Table of Contents

Lab 09 - Web Security

Objectives

Background

SQL Injection

SQL Injection is a server-side code injection vulnerability resulting from improper (unsanitized) input directly concatenated into SQL queries. Typical server queries are built as strings:

sql = "SELECT * FROM table WHERE item = '" + user_input_variable + "' <other expressions>";
database.query(sql);

Note that the user may choose to escape the SQL quotes and alter the SQL statement, e.g.:

user_input_variable = "' OR 1=1 -- "; // example input given by the user
sql = "SELECT * FROM table WHERE item = '' OR 1=1 -- ' <other expressions>";

An SQL injection exploit ultimately depends on the target SQL expression (which is usually unknown to the attacker) and query result behavior (whether the query contents arem displayed on screen or the user is blind, errors reported etc.).

Make sure to check those cheatsheets out:
https://portswigger.net/web-security/sql-injection
https://github.com/swisskyrepo/PayloadsAllTheThings/tree/master/SQL%20Injection
and:
https://github.com/swisskyrepo/PayloadsAllTheThings/blob/master/SQL%20Injection/MySQL%20Injection.md

Other server-side vulnerabilities

The SQL injection is a popular server-side code injection vulnerability, but there are many mistakes that a website developer / system administrator can make (expect to find some of them in your homework :P ):

There are even free or commercial web vulnerability scanners for testing a server's sercurity!

Client-side vulnerabilities

Browsers are now among the most targeted pieces of software on the Internet. This is mainly because of the large threat vector resulting from the complexity of the web ecosystem, requiring features such as fancy HTML+CSS rendering, animation and even sandboxed, untrusted JavaScript code execution.

Even when the browsers do a good job at protecting against attacks, sometimes trusted websites themselved may contain bugs that directly affect the security of their users.

A major threat, Cross Site Scripting (XSS) is a JavaScript code injection vulnerability where an attacker that found a way to post public HTML scripts into an unprotected website (e.g., by using comments forms or forum responses). Those scripts, if served to other visitors, will execute with the credentials of their respective users, making it possible for the attacker to scam, exfiltrate personal data or even push malware into the victim's PC.

Another typical client-side vulnerability that the web developers need to protect their websites against is Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF). In this attack, the victim is tricked into opening an attacker-controlled web page which then issues custom requests (either using concealed elements that do external requests - img, form, or by using JavaScript / AJAX) to another (target) website. The browser will happily make the requests using the target domain's cookies and credentials. If the target website has URLs that execute certain actions (e.g., POST https://my-blog/post.php) without verifying the source of the request, any malicious page can execute them. Note that the attacker cannot see the results of those requests (unless authorized by CORS headers by the target). In practice, any URL endpoint executing sensitive actions needs to be protected using either referer validation or CSRF tokens.

Setup

You will be using a OpenStack VM for your tasks.

Remember that the instances have private IPs, 10.9.x.y, inaccessible from anywhere but the campus network. Since we need to use a local browser to access a web server running inside the VM, we will employ a SSH tunnelling + proxy trick to accomplish this.

You should already have a SSH keypair for authenticating with fep & OpenStack:

We will be using ssh`s Local Port Forwarding feature, requesting it to pass all packets from localhost:8080 through the SSH tunnel to the destination VM on 8080:

ssh -L "8080:localhost:8080" -J <first.lastname>@fep.grid.pub.ro student@10.9.X.Y

Tasks

1 [20p]. SQL Injection

2 [20p]. Advanced SQL Injection

3 [20p]. Cross-Site Scripting

4 [20p]. Cross-Site Request Forgery

5 [20p]. Server Reconnaissance

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