6.1 KiB
Glaztech — Session Log 2026-06-04
User
- User: Mike Swanson (mike)
- Machine: GURU-5070
- Role: admin
Session Summary
Performed a read-only intrusion / brute-force log review on the Glaztech web server (WWW, agent 455a1bc7-1c29-42bc-b597-fa1e64f08eec, Windows Server 2019, agent v0.6.54) via GuruRMM, following up on the 2026-06-03 website security assessment. Question: is there evidence anyone tried to brute-force the website logins or the server itself.
Analyzed 7 days of IIS logs (C:\inetpub\logs\LogFiles\W3SVC4, ~52,000 requests, May 29 – Jun 4). Identified the two login endpoints (/customer_login.aspx, /emp/employee-login.aspx), then broke POSTs down per source IP with HTTP status codes. An initial pass flagged the employee portal as suspicious (381 "failures"/HTTP 200 vs 77 "successes"/302 — an inverted ratio vs the customer login). Pulling full per-IP request timelines corrected this: the employee login returns HTTP 200 on both success and failure (no redirect-on-success), so status code alone does not indicate a failed staff login. The top "suspect" IP 160.3.157.9 proved to be a single legitimate employee on an iPhone checking timecards. No brute-force or credential-stuffing signature exists on either endpoint.
Also reviewed the Windows Security event log (4625 failed logons / 4624 successes, 7-day window): only 13 failed logons, all LogonType 3 (SMB) from internal LAN IPs, zero external, no RDP failures, and no successful remote logons from public IPs — indicating RDP/SMB are not internet-exposed and nothing got in at the OS auth layer.
Folded the findings into the security record: added Appendix A — Intrusion / Brute-Force Log Review (2026-06-04) to clients/glaztech/reports/2026-06-03-website-security-assessment.md, and extended finding H5 with a detection-blind-spot note (200-on-both + no lockout + no failed-login logging = slow guessing would be invisible).
Key Decisions
- Used IIS request logs as the primary evidence source, not the Windows Security log, because the app's custom session-based auth never generates Windows logon events. The Security log was used only to rule out RDP/SMB brute force against the host.
- Did not treat HTTP 200 on the employee login as a failure once the timelines showed 200-on-success. Reported the corrected interpretation rather than the alarming-but-wrong intermediate read.
- Flagged the HTTP 500 bursts as worth an app-side look (possible SQLi error path per C3) but explicitly classified them as not-a-brute-force, to avoid overstating the threat.
- Recorded the detection gap as the actionable outcome — the review found no attacker, but confirmed that a slow guessing attack would currently be undetectable; reinforces the existing #32378 remediation (add lockout + failed-login logging).
Problems Encountered
jq -n --argheredoc capture glitched when dispatching the Security-log script (parse error / empty command). Resolved by writing the PowerShell to.claude/tmp/seclog.ps1and passing it withjq --rawfile, which is robust against embedded quoting.- IIS logs do not record POST bodies, so attempted usernames/passwords are not recoverable — noted as a limitation; confirming which accounts (if any) were targeted would require app-level auth logging that does not exist.
Configuration Changes
- Modified:
clients/glaztech/reports/2026-06-03-website-security-assessment.md— added Appendix A (2026-06-04 log review); extended H5 with detection-blind-spot note + failed-login-logging fix; updated Status line. - Created:
clients/glaztech/session-logs/2026-06-04-session.md(this file). - Local-only (gitignored):
.claude/current-modeset toinfra; transient.claude/tmp/seclog.ps1,.claude/tmp/rmm.token,.claude/tmp/rmm.cmd.
Credentials & Secrets
- None discovered or created. RMM admin credential read from vault
infrastructure/gururmm-server.sops.yaml(unchanged).
Infrastructure & Servers
- WWW (Glaztech web server) — internal
192.168.8.72, public65.113.52.88, Windows Server 2019 (build 17763), GuruRMM agent455a1bc7-1c29-42bc-b597-fa1e64f08eec(v0.6.54), client "Glaztech Industries" / site "TUS - Tucson". - Active IIS site:
W3SVC4(log dirC:\inetpub\logs\LogFiles\W3SVC4; dailyu_exYYMMDD.log). Older sites W3SVC1/2/3 are stale (last writes 2018–2022). - SQL backend (context only, not touched):
192.168.8.62,3436(GTI-INV-SQL).
Commands & Outputs
- IIS analysis dispatched as PowerShell via GuruRMM (
POST /api/agents/<id>/command), parsing#Fields-keyed log lines forcs-method,cs-uri-stem,c-ip,sc-status,date,time,cs(User-Agent). - Key counts: customer login 2,547×302 / 78×200 / 5×500; employee login 77×302 / 381×200 / 6×500; 740 distinct IPs hit the login endpoints; 241 distinct IPs hit the employee login.
- Security log: span 2026-03-31 .. 2026-06-04; 4625 in last 7d = 13, all type 3, all internal, usernames = 12 blank + 1
tomabens; 4624 external type 3/8/10 = none.
Pending / Incomplete Tasks
- App-side investigation of the HTTP 500 bursts on post-login pages (possible SQLi error path) — IPs
201.146.179.166,64.178.182.162,205.185.107.49,172.87.137.60. Not yet handed to Tom. - #32378 (Waiting on Customer) unchanged: add account lockout + failed-login logging (now explicitly tied to this review), fix SQLi, least-privilege the
tom/sysadminDB login, separate website DB from GTIware, stop storing cards / never CVV, encrypt at rest. - Optional confirming check offered but not run: enumerate listening/forwarded ports on
WWWto turn "RDP almost certainly not exposed" into "confirmed." - Carried over:
corpDBcc_file"Invalid object name" anomaly; confirm Payrilla payment-flow scope.
Reference Information
- Report:
clients/glaztech/reports/2026-06-03-website-security-assessment.md(Appendix A) - Companion:
clients/glaztech/reports/2026-06-03-pci-cardholder-data-finding.md - Wiki:
wiki/clients/glaztech.md - Ticket: Syncro #32378 (Glaztech website security — Waiting on Customer)
- RMM API:
http://172.16.3.30:3001| agent id455a1bc7-1c29-42bc-b597-fa1e64f08eec