Book Image

Web Penetration Testing with Kali Linux - Third Edition

By : Gilberto Najera-Gutierrez, Juned Ahmed Ansari
Book Image

Web Penetration Testing with Kali Linux - Third Edition

By: Gilberto Najera-Gutierrez, Juned Ahmed Ansari

Overview of this book

Web Penetration Testing with Kali Linux - Third Edition shows you how to set up a lab, helps you understand the nature and mechanics of attacking websites, and explains classical attacks in great depth. This edition is heavily updated for the latest Kali Linux changes and the most recent attacks. Kali Linux shines when it comes to client-side attacks and fuzzing in particular. From the start of the book, you'll be given a thorough grounding in the concepts of hacking and penetration testing, and you'll see the tools used in Kali Linux that relate to web application hacking. You'll gain a deep understanding of classicalSQL, command-injection flaws, and the many ways to exploit these flaws. Web penetration testing also needs a general overview of client-side attacks, which is rounded out by a long discussion of scripting and input validation flaws. There is also an important chapter on cryptographic implementation flaws, where we discuss the most recent problems with cryptographic layers in the networking stack. The importance of these attacks cannot be overstated, and defending against them is relevant to most internet users and, of course, penetration testers. At the end of the book, you'll use an automated technique called fuzzing to identify flaws in a web application. Finally, you'll gain an understanding of web application vulnerabilities and the ways they can be exploited using the tools in Kali Linux.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Custom encryption protocols


As penetration testers, it's not uncommon to find applications where developers make custom implementations of standard encryption protocols or attempt to create their own custom algorithms. In such cases, you need to pay special attention to these modules, as they may contain several flaws that could prove catastrophic if released into production environments.

As stated previously, encryption algorithms are created by information security experts and mathematicians specialized in cryptography through years of experimentation and testing. It is highly improbable for a single developer or small team to design a cryptographically strong algorithm or to improve on an intensively tested implementation such as OpenSSL or the established cryptographic libraries of programming languages.

Identifying encrypted and hashed information

The first step when encountering a custom cryptographic implementation or data that cannot be identified as cleartext, is to define the process...