What Exploit Are These User Agents Trying to Use?What is SPL exploit?What kind of security injection are these traces of, SQL, javascript, or otherwise?Is it illegal to use Fake User-agents?Server attack attempts, what are they trying to achieve?Can I exploit Windows kernel from user-mode application?HTTP attack taking down PHP-FPMSegmentation fault trying to exploit printf vulnerabilityWhat web servers are affected by this user agent exploit?Which exploit and which payload use?Help on what to do with these suspicious logs
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What Exploit Are These User Agents Trying to Use?
What is SPL exploit?What kind of security injection are these traces of, SQL, javascript, or otherwise?Is it illegal to use Fake User-agents?Server attack attempts, what are they trying to achieve?Can I exploit Windows kernel from user-mode application?HTTP attack taking down PHP-FPMSegmentation fault trying to exploit printf vulnerabilityWhat web servers are affected by this user agent exploit?Which exploit and which payload use?Help on what to do with these suspicious logs
I just looked at my user agent tracking page on my site (archived on Yandex) and I noticed these user agents. I believe they are an attempt to exploit my server (NGinx with PHP). The 1 in front of it is just how many times the user agent was seen in the NGinx log. These are also shortened user agents and not long ones like Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10_14_3) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/73.0.3683.86 Safari/537.36. I no longer have access to the logs as I presume this occurred sometime in January or February (my oldest logs are in March and I created the site in January).
1 Mozilla/5.9}print(238947899389478923-34567343546345);
I just looked at my user agent tracking page on my site (archived on Yandex) and I noticed these user agents. I believe they are an attempt to exploit my server (NGinx with PHP). The 1 in front of it is just how many times the user agent was seen in the NGinx log. These are also shortened user agents and not long ones like Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10_14_3) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/73.0.3683.86 Safari/537.36. I no longer have access to the logs as I presume this occurred sometime in January or February (my oldest logs are in March and I created the site in January).
1 Mozilla/5.9print(238947899389478923-34567343546345);
I just looked at my user agent tracking page on my site (archived on Yandex) and I noticed these user agents. I believe they are an attempt to exploit my server (NGinx with PHP). The 1 in front of it is just how many times the user agent was seen in the NGinx log. These are also shortened user agents and not long ones like Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10_14_3) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/73.0.3683.86 Safari/537.36. I no longer have access to the logs as I presume this occurred sometime in January or February (my oldest logs are in March and I created the site in January).
1 Mozilla/5.9print(238947899389478923-34567343546345);
1 Mozilla/5.9$print(238947899389478923-34567343546345)
1 Mozilla/5.9x22$print(238947899389478923-34567343546345)x22
1 Mozilla/5.9x22];print(238947899389478923-34567343546345);//
1 Mozilla/5.9x22
What exploit was attempted and how can I test to ensure these exploits are not usable?
exploit webserver web nginx anti-exploitation
exploit webserver web nginx anti-exploitation
exploit webserver web nginx anti-exploitation
asked 3 hours ago
SenorContentoSenorContento
256
256
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2 Answers
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It looks to be trying to exploit some form of command injection. As DarkMatter mentioned in his answer, this was likely a broad attempt to find any vulnerable servers, rather than targeting you specifically. The payload itself just appears to just be testing to see if the server is vulnerable to command injection. It does not appear to have any additional purpose.
In order to test if you would be affected by these specific payloads, the easiest way would be to send them to your own server, and see how they respond. Note, that I only say this because the payloads themselves are benign; I do not recommend doing this with all payloads.
My bet is that your server is not vulnerable, because I would have expected to see follow up request to actually exploit your server.
add a comment |
It is probably nothing. It seems like the broad spam of a scanner looking across the web for any website that evaluates and returns that subtraction when it shouldn't. It is a pretty common thing to see.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
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active
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votes
active
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votes
It looks to be trying to exploit some form of command injection. As DarkMatter mentioned in his answer, this was likely a broad attempt to find any vulnerable servers, rather than targeting you specifically. The payload itself just appears to just be testing to see if the server is vulnerable to command injection. It does not appear to have any additional purpose.
In order to test if you would be affected by these specific payloads, the easiest way would be to send them to your own server, and see how they respond. Note, that I only say this because the payloads themselves are benign; I do not recommend doing this with all payloads.
My bet is that your server is not vulnerable, because I would have expected to see follow up request to actually exploit your server.
add a comment |
It looks to be trying to exploit some form of command injection. As DarkMatter mentioned in his answer, this was likely a broad attempt to find any vulnerable servers, rather than targeting you specifically. The payload itself just appears to just be testing to see if the server is vulnerable to command injection. It does not appear to have any additional purpose.
In order to test if you would be affected by these specific payloads, the easiest way would be to send them to your own server, and see how they respond. Note, that I only say this because the payloads themselves are benign; I do not recommend doing this with all payloads.
My bet is that your server is not vulnerable, because I would have expected to see follow up request to actually exploit your server.
add a comment |
It looks to be trying to exploit some form of command injection. As DarkMatter mentioned in his answer, this was likely a broad attempt to find any vulnerable servers, rather than targeting you specifically. The payload itself just appears to just be testing to see if the server is vulnerable to command injection. It does not appear to have any additional purpose.
In order to test if you would be affected by these specific payloads, the easiest way would be to send them to your own server, and see how they respond. Note, that I only say this because the payloads themselves are benign; I do not recommend doing this with all payloads.
My bet is that your server is not vulnerable, because I would have expected to see follow up request to actually exploit your server.
It looks to be trying to exploit some form of command injection. As DarkMatter mentioned in his answer, this was likely a broad attempt to find any vulnerable servers, rather than targeting you specifically. The payload itself just appears to just be testing to see if the server is vulnerable to command injection. It does not appear to have any additional purpose.
In order to test if you would be affected by these specific payloads, the easiest way would be to send them to your own server, and see how they respond. Note, that I only say this because the payloads themselves are benign; I do not recommend doing this with all payloads.
My bet is that your server is not vulnerable, because I would have expected to see follow up request to actually exploit your server.
answered 1 hour ago
user52472user52472
2,422614
2,422614
add a comment |
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It is probably nothing. It seems like the broad spam of a scanner looking across the web for any website that evaluates and returns that subtraction when it shouldn't. It is a pretty common thing to see.
add a comment |
It is probably nothing. It seems like the broad spam of a scanner looking across the web for any website that evaluates and returns that subtraction when it shouldn't. It is a pretty common thing to see.
add a comment |
It is probably nothing. It seems like the broad spam of a scanner looking across the web for any website that evaluates and returns that subtraction when it shouldn't. It is a pretty common thing to see.
It is probably nothing. It seems like the broad spam of a scanner looking across the web for any website that evaluates and returns that subtraction when it shouldn't. It is a pretty common thing to see.
answered 2 hours ago
DarkMatterDarkMatter
2,1081120
2,1081120
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add a comment |
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