It is a bot testing for SQL injection vulnerabilities by closing a query with apostrophe, then setting a variable. There are also similar injects that deal with shell commands and/or file path traversals. Whether it's a "good bot" or a bad bot is unknown, but if the inject works, you have bigger issues to deal with. There's a 99% chance your site is not generating these style links and there is nothing you can do to stop them from crafting those urls unless you block the request(s) with a simple regex string or a more complex WAF such as ModSecurity.
Blocking based on user agent is not an effective angle. You need to look for the request heuristics and block based on that instead. Some examples of things to look for in the url/request/POST/referrer, as both utf-8 and hex characters:
- double apostrophes
- double periods, especially followed by a slash in various encodings
- words like "script", "etc" or "passwd"
- paths like
dev/null
used with piping/echoing shell output
- %00 null byte style characters used for init a new command
- http in the url more than once (unless your site uses it)
- anything regarding
cgi
(unless your site uses it)
- random "enterprise" paths for things like coldfusion, tomcat, etc
If you aren't using a WAF, here is a regex concat that should capture many of those within a url. We use it in PHP apps, so you may/will need to tweak some escapes/looks depending on where you are using this. Note that this has .cgi
, wordpress
, and wp-admin
along with a bunch of other stuff in the regex, remove them if you need to.
$invalid = "(\(\))"; // lets not look for quotes. [good]bots use them constantly. looking for () since technically parenthesis arent valid
$period = "(\\002e|%2e|%252e|%c0%2e|\.)";
$slash = "(\\2215|%2f|%252f|%5c|%255c|%c0%2f|%c0%af|\/|\\\)"; // http://security.stackexchange.com/questions/48879/why-does-directory-traversal-attack-c0af-work
$routes = "(etc|dev|irj)" . $slash . "(passwds?|group|null|portal)|allow_url_include|auto_prepend_file|route_*=http";
$filetypes = $period . "+(sql|db|sqlite|log|ini|cgi|bak|rc|apk|pkg|deb|rpm|exe|msi|bak|old|cache|lock|autoload|gitignore|ht(access|passwds?)|cpanel_config|history|zip|bz2|tar|(t)?gz)";
$cgis = "cgi(-|_){0,1}(bin(-sdb)?|mod|sys)?";
$phps = "(changelog|version|license|command|xmlrpc|admin-ajax|wsdl|tmp|shell|stats|echo|(my)?sql|sample|modx|load-config|cron|wp-(up|tmp|sitemaps|sitemap(s)?|signup|settings|" . $period . "?config(uration|-sample|bak)?))" . $period . "php";
$doors = "(" . $cgis . $slash . "(common" . $period . "(cgi|php))|manager" . $slash . "html|stssys" . $period . "htm|((mysql|phpmy|db|my)admin|pma|sqlitemanager|sqlite|websql)" . $slash . "|(jmx|web)-console|bitrix|invoker|muieblackcat|w00tw00t|websql|xampp|cfide|wordpress|wp-admin|hnap1|tmunblock|soapcaller|zabbix|elfinder)";
$sqls = "((un)?hex\(|name_const\(|char\(|a=0)";
$nulls = "(%00|%2500)";
$truth = "(.{1,4})=\1"; // catch OR always-true (1=1) clauses via sql inject - not used atm, its too broad and may capture search=chowder (ch=ch) for example
$regex = "/$invalid|$period{1,2}$slash|$routes|$filetypes|$phps|$doors|$sqls|$nulls/i";
Using it, at least with PHP, is pretty straight forward with preg_match_all()
. Here is an example of how you can use it: https://gist.github.com/dhaupin/605b35ca64ca0d061f05c4cf423521ab
WARNING: Be careful if you set this to autoban (ie, fail2ban filter). MS/Bing DumbBots (and others) often muck up urls by entering things like strange triple dots from following truncated urls, or trying to hit a tel:
link as a URi. I don't know why. Here is what i mean: A link with text www.example.com/link-too-long...truncated.html
may point to a correct url, but Bing may try to access it "as it looks" instead of following the href
, resulting in a WAF hit due to double dots.
'A=0
) or ways to run JS. If that works, they know the site is vulnerable, it is reported to the scanner OP, then scanner OP comes to work the magic. Just this week there have been 6 amazon instances hitting our networks probing, and like the comment above states, there is nothing "generating them" in code.