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Message-ID: <47093665.6030900@northernfortress.net>
Date: Sun, 07 Oct 2007 20:41:25 +0100
From: "A. R." <r00t@...thernfortress.net>
To: full-disclosure@...ts.grok.org.uk
Subject: sqlninja 0.2.1 released

Hello fellow security enthusiasts,

a new version of sqlninja is out at sourceforge !

Introduction
============
Sqlninja is a tool to exploit SQL Injection vulnerabilities on a web
application that uses Microsoft SQL Server as its back-end. Its main
goal is to provide a remote shell on the vulnerable DB server, even in a
very hostile environment. It should be used by penetration testers to
help and automate the process of taking over a DB Server when a SQL
Injection vulnerability has been discovered. It is written in perl and
so far has been successfully tested on:
- Linux
- FreeBSD
- Mac OS X
You can find it, together with a flash demo of its features, at the
address http://sqlninja.sourceforge.net

What's new
==========
# A new flavor of bruteforce attack, performed remotely on the target DB
Server by using its own CPU resources (use it with caution !)
# Detection of the authentication mode (mixed or Windows-only), which is
useful to understand whether the bruteforce attack to the 'sa' account
can succeed or not
# Documentation is now in HTML format, which should make things much
easier for new users
# Several bugfixes and minor improvements

What's not so new
=================
# Fingerprint of the remote SQL Server (version, user performing the
queries, user privileges, xp_cmdshell availability)
# Bruteforce of 'sa' password
# Privilege escalation to 'sa' if its password has been found
# Creation of a custom xp_cmdshell if the original one has been disabled
# Upload of netcat.exe (or any other executable) using only 100% ASCII
GET/POST requests, so no need for FTP connections
# TCP/UDP portscan from the target SQL Server to the attacking machine,
in order to find a port that is allowed by the firewall of the target
network and use it for a reverse shell
# Direct and reverse bindshell, both TCP and UDP
# DNS-tunneled pseudo-shell, when no TCP/UDP ports are available for a
direct/reverse shell, but the DB server can resolve external hostnames

Happy hacking !

--
icesurfer

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