Book Image

Practical Hardware Pentesting, Second edition - Second Edition

By : Jean-Georges Valle
Book Image

Practical Hardware Pentesting, Second edition - Second Edition

By: Jean-Georges Valle

Overview of this book

Practical Hardware Pentesting, Second Edition, is an example-driven guide that will help you plan attacks, hack your embedded devices, and secure the hardware infrastructure. Throughout the book, you’ll explore the functional and security aspects of a device and learn how a system senses and communicates with the outside world. You’ll set up a lab from scratch and gradually work towards an advanced hardware lab. The first part of this book will get you attacking the software of an embedded device. This will get you thinking from an attacker point of view; you’ll understand how devices are attacked, compromised, and how you can harden a device against the most common hardware attack vectors. As you progress, you’ll get to grips with the global architecture of an embedded system and sniff on-board traffic, learn how to identify and formalize threats to the embedded system, and understand its relationship with its ecosystem. This 2nd Edition covers real-world examples featuring various devices like smart TVs, baby monitors, or pacemakers, you’ll discover how to analyze hardware and locate its possible vulnerabilities before going on to explore firmware dumping, analysis, and exploitation. By the end of this book, you’ll and understand how to implement best practices to secure your hardware.
Table of Contents (5 chapters)

Questions

  1. What tool can you use to take an image of a peripheral that is recognized by your Linux machine?
  2. What is the use of the -o loop command-line switch for mount?
  3. Why are the lists in cat /proc/filesystems and /lib/modules/xxx/kernel/fs/ different?
  4. You found a module marked eUSB on a device you are testing. What is it? How would you read it?
  5. What is the eMMC standard? How would you read it?
  6. What is FUSE? What is user space? How can you use it?