Search icon CANCEL
Subscription
0
Cart icon
Your Cart (0 item)
Close icon
You have no products in your basket yet
Arrow left icon
Explore Products
Best Sellers
New Releases
Books
Videos
Audiobooks
Learning Hub
Free Learning
Arrow right icon
Arrow up icon
GO TO TOP
Mastering Kali Linux for Web Penetration Testing

You're reading from   Mastering Kali Linux for Web Penetration Testing The ultimate defense against complex organized threats and attacks

Arrow left icon
Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781784395070
Length 338 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Arrow right icon
Author (1):
Arrow left icon
Michael McPhee Michael McPhee
Author Profile Icon Michael McPhee
Michael McPhee
Arrow right icon
View More author details
Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Common Web Applications and Architectures FREE CHAPTER 2. Guidelines for Preparation and Testing 3. Stalking Prey Through Target Recon 4. Scanning for Vulnerabilities with Arachni 5. Proxy Operations with OWASP ZAP and Burp Suite 6. Infiltrating Sessions via Cross-Site Scripting 7. Injection and Overflow Testing 8. Exploiting Trust Through Cryptography Testing 9. Stress Testing Authentication and Session Management 10. Launching Client-Side Attacks 11. Breaking the Application Logic 12. Educating the Customer and Finishing Up

Common architectures

Web applications have evolved greatly over the last 15 years, emerging from their early monolithic designs to segmented approaches, which in more professionally deployed instances dominate the market now. They have also seen a shift in how these elements of architecture are hosted, from purely on-premise servers, to virtualized instances, to now pure or hybrid cloud deployments. We should also understand that the clients' role in this architecture can vary greatly. This evolution has improved scale and availability, but the additional complexity and variability involved can work against less diligent developers and operators.

The overall web application's architecture maybe physically, logically, or functionally segmented. These types of segmentation may occur in combinations; with the cross-application integration so prevalent in enterprises, it is likely that these boundaries or characteristics are always in a state of transition. This segmentation serves to improve scalability and modularity, split management domains to match the personnel or team structure, increase availability, and can also offer some much-needed segmentation to assist in the event of a compromise. The degree to which this modularity occurs and how the functions are divided logically and physically is greatly dependent on the framework that is used.

Let's discuss some of the more commonly used logical models as well as some of the standout frameworks that these models are implemented on.

Standalone models

Most small or ad hoc web applications at some point or another were hosted on a physical or virtual server and within a single monolithic installation, and this is commonly encountered in simpler self-hosted applications such as a small or medium business web page, inventory service, ticketing systems, and so on. As these applications or their associated databases grow, it becomes necessary to separate the components or modules to better support the scale and integrate with adjacent applications and data stores.

These applications tend to use commonly available turnkey web frameworks such as Drupal, WordPress, Joomla!, Django, or a multitude of other frameworks, each of which includes a content delivery manager and language platform (for example Java, PHP: Hypertext Pre-Processor (PHP), Active Server Pages (ASP.NET), and so on), generated content in Hyper Text Markup Language (HTML), and a database type or types they support (various Server Query Languages (SQLs), Oracle, IBM DB2, or even flat files and Microsoft Access databases). Available as a single image or install medium, all functions reside within the same operating system and memory space. The platform and database combinations selected for this model are often more a question of developer competencies and preferences than anything else. Social engineering and open source information gathering on the responsible teams will certainly assist in characterizing the architecture of the web application.

A simple single-tier or standalone architecture is shown here in the following figure:

The standalone architecture was the first encountered historically, and often a first step in any application's evolution.

Three-tier models

Conceptually, the three-tier design is still used as a reference model, even if most applications have migrated to other topologies or have yet to evolve from a standalone implementation. While many applications now stray from this classic model, we still find it useful for understanding the basic facilities needed for real-world applications. We call it a three-tier model but it also assumes a fourth unnamed component: the client.

The three tiers include the web tier (or front end), the application tier, and the database tier, as seen here: in the following figure:

The Three Tier Architecture provides greater scalability and specialization that modern enterprise applications require.

The role of each tier is important to consider:

  • Web or Presentation Tier/Server/Front End: This module provides the User Interface (UI), authentication and authorization, scaling provisions to accommodate the large number of users, high availability features (to handle load shifting, content caching, and fault tolerance), and any software service that must be provisioned for the client or is used to communicate with the client. HTML, eXtensible Markup Language (XML), Asynchronous JavaScript And XML (AJAX), Common Style Sheets (CSS), JavaScript, Flash, other presented content, and UI components all reside in this tier, which is commonly hosted by Apache, IBM WebSphere, or Microsoft IIS. In effect, this tier is what the users see through their browser and interact with to request and receive their desired outcomes.
  • Application or Business Tier/Server: This is the engine of the web application. Requests fielded by the web tier are acted upon here, and this is where business logic, processes, or algorithms reside. This tier also acts as a bridge module to multiple databases or even other applications, either within the same organization or with trusted third parties. C/C++, Java, Ruby, and PHP are usually the languages used to do the heavy lifting and turn raw data from the database tier into the information that the web tier presents to the client.
  • The Database Tier/Server: Massive amounts of data of all forms is stored in specialized systems called databases. These troves of information are arranged so they can be quickly accessed but continually scaled. Classic SQL implementations such as MySQL and ProstgreSQL, Redis, CouchDB, Oracle, and others are common for storing the data, along with a large variety of abstraction tools helping to organize and access that data. At the higher end of data collection and processing, there are a growing number of superscalar database architectures that involve Not Only SQL (NoSQL), which is coupled with database abstraction software such as Hadoop. These are commonly found in anything that claims to be Big Data or Data Analytics, such as Facebook, Google, NASA, and so on.
  • The Client: All of the three tiers need an audience, and the client (more specifically, their browser) is where users access the application and interact. The browser and its plugin software modules support the web tier in presenting the information as intended by the application developers.

The vendor takes this model and modifies it to accentuate their strengths or more closely convey their strategies. Both Oracle's and Microsoft's reference web application architectures, for instance, combine the web and application tiers into a single tier, but Oracle calls attention to its strength on the database side of things, whereas Microsoft expends considerable effort expanding on its list of complementary services that can add value to the customer (and revenue for Microsoft) to include load balancing, authentication services, and ties to its own operating systems on a majority of clients worldwide.

Model-View-Controller design

The Model-View-Controller (MVC) design is a functional model that guides the separation of information and exposure, and to some degree, also addresses the privileges of the stakeholder users through role separation. This allows the application to keep users and their inputs from intermingling with the back-end business processes, logic, and transactions that can expose earlier architectures to data leakage. The MVC design approach was actually created by thick-application software developers and is not a logical separation of services and components but rather a role-based separation. Now that web applications commonly have to scale while tracking and enforcing roles, web application developers have adapted it to their use. MVC designs also facilitate code reuse and parallel module development.

An MVC design can be seen in following figure:

The Model-View-Controller design focuses on roles, not functions, and is often combined with a functional architecture.

In the MVC design, the four components are as follows:

  • Model: The model maintains and updates data objects as the source of truth for the application, possessing the rules, logic, and patterns that make the application valuable. It has no knowledge of the user, but rather receives calls from the controller to process commands against its own data objects and returns its results to both the controller and the view. Another way to look at it is that the Model determines the behavior of the application.
  • View: The view is responsible for presenting the information to the user, and so, it is responsible for the content delivery and responses: taking feedback from the controller and results from the model. It frames the interface that the user views and interacts with. The view is where the user sees the application work.
  • Controller: The controller acts as the central link between the view and model; in receiving input from the view's user interface, the Controller translates these input calls to requests that the model acts on. These requests can update the Model and act on the user's intent or update the View presented to the user. The controller is what makes the application interactive, allowing the outside world to stimulate the model and alter the view.
  • User: As in the other earlier models, the user is an inferred component of the design; and indeed, the entire design will revolve around how to allow the application to deliver value to the customer.

Notice that in the MVC model, there is very little detail given about software modules, and this is intentional. By focusing on the roles and separation of duties, software (and now, web) developers were free to create their own platform and architecture while using MVC as a guide for role-based segmentation. Contrast this with the standalone or 3-tier models break down the operation of an application, and we'll see that they are thinking about the same thing in very different ways.

One thing MVC does instill is a sense of statefulness, meaning that the application needs to track session information for continuity. This continuity drove the need for HTTP cookies and tokens to track sessions, which are in themselves something our app developers should now find ways to secure. Heavy use of application programming interfaces (APIs) also mean that there is now a larger attack surface. If the application is only presenting a small portion of data stored within the database tier, or that information should be more selectively populated to avoid leaks by maintaining too much information within the model that can be accessed when misconfigured or breached. In these cases, MVC is often shunned as a methodology because it can be difficult to manage data exposure within it.

It should be noted that the MVC design approach can be combined with physical or logical models of functions; in fact, platforms that use some MVC design principles power the majority of today's web applications.

You have been reading a chapter from
Mastering Kali Linux for Web Penetration Testing
Published in: Jun 2017
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781784395070
Register for a free Packt account to unlock a world of extra content!
A free Packt account unlocks extra newsletters, articles, discounted offers, and much more. Start advancing your knowledge today.
Unlock this book and the full library FREE for 7 days
Get unlimited access to 7000+ expert-authored eBooks and videos courses covering every tech area you can think of
Renews at $19.99/month. Cancel anytime
Banner background image