Book Image

Mastering Kali Linux for Web Penetration Testing

By : Michael McPhee
Book Image

Mastering Kali Linux for Web Penetration Testing

By: Michael McPhee

Overview of this book

You will start by delving into some common web application architectures in use, both in private and public cloud instances. You will also learn about the most common frameworks for testing, such as OWASP OGT version 4, and how to use them to guide your efforts. In the next section, you will be introduced to web pentesting with core tools and you will also see how to make web applications more secure through rigorous penetration tests using advanced features in open source tools. The book will then show you how to better hone your web pentesting skills in safe environments that can ensure low-risk experimentation with the powerful tools and features in Kali Linux that go beyond a typical script-kiddie approach. After establishing how to test these powerful tools safely, you will understand how to better identify vulnerabilities, position and deploy exploits, compromise authentication and authorization, and test the resilience and exposure applications possess. By the end of this book, you will be well-versed with the web service architecture to identify and evade various protection mechanisms that are used on the Web today. You will leave this book with a greater mastery of essential test techniques needed to verify the secure design, development, and operation of your customers' web applications.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Exploiting Trust Through Cryptography Testing

The development of commercially available encryption and cryptographic methods has been crucial to the adoption of the internet as the engine of the global economy. The web has come a long way from its early days with early browsers such as Erwise and Mosaic delivering static, open information to mainly education users. It is hard to imagine a time when the web was plain-text, when information was transmitted (and stored, for that matter) without any protection against theft or snooping. Now, the financial, personal, and intellectual transactions that the internet facilitates are protected by mathematically-driven algorithms such as the Secure Socket Layer (SSL)/ Transport Layer Security (TLS), Advanced Encryption Standard (AES), Secure Hashing Algorithm (SHA), and Diffie-Helman (DH). Together, these standards and more, coupled with...