Awesome
mssqlproxy
mssqlproxy is a toolkit aimed to perform lateral movement in restricted environments through a compromised Microsoft SQL Server via socket reuse. The client requires impacket and sysadmin privileges on the SQL server.
<p align="center"> <img src="scenario.png" width="720" > </p>Please read this article carefully before continuing.
It consists of three parts:
- CLR assembly: Compile assembly.cs
- Core DLL: Compile reciclador.sln
- Client: mssqlclient.py (based on Impacket's example)
You can compile the libraries or download them from releases (x64).
Compilation
To generate the core DLL, just import the project to Visual Studio (reciclador.sln) and compile it.
To generate the CLR assembly, first you need to find the C# compiler:
Get-ChildItem -Recurse "C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\" -Filter "csc.exe" | Sort-Object fullname -Descending | Select-Object fullname -First 1 -ExpandProperty fullname
Then,
C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework64\v4.0.30319\csc.exe /target:library .\assembly.cs
Usage
Once the two libraries are compiled, upload the core DLL (reciclador) to the target server.
Authentication options are the same as the ones in the original mssqlclient. mssqlproxy options:
proxy mode:
-reciclador path Remote path where DLL is stored in server
-install Installs CLR assembly
-uninstall Uninstalls CLR assembly
-check Checks if CLR is ready
-start Starts proxy
-local-port port Local port to listen on
-clr local_path Local CLR path
-no-check-src-port Use this option when connection is not direct (e.g. proxy)
We have also implemented two commands (within the SQL shell) for downloading and uploading files. Relating to the proxy stuff, we have four commands:
- install: Creates the CLR assembly and links it to a stored procedure. You need to provide the
-clr
param to read the generated CLR from a local DLL file. - uninstall: Removes what install created.
- check: Checks if everything is ready to start the proxy. Requires to provide the server DLL location (
-reciclador
), which can be uploaded using the upload command. - start: Starts the proxy. If
-local-port
is not specified, it will listen on port 1337/tcp.
Once the proxy is started, you can plug in your proxychains ;)
Note #1: if using a non-direct connection (e.g. proxies in between), the -no-check-src-port
flag is needed, so the server only checks the source address.
Note #2: at the moment, only IPv4 targets are supported (nor DNS neither IPv6 addresses).
Note #3: use carefully! by now the MSSQL service will crash if you try to establish multiple concurrent connections
Important: It's important to stop the mssqlproxy by pressing Ctrl+C on the client. If not, the server may crash and you will have to restart the MSSQL service manually.
Authors
Pablo Martinez (@xassiz), Juan Manuel Fernandez (@TheXC3LL) [ www.blackarrow.net - www.tarlogic.com ]
References
- https://www.blackhat.com/presentations/bh-asia-03/bh-asia-03-chong.pdf
- https://blog.netspi.com/attacking-sql-server-clr-assemblies/
- https://www.codeproject.com/Articles/27298/Dynamic-Invoke-C-DLL-function-in-C
- https://x-c3ll.github.io/posts/Pivoting-MySQL-Proxy/
- https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/ado/reference/ado-api/stream-object-ado
- https://docs.microsoft.com/es-es/sql/t-sql/functions/openrowset-transact-sql
License
All the code included in this project is licensed under the terms of the MIT license. The mssqlclient.py is based on Impacket.