Book Image

Kali Linux - An Ethical Hacker's Cookbook

By : Himanshu Sharma
Book Image

Kali Linux - An Ethical Hacker's Cookbook

By: Himanshu Sharma

Overview of this book

With the current rate of hacking, it is very important to pentest your environment in order to ensure advanced-level security. This book is packed with practical recipes that will quickly get you started with Kali Linux (version 2016.2) according to your needs, and move on to core functionalities. This book will start with the installation and configuration of Kali Linux so that you can perform your tests. You will learn how to plan attack strategies and perform web application exploitation using tools such as Burp, and Jexboss. You will also learn how to perform network exploitation using Metasploit, Sparta, and Wireshark. Next, you will perform wireless and password attacks using tools such as Patator, John the Ripper, and airoscript-ng. Lastly, you will learn how to create an optimum quality pentest report! By the end of this book, you will know how to conduct advanced penetration testing thanks to the book’s crisp and task-oriented recipes.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
Disclaimer
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
6
Wireless Attacks – Getting Past Aircrack-ng

Using the paranoid meterpreter


Sometime during 2015, hackers realized it was possible to steal/hijack someone's meterpreter session by simply playing around with the victim's DNS and launching their own handler to connect. This then led to the development and release of meterpreter paranoid mode. They introduced an API that verified the SHA1 hash of the certificate presented by the msf at both ends. In this recipe, we will see how to use the paranoid mode.

How to do it...

We will need an SSL certificate to begin with:

  1. We can generate our own using the following commands:
        openssl req -new -newkey rsa:4096 -days 365 -nodes -x509
        -keyout meterpreter.key -out meterpreter.crt

The following screenshot shows the output for the preceding command:

We fill in the information such as country code and other information accordingly:

        cat meterpreter.key meterpreter.crt > meterpreter.pem
  1. The previous command basically opens two files before and writes them into a single file. We then...