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Pentesting APIs

You're reading from   Pentesting APIs A practical guide to discovering, fingerprinting, and exploiting APIs

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837633166
Length 290 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Maurício Harley Maurício Harley
Author Profile Icon Maurício Harley
Maurício Harley
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Introduction to API Security
2. Chapter 1: Understanding APIs and their Security Landscape FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Setting Up the Penetration Testing Environment 4. Part 2: API Information Gathering and AuthN/AuthZ Testing
5. Chapter 3: API Reconnaissance and Information Gathering 6. Chapter 4: Authentication and Authorization Testing 7. Part 3: API Basic Attacks
8. Chapter 5: Injection Attacks and Validation Testing 9. Chapter 6: Error Handling and Exception Testing 10. Chapter 7: Denial of Service and Rate-Limiting Testing 11. Part 4: API Advanced Topics
12. Chapter 8: Data Exposure and Sensitive Information Leakage 13. Chapter 9: API Abuse and Business Logic Testing 14. Part 5: API Security Best Practices
15. Chapter 10: Secure Coding Practices for APIs 16. Index 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Leveraging error responses for information disclosure

Cool! So, you’ve learned how to identify error codes and messages and you’ve practiced this with a generic API endpoint. It’s now time for you to learn what you can do with the answers you will receive from the requests you are making toward such endpoints. They can be quite revealing. And sometimes, we don’t even need to send pernicious payloads to cause them to fail. Sysadmins and developers may change configurations or parameters based on changes or new application releases, and the new scenarios can cause the API to stop working.

You will see a couple of generic figures in the following sections that show real web applications’ error messages. Observe that in at least one of them, the application simply discloses the versions of both .NET Framework and ASP.NET. This is embarrassing. In this specific case, some changes to a web.config file could suppress that specific line. Likewise, lacking...

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