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Hands-On Penetration Testing on Windows

You're reading from   Hands-On Penetration Testing on Windows Unleash Kali Linux, PowerShell, and Windows debugging tools for security testing and analysis

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788295666
Length 452 pages
Edition 1st 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 (19) Chapters Close

1. Bypassing Network Access Control FREE CHAPTER 2. Sniffing and Spoofing 3. Windows Passwords on the Network 4. Advanced Network Attacks 5. Cryptography and the Penetration Tester 6. Advanced Exploitation with Metasploit 7. Stack and Heap Memory Management 8. Windows Kernel Security 9. Weaponizing Python 10. Windows Shellcoding 11. Bypassing Protections with ROP 12. Fuzzing Techniques 13. Going Beyond the Foothold 14. Taking PowerShell to the Next Level 15. Escalating Privileges 16. Maintaining Access 17. Tips and Tricks 18. Assessment 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Introducing shellcoding


If you played around with the last example in the previous section, you should have seen that execution tried to jump to 0xdeadbeef. (We used deadbeef because it's one of the few things you can say with hexadecimal characters. Besides, doesn't it look like some sort of scary hacker moniker?) The point of this is to demonstrate that, by choosing input carefully, you are able to control the return address. This means we can also pass shellcode as an argument and pad it to just the right size necessary to concatenate a return address to a payload, which will then return and result in its execution. This is essentially the heart of the stack overflow attack. However, as you can imagine, the return needs to point to a nice spot in memory. Before we tackle that, let's get our hands on some bytes slightly more exciting than deadbeef.

Instead of generating the payload and passing it to some file that will be input to Metasploit or Shellter, we actually want to get our hands...

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