Book Image

Android Security Cookbook

Book Image

Android Security Cookbook

Overview of this book

Android Security Cookbook discusses many common vulnerabilities and security related shortcomings in Android applications and operating systems. The book breaks down and enumerates the processes used to exploit and remediate these vulnerabilities in the form of detailed recipes and walkthroughs. The book also teaches readers to use an Android Security Assessment Framework called Drozer and how to develop plugins to customize the framework. Other topics covered include how to reverse-engineer Android applications to find common vulnerabilities, and how to find common memory corruption vulnerabilities on ARM devices. In terms of application protection this book will show various hardening techniques to protect application components, the data stored, secure networking. In summary, Android Security Cookbook provides a practical analysis into many areas of Android application and operating system security and gives the reader the required skills to analyze the security of their Android devices.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Android Security Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Using StrongTrustManager from the OnionKit library


In this recipe, we are going to leverage the great work of the folks at the Guardian Project to enhance the validation of SSL connections made by our app. Specifically, we are going to make use of StrongTrustManager.

Getting ready

OnionKit is distributed as an Android library project. Before we start this recipe, download the OnionKit library from the GitHub page (https://github.com/guardianproject/OnionKit).

Then, extract and add to your project as you would add any other Android library project.

How to do it...

Let's get started!

  1. Integrating the StrongTustManager class couldn't be simpler. It is just a case of swapping out your HttpClient implementation. Hence, change the following code:

    public HttpResponse sampleRequest() throws Exception {
        HttpClient httpclient = new DefaultHttpClient();
        HttpGet httpget = new HttpGet("https://server.com/path?apikey=123");
        HttpResponse response = httpclient.execute(httpget);
        return response;...