Book Image

Learn Penetration Testing

By : Rishalin Pillay
Book Image

Learn Penetration Testing

By: Rishalin Pillay

Overview of this book

Sending information via the internet is not entirely private, as evidenced by the rise in hacking, malware attacks, and security threats. With the help of this book, you'll learn crucial penetration testing techniques to help you evaluate enterprise defenses. You'll start by understanding each stage of pentesting and deploying target virtual machines, including Linux and Windows. Next, the book will guide you through performing intermediate penetration testing in a controlled environment. With the help of practical use cases, you'll also be able to implement your learning in real-world scenarios. By studying everything from setting up your lab, information gathering and password attacks, through to social engineering and post exploitation, you'll be able to successfully overcome security threats. The book will even help you leverage the best tools, such as Kali Linux, Metasploit, Burp Suite, and other open source pentesting tools to perform these techniques. Toward the later chapters, you'll focus on best practices to quickly resolve security threats. By the end of this book, you'll be well versed with various penetration testing techniques so as to be able to tackle security threats effectively
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: The Basics
4
Section 2: Exploitation
12
Section 3: Post Exploitation
16
Section 4: Putting It All Together

Creating virtual machines in VMware, Hyper-V, and VirtualBox

Leveraging a hypervisor enables you to build your lab environment with minimal hardware costs. Any decent laptop or desktop these days is able to run hypervisor software. When you use your hypervisor of choice, make sure that you configure the virtual networks appropriately. For example, if you require your VMs to be isolated, then you would use host only. If you require your virtual machine to have internet access, you could use network address translation or bridged networking. The difference between network address translation and bridged networking is that, with bridged networking, your virtual machine will obtain its own IP address, whereas with network address translation, your virtual machine will leverage your hosts, IP address to communicate externally.

Note that the options might differ between the different...