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AWS Penetration Testing

You're reading from   AWS Penetration Testing Beginner's guide to hacking AWS with tools such as Kali Linux, Metasploit, and Nmap

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839216923
Length 330 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Jonathan Helmus Jonathan Helmus
Author Profile Icon Jonathan Helmus
Jonathan Helmus
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Setting Up AWS and Pentesting Environments
2. Chapter 1: Building Your AWS Environment FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Pentesting and Ethical Hacking 4. Section 2: Pentesting the Cloud – Exploiting AWS
5. Chapter 3: Exploring Pentesting and AWS 6. Chapter 4: Exploiting S3 Buckets 7. Chapter 5: Understanding Vulnerable RDS Services 8. Chapter 6: Setting Up and Pentesting AWS Aurora RDS 9. Chapter 7: Assessing and Pentesting Lambda Services 10. Chapter 8: Assessing AWS API Gateway 11. Chapter 9: Real-Life Pentesting with Metasploit and More! 12. Section 3: Lessons Learned – Report Writing, Staying within Scope, and Continued Learning
13. Chapter 10: Pentesting Best Practices 14. Chapter 11: Staying Out of Trouble 15. Chapter 12: Other Projects with AWS 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Discovering SSH keys

SSH, or secure shell, is a common login service that various system administrators implement in their infrastructure. The fast and secure system makes the service ideal for security purposes, as well as "feasibility" due to its key-like infrastructure. The keys make authentication seamless, much like we did back in Chapter 1, Building Your AWS Environment, with the keys that we downloaded from our AWS instance. Those keys give us "the keys to the kingdom," so to speak, and allow us access to our AWS instances.

How the keys work

A private and public key must be made to use the service. When creating a key pair, a private key is generated and stored on the system. In this case, the keys are stored in our EC2 instances. Private keys are keys that should never be shared with anyone, ever. Recent years have shed light on private exposures and the damage they have caused companies.

Figure 3.6 – Public and private...

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