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Web Penetration Testing with Kali Linux 2.0, Second Edition

Web Penetration Testing with Kali Linux 2.0, Second Edition

By : Juned Ahmed Ansari
4 (6)
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Web Penetration Testing with Kali Linux 2.0, Second Edition

Web Penetration Testing with Kali Linux 2.0, Second Edition

4 (6)
By: Juned Ahmed Ansari

Overview of this book

Kali Linux 2.0 is the new generation of the industry-leading BackTrack Linux penetration testing and security auditing Linux distribution. It contains several hundred tools aimed at various information security tasks such as penetration testing, forensics, and reverse engineering. At the beginning of the book, you will be introduced to the concepts of hacking and penetration testing and will get to know about the tools used in Kali Linux 2.0 that relate to web application hacking. Then, you will gain a deep understanding of SQL and command injection flaws and ways to exploit the flaws. Moving on, you will get to know more about scripting and input validation flaws, AJAX, and the security issues related to AJAX. At the end of the book, you will use an automated technique called fuzzing to be able to identify flaws in a web application. Finally, you will understand the web application vulnerabilities and the ways in which they can be exploited using the tools in Kali Linux 2.0.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
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5
5. Attacking the Server Using Injection-based Flaws
7
7. Attacking SSL-based Websites
11
Index

Web services

Web services are based on a service oriented architecture. Service-oriented architecture allows a service provider to easily integrate with the consumer of that service. Web services enable different applications to share data and functionality amongst themselves. It allows consumers over the internet to access data without the application knowing the format or the location of the data.

This becomes extremely critical when you don't want to expose the data model or the logic used to access the data but still want the data readily available for its consumers. An example would be a web service exposed by a stock exchange. Online brokers can use this web service to get real time information about the stocks and display them on their own websites for end users to buy. The broker website only needs to call the service and request the data for a company. When the service replies back with the data, the web application can parse the information and display it.

Web services are...

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