Book Image

Penetration Testing Azure for Ethical Hackers

By : David Okeyode, Karl Fosaaen
Book Image

Penetration Testing Azure for Ethical Hackers

By: David Okeyode, Karl Fosaaen

Overview of this book

“If you’re looking for this book, you need it.” — 5* Amazon Review Curious about how safe Azure really is? Put your knowledge to work with this practical guide to penetration testing. This book offers a no-faff, hands-on approach to exploring Azure penetration testing methodologies, which will get up and running in no time with the help of real-world examples, scripts, and ready-to-use source code. As you learn about the Microsoft Azure platform and understand how hackers can attack resources hosted in the Azure cloud, you'll find out how to protect your environment by identifying vulnerabilities, along with extending your pentesting tools and capabilities. First, you’ll be taken through the prerequisites for pentesting Azure and shown how to set up a pentesting lab. You'll then simulate attacks on Azure assets such as web applications and virtual machines from anonymous and authenticated perspectives. In the later chapters, you'll learn about the opportunities for privilege escalation in Azure tenants and ways in which an attacker can create persistent access to an environment. By the end of this book, you'll be able to leverage your ethical hacking skills to identify and implement different tools and techniques to perform successful penetration tests on your own Azure infrastructure.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
1
Section 1: Understanding the Azure Platform and Architecture
5
Section 2: Authenticated Access to Azure

Attacking storage accounts

Azure storage accounts are the primary data storage solution in Azure. Other Azure services, such as App Service and Container Registry, rely on it for data storage in the backend. The solution itself offers five services that can be used to store different datasets, including unstructured application data objects (Azure Blob Storage), semi-structured application data in a NoSQL store (Azure Table Storage), managed file shares in the cloud (Azure Files), a messaging store for reliable messaging (Azure Queue Storage), and a data lake for big data workloads (Azure Data Lake Storage Gen2). As you can imagine, this service is a prime target for attackers! For our purposes in this chapter, we will focus on Azure Blob Storage and Azure Files:

Figure 6.6 – Azure Storage

The Contributor role has permissions to read and modify any configuration on the management plane of this service (except for assigning permissions to other users...