Book Image

Practical Network Scanning

By : Ajay Singh Chauhan
Book Image

Practical Network Scanning

By: Ajay Singh Chauhan

Overview of this book

Network scanning is the process of assessing a network to identify an active host network; same methods can be used by an attacker or network administrator for security assessment. This procedure plays a vital role in risk assessment programs or while preparing a security plan for your organization. Practical Network Scanning starts with the concept of network scanning and how organizations can benefit from it. Then, going forward, we delve into the different scanning steps, such as service detection, firewall detection, TCP/IP port detection, and OS detection. We also implement these concepts using a few of the most prominent tools on the market, such as Nessus and Nmap. In the concluding chapters, we prepare a complete vulnerability assessment plan for your organization. By the end of this book, you will have hands-on experience in performing network scanning using different tools and in choosing the best tools for your system.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

WAFs


WAFs provide additional security between users and web applications to protect web servers from unauthorized access and malicious attacks. WAF vendors offer hardware, software, virtual, and cloud-based firewall solutions. Web applications are extremely vulnerable and are also the backbone of business, so they must be protected. The biggest challenge in application security is detecting a vulnerability in your application, at which point the trouble begins when you are patching and fixing the code, as these are time-consuming tasks. This is where WAFs come in; as soon as a vulnerability is detected, you can apply patches to WAF. Any request which comes after the WAF patches are updated will stop attacks associated with the vulnerability that has been found. 

Let's take a look at the following diagram. Non-HTTP/HTTPS attacks are blocked by a perimeter firewall, but the perimeter firewall does allow HTTP/HTTPS connections. These HTTP/HTTPS connections can also become attacks and are therefore...