Book Image

Defending APIs

By : Colin Domoney
Book Image

Defending APIs

By: Colin Domoney

Overview of this book

Along with the exponential growth of API adoption comes a rise in security concerns about their implementation and inherent vulnerabilities. For those seeking comprehensive insights into building, deploying, and managing APIs as the first line of cyber defense, this book offers invaluable guidance. Written by a seasoned DevSecOps expert, Defending APIs addresses the imperative task of API security with innovative approaches and techniques designed to combat API-specific safety challenges. The initial chapters are dedicated to API building blocks, hacking APIs by exploiting vulnerabilities, and case studies of recent breaches, while the subsequent sections of the book focus on building the skills necessary for securing APIs in real-world scenarios. Guided by clear step-by-step instructions, you’ll explore offensive techniques for testing vulnerabilities, attacking, and exploiting APIs. Transitioning to defensive techniques, the book equips you with effective methods to guard against common attacks. There are plenty of case studies peppered throughout the book to help you apply the techniques you’re learning in practice, complemented by in-depth insights and a wealth of best practices for building better APIs from the ground up. By the end of this book, you’ll have the expertise to develop secure APIs and test them against various cyber threats targeting APIs.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
1
Part 1: Foundations of API Security
6
Part 2: Attacking APIs
10
Part 3: Defending APIs

Summary

We covered a lot in this chapter and, hopefully, you have a sense of optimism about the benefits of a shift-left approach toward API security. By embracing a design-first approach, development teams can incorporate security and data directives into their design at the very outset. By leveraging the OpenAPI definition as the single source of truth, developers can drive their development processes using API auditing and testing tools. The main benefit of this contract-based approach is the positive security model—no longer guessing what bad data looks like, we only allow good data. A predictor of success in the driving of a modern API development process is the tight integration of tools into the CI/CD pipelines, allowing the complete automation of the build, test, and deployment processes. Many of the most common vulnerabilities in APIs can be easily detected automatically and eliminated entirely—this is the essence of the shift-left approach. Finally, incorporating...