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Hands-On Application Penetration Testing with Burp Suite

You're reading from   Hands-On Application Penetration Testing with Burp Suite Use Burp Suite and its features to inspect, detect, and exploit security vulnerabilities in your web applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788994064
Length 366 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Dhruv Shah Dhruv Shah
Author Profile Icon Dhruv Shah
Dhruv Shah
Riyaz Ahemed Walikar Riyaz Ahemed Walikar
Author Profile Icon Riyaz Ahemed Walikar
Riyaz Ahemed Walikar
Carlos A. Lozano Carlos A. Lozano
Author Profile Icon Carlos A. Lozano
Carlos A. Lozano
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Configuring Burp Suite FREE CHAPTER 2. Configuring the Client and Setting Up Mobile Devices 3. Executing an Application Penetration Test 4. Exploring the Stages of an Application Penetration Test 5. Preparing for an Application Penetration Test 6. Identifying Vulnerabilities Using Burp Suite 7. Detecting Vulnerabilities Using Burp Suite 8. Exploiting Vulnerabilities Using Burp Suite - Part 1 9. Exploiting Vulnerabilities Using Burp Suite - Part 2 10. Writing Burp Suite Extensions 11. Breaking the Authentication for a Large Online Retailer 12. Exploiting and Exfiltrating Data from a Large Shipping Corporation 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Detecting insecure deserialization


Deserialization is the process of passing some type of data to other data, to be managed by the application, for example, passing a JSON format request that is parsed and managed as XML by the application. Also, there are deserialization vulnerabilities where the technology used in the development is involved. These vulnerabilities pass resources of a certain type to binary objects.

To understand the vulnerability, review the next snippet of code, published in the CVE.2011-2092:

[RemoteClass(alias="javax.swing.JFrame")] 
public class JFrame { 
   public var title:String = "Gotcha!"; 
   public var defaultCloseOperation:int = 3; 
   public var visible:Boolean = true; 
} 

This code is the class definition of a data type called JFrame. In the next snippet of code, we can see how it is used:

InputStream is = request.getInputStream(); 
ObjectInputStream ois = new ObjectInputStream(is); 
AcmeObject acme = (AcmeObject)ois.readObject(); 

The issue is that any kind of...

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