Full Disclosure mailing list archives
Framework for the aid of exploiting SQL injection
From: Roman Medina-Heigl Hernandez <roman () rs-labs com>
Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 19:05:16 +0100
Hi, Is there any recommended tool which helps to get databases tables, entries, structure, etc, given a particular SQL injection bug in one application? I mean, it should *automatically* try different sentences to figure out the names of the columns and in general, other useful info from the database. Perhaps a PoC of some of NGSSoftware's papers or a more elaborated tool... I'd like to hear from you what's the state of the art in this very particular web-appsec field (so feel free to talk about tools oriented to different database flavours, if you want: SQL Server, Oracle, MySQL, Access, etc...). Thanks. PD: For God's sake, don't continue feeding non-sense threads like the former Netdev's related flamewar. The best thing you can do is to ignore them. -- Saludos, -Roman PGP Fingerprint: 09BB EFCD 21ED 4E79 25FB 29E1 E47F 8A7D EAD5 6742 [Key ID: 0xEAD56742. Available at KeyServ] _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/
Current thread:
- Framework for the aid of exploiting SQL injection Roman Medina-Heigl Hernandez (Nov 17)
- Re: Framework for the aid of exploiting SQL injection David Litchfield (Nov 17)
- Re: Framework for the aid of exploiting SQL injection Dave (Nov 18)
- Re: Framework for the aid of exploiting SQL injection Dave (Nov 19)
- Re: Framework for the aid of exploiting SQL injection Dave (Nov 18)
- Re: Framework for the aid of exploiting SQL injection nummish (Nov 19)
- Re: Framework for the aid of exploiting SQL injection David Litchfield (Nov 17)