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Secure Software Development

You're reading from   Secure Software Development Learn to analyze and mitigate risks in your software projects

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835462836
Length 262 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Aspen Olmsted Aspen Olmsted
Author Profile Icon Aspen Olmsted
Aspen Olmsted
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Modeling a Secure Application FREE CHAPTER
2. Chapter 1: Security Principles 3. Chapter 2: Designing a Secure Functional Model 4. Chapter 3: Designing a Secure Object Model 5. Chapter 4: Designing a Secure Dynamic Model 6. Chapter 5: Designing a Secure System Model 7. Chapter 6: Threat Modeling 8. Part 2: Mitigating Risks in Implementation
9. Chapter 7: Authentication and Authorization 10. Chapter 8: Input Validation and Sanitization 11. Chapter 9: Standard Web Application Vulnerabilities 12. Chapter 10: Database Security 13. Part 3: Security Validation
14. Chapter 11: Unit Testing 15. Chapter 12: Regression Testing 16. Chapter 13: Integration, System, and Acceptance Testing 17. Chapter 14: Software Penetration Testing 18. Index 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

An example of enterprise threat model

Throughout this book, we will build a secure design for an event ticketing system. Envision a software system that allows a box office or a website to sell tickets to a famous musical concert or theatre event. We will demonstrate unit tests in three languages, PHP, Java, and Python, to test the Person class from our object model. This chapter will test a single method, but all methods with interesting behavior should have unit tests written. If you remember from our object, the create_login method takes in a password. We want to ensure the password has a length of eight characters or greater, uses both uppercase and lowercase characters, and has at least one symbol.

Note:

Naming conventions and consistency are important to improve software quality. We are using an example across many programming languages. In some languages, create_login should be written as createLogin to maintain language convention. You will see this later in the JUnit...

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