Book Image

Hands-On Application Penetration Testing with Burp Suite

By : Carlos A. Lozano, Dhruv Shah, Riyaz Ahemed Walikar
Book Image

Hands-On Application Penetration Testing with Burp Suite

By: Carlos A. Lozano, Dhruv Shah, Riyaz Ahemed Walikar

Overview of this book

Burp suite is a set of graphic tools focused towards penetration testing of web applications. Burp suite is widely used for web penetration testing by many security professionals for performing different web-level security tasks. The book starts by setting up the environment to begin an application penetration test. You will be able to configure the client and apply target whitelisting. You will also learn to setup and configure Android and IOS devices to work with Burp Suite. The book will explain how various features of Burp Suite can be used to detect various vulnerabilities as part of an application penetration test. Once detection is completed and the vulnerability is confirmed, you will be able to exploit a detected vulnerability using Burp Suite. The book will also covers advanced concepts like writing extensions and macros for Burp suite. Finally, you will discover various steps that are taken to identify the target, discover weaknesses in the authentication mechanism, and finally break the authentication implementation to gain access to the administrative console of the application. By the end of this book, you will be able to effectively perform end-to-end penetration testing with Burp Suite.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Contributors
About Packt
Preface
12
Exploiting and Exfiltrating Data from a Large Shipping Corporation
Index

Using SSRF/XSPA to extract data from internal machines


SSRF and XSPA vulnerabilities can also be used for other actions, such as extracting information from the servers into the network where the backend is located, or from the server where the application is hosted. Let's analyze the following request:

Here, the filehookURL parameter is vulnerable, so send it to the Repeater tool, using the secondary button of the mouse, and modify the parameter to extract a file, in /etc/passwd, as follows:

action=handleWidgetFiles&type=delete&file=1&filehookURL=file:///etc/passwd 

Send it to the application. If it works, the application will show you the file in the response, as demonstrated in the following screenshot:

As in other kinds of vulnerabilities, sometimes, it is very useful to look for files in the web server's root directory, where it is possible to extract source code files or properties, files with sensitive information.