are set to 240, 120, and 60, respectively. And yes, I implemented
   a 5 day block.
 * I do understand that Wordfence is only dealing with the traffic that actually
   makes it to our website. We are using Cloudflare and have hardened our server
   to only accept traffic coming from CF IPs.
 * What I’m asking is, how can the **same IP** have a **dozen different blocks**
   at the **same timestamp**? Why not just have a single block with a high incidence
   count?
 *  Plugin Support [wfpeter](https://wordpress.org/support/users/wfpeter/)
 * (@wfpeter)
 * [1 year, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/multiple-blocks-same-ip-same-timestamp/#post-18447411)
 * Thanks [@chillsunfire](https://wordpress.org/support/users/chillsunfire/) for
   that information. I just wanted to check they weren’t excessively strict settings
   before making a call on what’s happening.
 * It certainly appears that a large number of requests were being processed at 
   the same time. It’s pretty unusual to have that many, which may just mean your
   hosting company is less restrictive than others when it comes to allowing simultaneous
   requests to be processed from the same IP.
 * As several block records were created less than a second apart, the first one
   started to trigger actual blocks and counted them. However as these take small
   amounts of processing time to complete, the 4 subsequent blocks _appear_ to have
   taken place after some other uncounted requests, as it took a fraction longer
   to return a count. Bear in mind this all happened within the same second though.
 * You could check the access logs to confirm that IP address was hitting the site
   repeatedly at the same time. If any IP addresses that have done this previously
   are similar, you could block a range of IPs manually. Using the WHOIS Lookup 
   from **Live Traffic** is a good way to quickly find the range. Duplicate blocks
   can be unblocked manually or just left to expire.
 * We can’t _prevent_ duplicates like this without adding some form of locking, 
   which could make the web server hang during periods of high traffic as the processes
   would be waiting for the lock to release instead of processing in parallel as
   they do currently.
 * Many thanks,
   Peter.
 *  Thread Starter [Sunfire](https://wordpress.org/support/users/chillsunfire/)
 * (@chillsunfire)
 * [1 year, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/multiple-blocks-same-ip-same-timestamp/#post-18447426)
 * Thanks for the follow-up Peter. I looked at the logs again today – at one point
   the same IP had 30 different blocks listed in Wordfence with the same timestamp.
 * Since we have it so all the traffic should be going through CF, I went back there
   to check settings and verify things like rate limiting and Bot mitigation were
   in place and functioning. They are configured as I would expect, so I may just
   need to dig deeper and refine it.
 * It’s helpful to know that these multiple blocks are functioning as intended (
   slight delay) and not broken. Thanks.
 * And yes, for now I am just letting the duplicate entries expire and, adding a
   Permanent block on the entry that has recorded multiple hits, especially if they
   continued to hit more than 48 hours later (hence the 5 day lockout). Although
   these permanent blocks on specific IPs doesn’t seem to matter as the bots or 
   attackers are rotating IPs regularly… it’s still helpful in my monitoring process.

Viewing 4 replies - 1 through 4 (of 4 total)

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 * Last reply from: [Sunfire](https://wordpress.org/support/users/chillsunfire/)
 * Last activity: [1 year, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/multiple-blocks-same-ip-same-timestamp/#post-18447426)
 * Status: resolved