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Hands-On AWS Penetration Testing with Kali Linux

You're reading from   Hands-On AWS Penetration Testing with Kali Linux Set up a virtual lab and pentest major AWS services, including EC2, S3, Lambda, and CloudFormation

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789136722
Length 508 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Authors (2):
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Benjamin Caudill Benjamin Caudill
Author Profile Icon Benjamin Caudill
Benjamin Caudill
Karl Gilbert Gupta Karl Gilbert Gupta
Author Profile Icon Karl Gilbert Gupta
Karl Gilbert Gupta
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Toc

Table of Contents (28) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Kali Linux on AWS FREE CHAPTER
2. Setting Up a Pentesting Lab on AWS 3. Setting Up a Kali PentestBox on the Cloud 4. Exploitation on the Cloud using Kali Linux 5. Section 2: Pentesting AWS Elastic Compute Cloud Configuring and Securing
6. Setting Up Your First EC2 Instances 7. Penetration Testing of EC2 Instances using Kali Linux 8. Elastic Block Stores and Snapshots - Retrieving Deleted Data 9. Section 3: Pentesting AWS Simple Storage Service Configuring and Securing
10. Reconnaissance - Identifying Vulnerable S3 Buckets 11. Exploiting Permissive S3 Buckets for Fun and Profit 12. Section 4: AWS Identity Access Management Configuring and Securing
13. Identity Access Management on AWS 14. Privilege Escalation of AWS Accounts Using Stolen Keys, Boto3, and Pacu 15. Using Boto3 and Pacu to Maintain AWS Persistence 16. Section 5: Penetration Testing on Other AWS Services
17. Security and Pentesting of AWS Lambda 18. Pentesting and Securing AWS RDS 19. Targeting Other Services 20. Section 6: Attacking AWS Logging and Security Services
21. Pentesting CloudTrail 22. GuardDuty 23. Section 7: Leveraging AWS Pentesting Tools for Real-World Attacks
24. Using Scout Suite for AWS Security Auditing 25. Using Pacu for AWS Pentesting 26. Putting it All Together - Real - World AWS Pentesting 27. Other Books You May Enjoy

An introduction to GuardDuty and its findings

GuardDuty is a continuous monitoring service offered by AWS that identifies and alerts about suspicious or unwanted behavior within an account. There are currently three data sources that it analyzes, which are virtual private cloud (VPC) flow logs, CloudTrail event logs, and domain name system (DNS) logs. Note that VPC flow logging and CloudTrail event logging do not need to be enabled on your account for GuardDuty to use them, and there is currently no way to review DNS logs in AWS. This means that even if there are no flow logs active in the environment and CloudTrail is disabled, GuardDuty will still generate findings from VPC flow logs, CloudTrail event logs, and DNS logs.

It is also important to note that GuardDuty can only ingest DNS logs if the requests are routed through AWS DNS resolvers, which is the default for EC2 instances...

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