internet block and cramped NOC traffic very badly

A worm which exploits a (new?) vulnerability in SQL Server is bringing
 the core routers to a grinding halt. The speed of the propagation can be
 attributed to the attack method and simplicity of the code. The worm
 sends a 376-byte UDP packet to port 1434 (i found 1433 also) of each
random target, each vulnerable system will immediately start propagating
itself.
Since UDP is connection-less, the worm is able to spread much more quickly
than those using your standard TCP-based attack vectors (no connect
 timeouts).


Some random screen shots, a copy of the worm as a perl script, and a
disassembly (sorry, no comments) can be found online at:
http://www.digitaloffense.net/worms/mssql_udp_worm/


The UDP D.O.S. attack: (Random snippets from logs)
PROTO=UDP SPT=1518 DPT=1434
PROTO=UDP SPT=1032 DPT=1434
PROTO=UDP SPT=1077 DPT=1434
PROTO=UDP SPT=4319 DPT=1434


Some News: http://news.zdnet.co.uk/story/0,,t269-s2099780,00.html
Advisory: http://www.nextgenss.com/advisories/mssql-udp.txt
Microsoft Fix:
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/treeview/default.asp?url=/technet/security/
bulletin/MS02-039.asp


MS SQL listens on port 1434/udp so that clients can figure out which method
of communication to use (named pipes, tcp/ip et al)
there are two problems that yield ability to execute code remotely while
unauthenticated.

Right now, packet loss is running at roughly 95%.

ranjeet







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