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| Subject: | Re: Domino testing |
|---|---|
| Date: | Mon, 23 Jul 2007 15:21:55 +0200 (ora solare Europa occidentale) |
Hey,
On Fri, 20 Jul 2007, A Plasmoid wrote:
I'm new to Domino testing, and have found a few interesting databases. I am wondering if there is anything that could be done with them.Specifically, there are:
cldbdir.nsf
This is the Cluster Directory: obvious information leak.
dba4.nsf
qstart.nsf
/sample/faqw46.nsf /sample/pagesw46.nsf (several others in sample) /help/help5_designer.nsf (several others in help)
See above.
The ?EditDocument functionality is locked down with "basic authentication" but I can view them.There is not a lot of info (that I have found) regarding domino, so I'm hoping that some kind person here can tell me whether these things can be leveraged into a deeper level of access or not.
http://www.dominosecurity.org/ http://www.ngssoftware.com/papers/hpldws.pdf http://www.fortconsult.net/images/pdf/lotusnotes_keyfiles.pdf http://seclists.org/pen-test/2002/Nov/0034.html (all thread) http://documents.iss.net/whitepapers/domino.pdf http://www-128.ibm.com/developerworks/views/lotus/library.jsp http://www-128.ibm.com/developerworks/lotus/security/ http://www.redbooks.ibm.com/redbooks/pdfs/sg247017.pdf http://www.redbooks.ibm.com/pubs/pdfs/redbooks/sg245341.pdf
And some testing tools:
http://packetstormsecurity.org/UNIX/scanners/DominoHunter-0.92.zip http://packetstormsecurity.org/UNIX/scanners/domino.tar.gz http://www.cqure.net/wp/?page_id=17 http://www.appsecinc.com/products/appdetective/domino/ (commercial!) http://www.rapid7.com/nexpose/features.jsp (commercial!) http://www.openwall.com/john http://usuarios.lycos.es/reinob/ http://www.nestonline.com/lcrack/ http://www.securiteinfo.com/download/dhb.zip http://www.cqure.net/wp/?page_id=12 Other commercial password crackers from Elcomsoft/Passware/etc.
All of the other "important" databases like names.nsf, webadmin.nsf, and others are also protected with basic auth.
http://www.0xdeadbeef.info/exploits/raptor_dominohash
Thanks for any hints, clues, and even "Google is your friend" stuff (as long as there is a corresponding reasonable search parameter ) :)
Hope this helps,
-- Marco Ivaldi, OPST Chief Security Officer Data Security Division @ Mediaservice.net Srl http://mediaservice.net/
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