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Windows and Linux Penetration Testing from Scratch

You're reading from   Windows and Linux Penetration Testing from Scratch Harness the power of pen testing with Kali Linux for unbeatable hard-hitting results

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801815123
Length 510 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Phil Bramwell Phil Bramwell
Author Profile Icon Phil Bramwell
Phil Bramwell
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Table of Contents (23) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Recon and Exploitation
2. Chapter 1: Open Source Intelligence FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Bypassing Network Access Control 4. Chapter 3: Sniffing and Spoofing 5. Chapter 4: Windows Passwords on the Network 6. Chapter 5: Assessing Network Security 7. Chapter 6: Cryptography and the Penetration Tester 8. Chapter 7: Advanced Exploitation with Metasploit 9. Part 2: Vulnerability Fundamentals
10. Chapter 8: Python Fundamentals 11. Chapter 9: PowerShell Fundamentals 12. Chapter 10: Shellcoding - The Stack 13. Chapter 11: Shellcoding – Bypassing Protections 14. Chapter 12: Shellcoding – Evading Antivirus 15. Chapter 13: Windows Kernel Security 16. Chapter 14: Fuzzing Techniques 17. Part 3: Post-Exploitation
18. Chapter 15: Going Beyond the Foothold 19. Chapter 16: Escalating Privileges 20. Chapter 17: Maintaining Access 21. Answers 22. Other Books You May Enjoy

Getting hands-on with the return-to-PLT attack

I say this about a lot of topics, but the Procedure Linkage Table (PLT) and the Global Offset Table (GOT) are subjects that deserve their own book. However, we’ll try to run through a crash course to understand how we’re going to get around memory space randomization. Our executable is not a position-independent executable thanks to our -no-pie compilation configuration, so the actual location of global structures in the program wasn’t known at compile time. The GOT is literally a table of addresses used by the executable during runtime to convert PIE addresses into absolute ones. At runtime, our executable needs its shared libraries; these are loaded and linked using the dynamic linker during the bootstrapping process. That is when the GOT is updated.

Since the addresses are dynamically linked at runtime, the compiler doesn’t really know whether the addresses in our non-position-independent code will...

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