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Python: Penetration Testing for Developers

You're reading from   Python: Penetration Testing for Developers Execute effective tests to identify software vulnerabilities

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Product type Course
Published in Oct 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787128187
Length 650 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (6):
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Christopher Duffy Christopher Duffy
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Christopher Duffy
Mohit Raj Mohit Raj
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Mohit Raj
Dave Mound Dave Mound
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Dave Mound
Terry Ip Terry Ip
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Terry Ip
Cameron Buchanan Cameron Buchanan
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Cameron Buchanan
Andrew Mabbitt Andrew Mabbitt
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Andrew Mabbitt
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Table of Contents (32) Chapters Close

Python: Penetration Testing for Developers
Python: Penetration Testing for Developers
Credits
Preface
1. Understanding the Penetration Testing Methodology 2. The Basics of Python Scripting FREE CHAPTER 3. Identifying Targets with Nmap, Scapy, and Python 4. Executing Credential Attacks with Python 5. Exploiting Services with Python 6. Assessing Web Applications with Python 7. Cracking the Perimeter with Python 8. Exploit Development with Python, Metasploit, and Immunity 9. Automating Reports and Tasks with Python 10. Adding Permanency to Python Tools 11. Python with Penetration Testing and Networking 12. Scanning Pentesting 13. Sniffing and Penetration Testing 14. Wireless Pentesting 15. Foot Printing of a Web Server and a Web Application 16. Client-side and DDoS Attacks 17. Pentesting of SQLI and XSS 18. Gathering Open Source Intelligence 19. Enumeration 20. Vulnerability Identification 21. SQL Injection 22. Web Header Manipulation 23. Image Analysis and Manipulation 24. Encryption and Encoding 25. Payloads and Shells 26. Reporting Bibliography
Index

Brute forcing login through the Authorization header


Many websites use HTTP basic authentication to restrict access to content. This is especially prevalent in embedded devices such as routers. The Python requests library has built-in support for basic authentication, making an easy way to create an authentication brute force script.

Getting ready

Before creating this recipe, you're going to need a list of passwords to attempt to authenticate with. Create a local text file called passwords.txt, with each password on a new line. Check out Brute forcing passwords in Chapter 2, Enumeration, for password lists from online resources. Also, spend some time to scope out the target server as you're going to need to know how it responds to a failed login request, so that we can differentiate when the brute force works or not.

How to do it…

The following code will attempt to brute force entry to website through basic authentication:

import requests
from requests.auth import HTTPBasicAuth

with open('passwords...
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