Book Image

Hands-On Network Forensics

By : Nipun Jaswal
2 (2)
Book Image

Hands-On Network Forensics

2 (2)
By: Nipun Jaswal

Overview of this book

Network forensics is a subset of digital forensics that deals with network attacks and their investigation. In the era of network attacks and malware threat, it’s now more important than ever to have skills to investigate network attacks and vulnerabilities. Hands-On Network Forensics starts with the core concepts within network forensics, including coding, networking, forensics tools, and methodologies for forensic investigations. You’ll then explore the tools used for network forensics, followed by understanding how to apply those tools to a PCAP file and write the accompanying report. In addition to this, you will understand how statistical flow analysis, network enumeration, tunneling and encryption, and malware detection can be used to investigate your network. Towards the end of this book, you will discover how network correlation works and how to bring all the information from different types of network devices together. By the end of this book, you will have gained hands-on experience of performing forensics analysis tasks.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Obtaining the Evidence
4
Section 2: The Key Concepts
8
Section 3: Conducting Network Forensics

Case study – hack attempts

Consider a simple scenario where you are tasked with finding the origin of incoming attacks on a particular web application. The only thing you know about the network is that the application is internally hosted and is not connected to the outside world. There is a caching proxy running in the network as well. As the forensic investigator, the first thing you requested from the client is the logs of the application server, which you started to investigate in Apache Logs Viewer:

Apache log viewer

We quickly deduce that there are two IP addresses of supreme interest, 192.168.174.157 and 192.168.174.150, and since the User-Agent contains sqlmap, it's a SQL injection attempt. We can also see the requests that contain buzzwords, such as WHERE and SELECT, which are typically used in SQL injections on a vulnerable parameter...