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Bash Shell Scripting for Pentesters

You're reading from   Bash Shell Scripting for Pentesters Master the art of command-line exploitation and enhance your penetration testing workflows

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835880821
Length 402 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Steve Campbell Steve Campbell
Author Profile Icon Steve Campbell
Steve Campbell
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Getting Started with Bash Shell Scripting
2. Chapter 1: Bash Command-Line and Its Hacking Environment FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: File and Directory Management 4. Chapter 3: Variables, Conditionals, Loops, and Arrays 5. Chapter 4: Regular Expressions 6. Chapter 5: Functions and Script Organization 7. Chapter 6: Bash Networking 8. Chapter 7: Parallel Processing 9. Part 2: Bash Scripting for Pentesting
10. Chapter 8: Reconnaissance and Information Gathering 11. Chapter 9: Web Application Pentesting with Bash 12. Chapter 10: Network and Infrastructure Pentesting with Bash 13. Chapter 11: Privilege Escalation in the Bash Shell 14. Chapter 12: Persistence and Pivoting 15. Chapter 13: Pentest Reporting with Bash 16. Part 3: Advanced Applications of Bash Scripting for Pentesting
17. Chapter 14: Evasion and Obfuscation 18. Chapter 15: Interfacing with Artificial Intelligence 19. Chapter 16: DevSecOps for Pentesters 20. Index 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Advanced regex patterns and techniques

In regex, using capture groups is like putting a part of your pattern into a box. Everything inside this box is treated as a single unit. You can apply quantifiers to it, look for repetitions, or even extract information from it. In Bash, you use parentheses, (), to create these groups.

Grouping isn’t just about treating parts of your pattern as a single unit; it’s also about capturing information. When you group part of a regex pattern, Bash remembers what text matched that part of the pattern. This is incredibly useful for extracting information from strings.

Let’s say you’re working with log files and you want to extract timestamps. Your log lines might look something like this: 2023-04-01 12:00:00 Error: Something went wrong. A regex pattern to match the timestamp could be (\d{4}-\d{2}-\d{2} \d{2}:\d{2}:\d{2}). Here, \d matches any digit, and {n} specifies how many times that element should repeat. The entire...

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