Book Image

Hands-On Penetration Testing with Python

By : Furqan Khan
Book Image

Hands-On Penetration Testing with Python

By: Furqan Khan

Overview of this book

With the current technological and infrastructural shift, penetration testing is no longer a process-oriented activity. Modern-day penetration testing demands lots of automation and innovation; the only language that dominates all its peers is Python. Given the huge number of tools written in Python, and its popularity in the penetration testing space, this language has always been the first choice for penetration testers. Hands-On Penetration Testing with Python walks you through advanced Python programming constructs. Once you are familiar with the core concepts, you’ll explore the advanced uses of Python in the domain of penetration testing and optimization. You’ll then move on to understanding how Python, data science, and the cybersecurity ecosystem communicate with one another. In the concluding chapters, you’ll study exploit development, reverse engineering, and cybersecurity use cases that can be automated with Python. By the end of this book, you’ll have acquired adequate skills to leverage Python as a helpful tool to pentest and secure infrastructure, while also creating your own custom exploits.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)

Summary

In this chapter, we discussed using ML with Python and how we can apply it to the cyber security domain. There are many other wonderful applications of data science and ML in the cyber security space related to log analysis, traffic monitoring, anomaly detection, data exfiltration, URL analysis, spam detection, and so on. Modern SIEM solutions are mostly built on top of machine learning, and a big data engine is used to reduce human analysis in monitoring. Refer to the further reading section to see the various other use cases of machine learning with cyber security. It must also be noted that it is important for pen testers to have an understanding of machine learning, in order to find vulnerabilities. In the next chapter, the user is going to understand how they can use Python to automate various web application attack categories, which include SQLI, XSS, CSRF, and...