Book Image

Python: Penetration Testing for Developers

By : Christopher Duffy, Mohit , Cameron Buchanan, Andrew Mabbitt, Terry Ip, Dave Mound, Benjamin May
Book Image

Python: Penetration Testing for Developers

By: Christopher Duffy, Mohit , Cameron Buchanan, Andrew Mabbitt, Terry Ip, Dave Mound, Benjamin May

Overview of this book

Cybercriminals are always one step ahead, when it comes to tools and techniques. This means you need to use the same tools and adopt the same mindset to properly secure your software. This course shows you how to do just that, demonstrating how effective Python can be for powerful pentesting that keeps your software safe. Comprising of three key modules, follow each one to push your Python and security skills to the next level. In the first module, we’ll show you how to get to grips with the fundamentals. This means you’ll quickly find out how to tackle some of the common challenges facing pentesters using custom Python tools designed specifically for your needs. You’ll also learn what tools to use and when, giving you complete confidence when deploying your pentester tools to combat any potential threat. In the next module you’ll begin hacking into the application layer. Covering everything from parameter tampering, DDoS, XXS and SQL injection, it will build on the knowledge and skills you learned in the first module to make you an even more fluent security expert. Finally in the third module, you’ll find more than 60 Python pentesting recipes. We think this will soon become your trusted resource for any pentesting situation. This Learning Path combines some of the best that Packt has to offer in one complete, curated package. It includes content from the following Packt products: ? Learning Penetration Testing with Python by Christopher Duffy ? Python Penetration Testing Essentials by Mohit ? Python Web Penetration Testing Cookbook by Cameron Buchanan,Terry Ip, Andrew Mabbitt, Benjamin May and Dave Mound
Table of Contents (32 chapters)
Python: Penetration Testing for Developers
Python: Penetration Testing for Developers
Credits
Preface
Bibliography
Index

Implementing SHA and MD5 hashes together


In this section, we will see how SHA and MD5 hash work together.

Getting ready

For the following script, we will only require the hashlib module.

How to do it…

We are going to tie everything previously done together to form one big script. This will output three versions of SHA hashes and also an MD5 hash, so the user can choose which one they would like to use:

import hashlib

message = raw_input("Enter the string you would like to hash: ")

md5 = hashlib.md5(message)
md5 = md5.hexdigest()

sha1 = hashlib.sha1(message)
sha1 = sha1.hexdigest()

sha256 = hashlib.sha256(message)
sha256 = sha256.hexdigest()

sha512 = hashlib.sha512(message)
sha512 = sha512.hexdigest()

print "MD5 Hash =", md5
print "SHA1 Hash =", sha1
print "SHA256 Hash =", sha256
print "SHA512 Hash =", sha512
print "End of list."

How it works…

Once again, after importing the correct module into this script, we need to receive the user input that we wish to turn into an encoded string:

import...