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Practical Hardware Pentesting

You're reading from   Practical Hardware Pentesting A guide to attacking embedded systems and protecting them against the most common hardware attacks

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789619133
Length 382 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Jean-Georges Valle Jean-Georges Valle
Author Profile Icon Jean-Georges Valle
Jean-Georges Valle
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Getting to Know the Hardware
2. Chapter 1: Setting Up Your Pentesting Lab and Ensuring Lab Safety FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Understanding Your Target 4. Chapter 3: Identifying the Components of Your Target 5. Chapter 4: Approaching and Planning the Test 6. Section 2: Attacking the Hardware
7. Chapter 5: Our Main Attack Platform 8. Chapter 6: Sniffing and Attacking the Most Common Protocols 9. Chapter 7: Extracting and Manipulating Onboard Storage 10. Chapter 8: Attacking Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and BLE 11. Chapter 9: Software-Defined Radio Attacks 12. Section 3: Attacking the Software
13. Chapter 10: Accessing the Debug Interfaces 14. Chapter 11: Static Reverse Engineering and Analysis 15. Chapter 12: Dynamic Reverse Engineering 16. Chapter 13: Scoring and Reporting Your Vulnerabilities 17. Chapter 14: Wrapping It Up – Mitigations and Good Practices 18. Assessments 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Analyzing firmware – introduction to Ghidra

Ghidra is an open source tool that will allow you to reverse engineer executables on a lot of different CPU architectures for free. It also gives you a very nice feature when you compare it to the most popular proprietary tool: C decompilation for free.

Its main proprietary competitor (IDA Pro) is very popular in the security community but is extremely expensive and, all in all, only has one feature that Ghidra lacks: native debugger integration (Ghidra support some level of integration with the usual debuggers with external bridges). Given the extremely high license costs involved in IDA (this can be explained, but I will not enter into this debate here), I have chosen to use Ghidra in this book for you to be able to use a modern reverse engineering software suite.

I use IDA at work and Ghidra in my free time. Both are very good but Ghidra is open source.

Getting to know Ghidra with a very simple ARM Linux executable

The...

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