Billy,
Although this is indeed a good step, there are already a plethora of
"free" sql injection scanners or exploiters that kick the crap out of
this tool.
However, I am extremely excited to see this kind of development in the
commercial space, and would like to see some enhancements to this
product. Now, if HPs goal is to push their commercial tools ($$$) by
pushing a limited "free" version, then I suppose none of this will ever
happen, but *at a minimum* it would be nice to be able to either modify
headers or input credentials where public sites are not the target.
I tested this on 3 sites I knew to be vulnerable to SQL injection (all
ASP.NET, MSSQL), but either cookies or authentication were required to
actually test in these case, hence nothing was discovered with this
tool(lame).
There's nothing worse than a free version of a product designed
exclusively for you to be left "wanting" and thinking about purchasing
the commercial version.
If there are unseen or hidden options to this tool, forgive me,
otherwise I don't really see the value when so many better free tools
exist (Pangolin, Absinthe, Magic, Power Injector, etc, etc, etc)
-----Original Message-----
From: Hoffman, Billy [mailto:billy.hoffman@xxxxxx]
Sent: Tuesday, June 24, 2008 5:35 PM
To: websecurity@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [WEB SECURITY] Announcing Scrawlr: SQL Injector and Crawler
In response to all the Mass SQL Injection attacks this year, Microsoft
approached HP and the Web Security Research Group (formerly SPI Labs)
for assistance. While there was nothing they could patch, Microsoft
wanted to provide tools to help developers find and fix these issues.
After a month of development HP created Scrawlr.
Scrawlr (short for SQL Injector and Crawler) is a free tool that will
crawl a website while simultaneously analyzing the parameters of each
individual web page for SQL Injection vulnerabilities. Scrawlr was
designed specifically to help protect against these mass injection
attack which are using Google queries to find older web applications and
automatically injection them. As such, Scrawlr crawls a websites using
the same techniques as a search engine: it doesn't keep state, or submit
forms, or execute JavaScript or Flash. This Scrawl is finding and
auditing the pages that would have been indexed by the search engines.
To reduce false positives Scrawlr provides proof of the vulnerability
results by displaying the type of backend database in use and a list of
available table names. There is no denying you have SQL Injection when I
can show you table names!
Microsoft Announcement here:
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/advisory/954462.mspx
HP WSRG Blog:
http://www.communities.hp.com/securitysoftware/blogs/spilabs/archive/200
8/06/23/finding-sql-injection-with-scrawlr.aspx
Download here: https://download.spidynamics.com/Products/scrawlr/
Enjoy,
Billy Hoffman
--
Manager, HP Web Security Research Group
HP Software - Application Security Center
Direct: 770-343-7069
------------------------------------------------------------------------
----
Join us on IRC: irc.freenode.net #webappsec
Have a question? Search The Web Security Mailing List Archives:
http://www.webappsec.org/lists/websecurity/archive/
Subscribe via RSS:
http://www.webappsec.org/rss/websecurity.rss [RSS Feed]
Join WASC on LinkedIn
http://www.linkedin.com/e/gis/83336/4B20E4374DBA
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Join us on IRC: irc.freenode.net #webappsec
Have a question? Search The Web Security Mailing List Archives:
http://www.webappsec.org/lists/websecurity/archive/
Subscribe via RSS:
http://www.webappsec.org/rss/websecurity.rss [RSS Feed]
Join WASC on LinkedIn
http://www.linkedin.com/e/gis/83336/4B20E4374DBA