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Burp Suite Cookbook

Burp Suite Cookbook

By : Dr. Sunny Wear
5 (7)
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Burp Suite Cookbook

Burp Suite Cookbook

5 (7)
By: Dr. Sunny Wear

Overview of this book

With its many features, easy-to-use interface, and flexibility, Burp Suite is the top choice for professionals looking to strengthen web application and API security. This book offers solutions to challenges related to identifying, testing, and exploiting vulnerabilities in web applications and APIs. It provides guidance on identifying security weaknesses in diverse environments by using different test cases. Once you’ve learned how to configure Burp Suite, the book will demonstrate the effective utilization of its tools, such as Live tasks, Scanner, Intruder, Repeater, and Decoder, enabling you to evaluate the security vulnerability of target applications. Additionally, you’ll explore various Burp extensions and the latest features of Burp Suite, including DOM Invader. By the end of this book, you’ll have acquired the skills needed to confidently use Burp Suite to conduct comprehensive security assessments of web applications and APIs.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
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Uploading malicious files – polyglots

Polyglot is a term defined as something that uses several languages. If we carry this concept into hacking, it means the creation of an attack vector by using different languages as execution points. For example, attackers can construct valid images and embed JavaScript. The placement of the JavaScript payload is usually in the comments section of an image. Once the image is loaded in a browser, the XSS content may execute, depending upon the strictness of the content type declared by the web server and the interpretation of the content type by the browser. In this recipe, we will use a polyglot to upload a webshell disguised as an image.

Getting ready

Using the OWASP WebGoat file upload functionality, we will write a small Java Server Pages (JSP) webshell and upload it to the application, disguised as an image.

We will use some popular source code for the JSP webshell and save it in a file called poly.jsp.

Ensure the owaspbwa...

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