Book Image

Hands-On AWS Penetration Testing with Kali Linux

By : Karl Gilbert, Benjamin Caudill
Book Image

Hands-On AWS Penetration Testing with Kali Linux

By: Karl Gilbert, Benjamin Caudill

Overview of this book

The cloud is taking over the IT industry. Any organization housing a large amount of data or a large infrastructure has started moving cloud-ward — and AWS rules the roost when it comes to cloud service providers, with its closest competitor having less than half of its market share. This highlights the importance of security on the cloud, especially on AWS. While a lot has been said (and written) about how cloud environments can be secured, performing external security assessments in the form of pentests on AWS is still seen as a dark art. This book aims to help pentesters as well as seasoned system administrators with a hands-on approach to pentesting the various cloud services provided by Amazon through AWS using Kali Linux. To make things easier for novice pentesters, the book focuses on building a practice lab and refining penetration testing with Kali Linux on the cloud. This is helpful not only for beginners but also for pentesters who want to set up a pentesting environment in their private cloud, using Kali Linux to perform a white-box assessment of their own cloud resources. Besides this, the book covers a large variety of AWS services that are often overlooked during a pentest — from serverless infrastructure to automated deployment pipelines. By the end of this book, you will be able to identify possible vulnerable areas efficiently and secure your AWS cloud environment.
Table of Contents (28 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Kali Linux on AWS
5
Section 2: Pentesting AWS Elastic Compute Cloud Configuring and Securing
9
Section 3: Pentesting AWS Simple Storage Service Configuring and Securing
12
Section 4: AWS Identity Access Management Configuring and Securing
16
Section 5: Penetration Testing on Other AWS Services
20
Section 6: Attacking AWS Logging and Security Services
23
Section 7: Leveraging AWS Pentesting Tools for Real-World Attacks

Connecting an RDS instance to WordPress on EC2

Once our RDS instance has been created, we will set up WordPress on our EC2 instance.

For this tutorial, we'll be using an Ubuntu 16.04 instance. Go ahead, and spin up an Ubuntu EC2 instance. In the inbound rules settings, ensure that you allow traffic to port 80 and 443 (HTTP and HTTPS):

  1. SSH into the Ubuntu instance. We'll now set up the instance to be able to host the WordPress website. Before proceeding, run apt update and apt upgrade.
  2. Install Apache server on your EC2 machine:
sudo apt-get install apache2 apache2-utils
  1. To start the Apache service, you can run the following command:
sudo systemctl start apache2

To see whether the instance is working, you can visit http://<<EC2 IP Address>>, and you should get the default page of Apache.

  1. We will now install PHP and a few modules for it to work with the...