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How to Break Web Software: Functional and Security Testing of Web Applications and Web Services View Larger Image | Mike Andrews, James Whittaker Addison-Wesley, Paperback, Bk&CD edition, Published February 2006, 208 pages, ISBN 0321369440 | List Price: $34.99 Our Price: $18.95 You Save: $16.04 (46% Off)
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Read an excerpt:
Chapter 4: State-Based Attacks
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"The techniques in this book are
not an option for testers -- they are mandatory and these are the guys to
tell you how to apply them!"
-- Harry Robinson, Google.
Rigorously test and improve
the security of all your Web software!
It's as certain as death and
taxes: hackers will mercilessly attack your Web sites, applications, and
services. If you're vulnerable, you'd better discover these attacks
yourself, before the black hats do. Now, there's a definitive, hands-on
guide to security-testing any Web-based software: How to Break Web Software.
In this book, two renowned experts
address every category of Web software exploit: attacks on clients, servers,
state, user inputs, and more. You'll master powerful attack tools and
techniques as you uncover dozens of crucial, widely exploited flaws in Web
architecture and coding. The authors reveal where to look for potential
threats and attack vectors, how to rigorously test for each of them, and
how to mitigate the problems you find. Coverage includes
Client vulnerabilities, including attacks on client-side validation
State-based attacks: hidden fields, CGI parameters, cookie poisoning, URL
jumping, and session hijacking
Attacks on user-supplied inputs: cross-site scripting, SQL injection, and
directory traversal
Language- and technology-based attacks: buffer overflows, canonicalization,
and NULL string attacks
Server attacks: SQL Injection with stored procedures, command injection,
and server fingerprinting
Cryptography, privacy, and attacks on Web services
Your Web software is mission-critical
-- it can't be compromised. Whether you're a developer, tester, QA specialist,
or IT manager, this book will help you protect that software'systematically.
Companion CD contains full source
code for one testing tool you can modify and extend, free Web security testing
tools, and complete code from a flawed Web site designed to give you hands-on
practice in identifying security holes.
Table of Contents
Preface vii
Acknowledgments ix
About the Authors xi
Chapter 1: The Web Is Different
1
Chapter 2: Gathering Information
on the Target 11
Chapter 3: Attacking the Client
29
Chapter 4: State-Based Attacks
41
Chapter 5: Attacking User-Supplied
Input Data 65
Chapter 6: Language-Based Attacks
85
Chapter 7: Attacking the Server
99
Chapter 8: Authentication
115
Chapter 9: Privacy 135
Chapter 10: Web Services
149
Appendix A: Fifty Years of Software:
Key Principles for Quality 159
Appendix B: Flowershop Bugs
171
Appendix C: Tools 179
Index 207
About the Authors
Mike Andrews is a senior consultant at Foundstone who specializes
in software security and leads the Web application security assessments and
Ultimate Web Hacking classes. He brings with him a wealth of commercial and
educational experience from both sides of the Atlantic and is a widely published
author and speaker.
Before joining Foundstone, Mike was a freelance consultant and developer of
Web-based information systems, working with clients such as The Economist,
the London transport authority, and various United Kingdom universities. In
2002, after being an instructor and researcher for a number of years, Mike joined
the Florida Institute of Technology as an assistant professor, where he was
responsible for research projects and independent security reviews for the Office
of Naval Research, Air Force Research Labs, and Microsoft Corporation.
Mike holds a Ph.D. in computer science from the University of Kent at Canterbury
in the United Kingdom, where his focus was on debugging tools and programmer
psychology.
James A. Whittaker is a professor
of computer science at the Florida Institute of Technology (Florida Tech) and
is founder of Security Innovation. In 1992, he earned his Ph.D. in computer
science from the University of Tennessee. His research interests are software
testing, software security, software vulnerability testing, and anticyber warfare
technology. James is the author of How to Break Software (Addison-Wesley,
2002) and coauthor (with Hugh Thompson) of How to Break Software Security
(Addison-Wesley, 2003), and over fifty peer-reviewed papers on software
development and computer security. He holds patents on various inventions in
software testing and defensive security applications and has attracted millions
in funding, sponsorship, and license agreements while a professor at Florida
Tech. He has also served as a testing and security consultant for Microsoft,
IBM, Rational, and many other United States companies.
In 2001, James was appointed to Microsoft's
Trustworthy Computing Academic Advisory Board and was named a "Top Scholar"
by the editors of the Journal of Systems and Software, based on his research
publications in software engineering. His research team at Florida Tech is known
for its testing technologies and tools, which include the highly acclaimed runtime
fault injection tool Holodeck. His research group is also well known
for their development of exploits against software security, including cracking
encryption, passwords and infiltrating protected networks via novel attacks
against software defenses.
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