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Hands-On Bug Hunting for Penetration Testers

You're reading from   Hands-On Bug Hunting for Penetration Testers A practical guide to help ethical hackers discover web application security flaws

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789344202
Length 250 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Himanshu Sharma Himanshu Sharma
Author Profile Icon Himanshu Sharma
Himanshu Sharma
Joe Marshall Joe Marshall
Author Profile Icon Joe Marshall
Joe Marshall
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Joining the Hunt FREE CHAPTER 2. Choosing Your Hunting Ground 3. Preparing for an Engagement 4. Unsanitized Data – An XSS Case Study 5. SQL, Code Injection, and Scanners 6. CSRF and Insecure Session Authentication 7. Detecting XML External Entities 8. Access Control and Security Through Obscurity 9. Framework and Application-Specific Vulnerabilities 10. Formatting Your Report 11. Other Tools 12. Other (Out of Scope) Vulnerabilities 13. Going Further 14. Assessment 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Technical Requirements

For this chapter, we'll be using Burp Suite and its hidden content features, as well as Chrome (66.0.3359.139). We'll also be using WebGoat, an intentionally vulnerable app created by OWASP that you can download and practice against.

Please clone or download the repository to your local system (https://github.com/WebGoat/WebGoat).

There are several ways you can set up WebGoat. You can download and run it as a jar executable (as we've been doing with Burp Suite), you can download a Docker image, or you can build it directly from source. Although using jvm to manage Java dependencies works for Burp, I prefer to use Docker when it's available, since there's so much great tooling around it.

There is one concern: if you're running the Burp Suite proxy and using the default proxy ports (localhost:8080), you'll need to make sure...

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