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Brute force attack

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This is an Attack. To view all attacks, please see the Attack Category page.



Last revision (mm/dd/yy): 02/1/2016


Related Security Activities

How to Test for Brute Force Vulnerabilities

See the OWASP Testing Guide article on how to Test for Brute Force Vulnerabilities.


Last revision (mm/dd/yy): 02/1/2016

Description

A brute force attack can manifest itself in many different ways, but primarily consists in an attacker configuring predetermined values, making requests to a server using those values, and then analyzing the response. For the sake of efficiency, an attacker may use a dictionary attack (with or without mutations) or a traditional brute-force attack (with given classes of characters e.g.: alphanumerical, special, case (in)sensitive). Considering a given method, number of tries, efficiency of the system which conducts the attack, and estimated efficiency of the system which is attacked the attacker is able to calculate approximately how long it will take to submit all chosen predetermined values.

Risk Factors

Examples

Brute-force attacks are often used for attacking authentication and discovering hidden content/pages within a web application. These attacks are usually sent via GET and POST requests to the server. In regards to authentication, brute force attacks are often mounted when an account lockout policy in not in place.

Example 1

A web application can be attacked via brute force by taking a word list of known pages, for instance from a popular content management system, and simply requesting each known page then analyzing the HTTP response code to determine if the page exists on the target server.

DirBuster is a tool that does exactly this.

Other tools for this type of attack are as follows:

- dirb (http://sourceforge.net/projects/dirb/)
- WebRoot (http://www.cirt.dk/tools/webroot/WebRoot.txt)


Dirb is capable of:

- set cookies
- add any HTTP header
- use PROXY
- mutate objects which were found
- test http(s) connections
- seek catalogues and/or files using defined dictionaries and templates
- and much much more


The simplest test to perform is:

rezos@dojo ~/d/owasp_tools/dirb $ ./dirb http://testsite.test/
-----------------
DIRB v1.9
By The Dark Raver
-----------------
START_TIME: Mon Jul  9 23:13:16 2007
URL_BASE: http://testsite.test/
WORDLIST_FILES: wordlists/common.txt
SERVER_BANNER: lighttpd/1.4.15
NOT_EXISTANT_CODE: 404 [NOT FOUND]
(Location: '' - Size: 345)

-----------------

Generating Wordlist...
Generated Words: 839

---- Scanning URL: http://testsite.test/ ----
FOUND: http://testsite.test/phpmyadmin/
       (***) DIRECTORY (*)

In the output the attacker is informed that phpmyadmin/ directory was found. The attacker has now found a potential directory of interest within this application. In dirb's templates there are, among others, a dictionary containing information about invalid httpd configurations. This dictionary will detect weaknesses of this kind.

The application WebRoot.pl, written by CIRT.DK, has embedded mechanisms for parsing server responses, and based on the phrase specified by the attacker, measures if the server response is expected.

For example:


Np.

./WebRoot.pl -noupdate -host testsite.test -port 80 -verbose -match "test" -url "/private/<BRUTE>" -incremental lowercase -minimum 1 -maximum 1


oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00
o          Webserver Bruteforcing 1.8          o
0  ************* !!! WARNING !!! ************  0
0  ******* FOR PENETRATION USE ONLY *********  0
0  ******************************************  0
o       (c)2007 by Dennis Rand - CIRT.DK       o
oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00
[X] Checking for updates                - NO CHECK
[X] Checking for False Positive Scan    - OK
[X] Using Incremental                   - OK
[X] Starting Scan                       - OK
   GET /private/b HTTP/1.1
   GET /private/z HTTP/1.1
[X] Scan complete                       - OK
[X] Total attempts                      - 26
[X] Sucessfull attempts                 - 1
oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00oo00

WebRoot.pl found one file "/private/b" on testsite.test, which contains phrase "test".


Another example is to examine ranges of the variable's values:

./WebRoot.pl -noupdate -host testsite.test -port 80 -verbose -diff "Error" -url "/index.php?id=<BRUTE>" -incremental integer -minimum 1 -maximum 1


Road Blocks

One of the main issues with tools like dirb/dirbuster consist in the analysis of server responses. With more advanced server configuration (e.g. with mod_rewrite) automatic tools are sometimes unable to determine "File not found" errors due to the server response being an HTTP response code 200 but the page itself indicates "File not found". This can lead to false positives if the brute force tool is only relying on HTTP response codes.

An advanced application assessment tool, such as Burp Suite, can be used to parse specific parts of the page returned, looking for certain strings in an effort to reduce false positives.

Example 2

In regards to authentication, when no password policy is in place an attacker can use lists of common username and passwords to brute force a username and/or password field until successful authentication.

Defensive Tools

Php-Brute-Force-Attack Detector

http://yehg.net/lab/pr0js/files.php/php_brute_force_detect.zip

Detect your web servers being scanned by brute force tools such as WFuzz, OWASP DirBuster and vulnerability scanners such as Nessus, Nikto, Acunetix ..etc. This helps you quickly identify probable probing by bad guys who's wanna dig possible security holes.

http://yehg.net/lab/pr0js/tools/php-brute-force-detector-readme.pdf

Related Threat Agents

Related Attacks

Related Vulnerabilities

Related Controls

References

https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Category:OWASP_DirBuster_Project DirBuster http://portswigger.net/