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Sunday, 23 June 2013

Accessing the bindery files directly

1. Introduction

This document describes a command for accessing the NetWare 3.x bindery files directly, bypassing the NetWare network API calls.

It can be used for fast bindery access, bulk user management, bypassingsecurity restrictions, investigating problems etc.

It is quite possible to destroy the bindery completely, or to reveal information which could be used by hackers to obtain passwords. Users are assumed to have a basic grasp of good procedures for security and
backup.


2. Command syntax

The basic format of the command is bindery [options] bindery-spec action action ...


2.1 Specifying a bindery

A bindery specification takes the form path/.extension

E.g. SYS:SYSTEM/.SYS. The path defaults to the current directory. The extension defaults to .OLD.

Alternatively an 'active' bindery can be specified:

SERVER server

The bindery will be closed if necessary.


2.2 Actions on the bindery

  INFO                   print info about the bindery
  SCHEMA             checks the bindery against the schema in BINDERY.SCH
  DUMP obj            dump all information for the specified object(s)
  OBJ                       list all object records
  PROP                   list all property records
  VAL                      list all value records
  VALDATA            list all value records, with data
  EXPORT               export the bindery to a text file; see below
  IMPORT               import the bindery from a text file
  ETC                      export user password information, suitable for input to the

password-cracking program described below

The following actions apply only if a bindery has been specified by the SERVER parameter:

  CLOSE    close the bindery, i.e. make it available for direct access; users attempting to access the bindery  via NetWare API calls will receive an error

  OPEN      open the bindery, which causes the server to reload it and may take some time for large                            binderies

  COPY      directory copy the bindery files into a directory elsewhere


3. Export/import

The bindery can be exported to and imported from a text file. This can
be used for various purposes:

 -   problem diagnosis and repair

 -   creation of large binderies given a set of user information

 -   compaction of binderies

 -   merging binderies or moving users between binderies while
     preserving their passwords

To see the format of the export file, try exporting a small bindery.

4. Password cracking

Passwords are not stored in clear in the bindery. What is stored is a 16-byte value computed via a one-way function from the user's object id and the password. Given the object id and password it is possible to
generate a candidate password which can be compared against that in the bindery.

The ETC option of the BINDERY command produces a file containing the required information, in a format superficially similar to /etc/passwd on Unix:

   userid:pw-hash:object-id:pw-len:name::

e.g.

   ttidy:32d8998e098a05830f809b809ea02137:D0000001:8:Terry Tidy

This can then be input into bindery cracking programs. Separating the functions in this way allows various forms of parallelism:

 -   the password file can be split into smaller chunks

 -   the same password file can be worked on by several cracking
     programs each with different dictionaries or algorithms

 -   cracking programs can be run on faster machines

A cracking program BINCRACK is provided which takes such a file as input. It has command syntax:

   bincrack [/verify] [/numsub] pw-file dict-file

/verify lists the passwords that are being tried. /numsub tries substituting numbers for letters, e.g. "1D10T". This takes a lot longer as all possible combinations are tried. pw-file is an exported bindery password file. dict-file is a simple word list.

Versions are available for MS-DOS and for Solaris 1 and Solaris 2 SPARC systems.

Suitable wordlists can be found at

   ftp://ftp.ox.ac.uk/pub/wordlists/



By Trivedi Jay (B E Electrical Engineer )
email : erjaytrivedi@yahoo.com

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