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Hands-On Penetration Testing with Kali NetHunter

You're reading from   Hands-On Penetration Testing with Kali NetHunter Spy on and protect vulnerable ecosystems using the power of Kali Linux for pentesting on the go

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2019
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781788995177
Length 302 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Sean-Philip Oriyano Sean-Philip Oriyano
Author Profile Icon Sean-Philip Oriyano
Sean-Philip Oriyano
Glen D. Singh Glen D. Singh
Author Profile Icon Glen D. Singh
Glen D. Singh
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Exploring Kali NetHunter FREE CHAPTER
2. Introduction to Kali NetHunter 3. Understanding the Phases of the Pentesting Process 4. Section 2: Common Pentesting Tasks and Tools
5. Intelligence-Gathering Tools 6. Scanning and Enumeration Tools 7. Penetrating the Target 8. Clearing Tracks and Removing Evidence from a Target 9. Section 3: Advanced Pentesting Tasks and Tools
10. Packet Sniffing and Traffic Analysis 11. Targeting Wireless Devices and Networks 12. Avoiding Detection 13. Hardening Techniques and Countermeasures 14. Building a Lab 15. Selecting a Kali Device and Hardware 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Scanning and Enumeration Tools

In this chapter, we will be discussing an overview and the techniques of scanning. If we recall from Chapter 2, Understanding the Phases of Pentesting Process, scanning is the second phase of hacking. What is scanning? It enables a penetration tester to identify devices that are online/live within a network, and identify open and closed services ports, service versions, and vulnerabilities; these are just a few of its benefits. Nmap and hping3 are a couple of well-known scanning tools.

Furthermore, penetration testers usually need to extract information to quickly identify the attack points on a target system. Information can be network shares, routing tables from devices, users and groups, and DNS records. This way of extracting information is known as enumeration. A couple of powerful and simple-to-use tools for enumeration are nbtstat...

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