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

Chapter 7: Exploiting Owner and Privileged Azure AD Role Permissions

In the first chapter of this book, we made a distinction between the Azure AD roles and the Azure RBAC roles. We mentioned that Azure AD roles are used to manage access to Azure AD resources and operations, such as user accounts or group creation, and password resets, while Azure RBAC roles are used to manage access to Azure resources such as subscriptions, storage accounts, and SQL databases. For the most part, both services have separate scope boundaries. In general, an Azure AD role assignment does not grant access to manage Azure resources and an Azure RBAC role assignment does not grant access to manage Azure AD resources.

Bridging the gap from subscription Owner up to the root management group, or an Azure AD administrative role, or to on-premises targets, can be a difficult task. Likewise, moving laterally from Azure AD to Azure subscription resources could be tricky. In this chapter, we will focus on different...