Book Image

Kali Linux Web Penetration Testing Cookbook

By : Gilberto Najera-Gutierrez
Book Image

Kali Linux Web Penetration Testing Cookbook

By: Gilberto Najera-Gutierrez

Overview of this book

Web applications are a huge point of attack for malicious hackers and a critical area for security professionals and penetration testers to lock down and secure. Kali Linux is a Linux-based penetration testing platform and operating system that provides a huge array of testing tools, many of which can be used specifically to execute web penetration testing. This book will teach you, in the form step-by-step recipes, how to detect a wide array of vulnerabilities, exploit them to analyze their consequences, and ultimately buffer attackable surfaces so applications are more secure, for you and your users. Starting from the setup of a testing laboratory, this book will give you the skills you need to cover every stage of a penetration test: from gathering information about the system and the application to identifying vulnerabilities through manual testing and the use of vulnerability scanners to both basic and advanced exploitation techniques that may lead to a full system compromise. Finally, we will put this into the context of OWASP and the top 10 web application vulnerabilities you are most likely to encounter, equipping you with the ability to combat them effectively. By the end of the book, you will have the required skills to identify, exploit, and prevent web application vulnerabilities.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Kali Linux Web Penetration Testing Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Attacking with BeEF


In previous chapters, we saw what BeEF (the Browser Exploitation Framework) is capable of. In this recipe, we will use it to send a malicious browser extension, which when executed, will give us a remote bind shell to the system.

Getting ready

We will need to install Firefox in our Windows client for this recipe.

How to do it...

  1. Start your BeEF service. In a root terminal, type the following:

    cd /usr/share/beef-xss/
    ./beef
    
  2. We will use the BeEF's advanced demo page to hook our client. In the Windows Client VM, open Firefox and browse to http://192.168.56.1:3000/demos/butcher/index.html.

  3. Now, login to the BeEF's panel (http://127.0.0.1:3000/ui/panel). We must see the new hooked browser there.

  4. Select the hooked Firefox and navigate to Current Browser | Commands | Social Engineering | Firefox Extension (Bindshell).

    As it is marked orange (the command module works against the target, but may be visible to the user), we may need to work on social engineering to make the user accept...