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Kali Linux - An Ethical Hacker's Cookbook

You're reading from   Kali Linux - An Ethical Hacker's Cookbook Practical recipes that combine strategies, attacks, and tools for advanced penetration testing

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789952308
Length 472 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Himanshu Sharma Himanshu Sharma
Author Profile Icon Himanshu Sharma
Himanshu Sharma
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Kali - An Introduction 2. Gathering Intel and Planning Attack Strategies FREE CHAPTER 3. Vulnerability Assessment - Poking for Holes 4. Web App Exploitation - Beyond OWASP Top 10 5. Network Exploitation 6. Wireless Attacks - Getting Past Aircrack-ng 7. Password Attacks - The Fault in Their Stars 8. Have Shell, Now What? 9. Buffer Overflows 10. Elementary, My Dear Watson - Digital Forensics 11. Playing with Software-Defined Radios 12. Kali in Your Pocket - NetHunters and Raspberries 13. Writing Reports 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

Zone Walking using DNSRecon

Zone Walking is a technique that is used by attackers to enumerate the full content of DNSSEC-signed DNS zones. We will cover more about it in later chapters; in this recipe, we will use DNSRecon.

Getting ready

DNSRecon is already included in Kali Linux, and we can use it for Zone Walking. Zone Walking is a technique used to find subdomains using domains whose NSEC records are set. However, before we jump into Zone Walking, let's take a quick look at the other features of this tool.

How to do it...

  1. To view the help, we type the following:
dnsrecon -h

The following screenshot shows the output of the preceding command:

  1. To do a simple recon of name servers, A records, SOA records, MX records, and so on, we can run the following command:
dnsrecon -d packtpub.com -n 8.8.8.8

The following screenshot shows the output of the preceding command:

  1. Now let's take an example of a domain that has NSEC records. To do a zone walk, we can simply run the following command:
dnsrecon -z -d icann.org -n 8.8.8.8

The following screenshot shows the output of the preceding command:

  1. We can do this manually by using the dig command along with dig +short NSEC domainname.com.
  2. The previous dig command will throw us one subdomain, and then we can rerun the same command with the subdomain we got in previous step to find the next subdomain: dig +short NSEC a.domain.com.

There's more...

When signing a zone, DNSSEC automatically chains all labels in alphabetical order using NSEC Resource Records. This is used to prove the absence of names.

For example, if someone requests the non-existent name name3, the name server responds with the NSEC entry name2 NSEC name5, indicating that no other entry exists between name2 and name5. We take advantage of that by starting with the first entry and then getting all domains by calling successive queries and getting other subdomains.

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