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Hands-On Web Penetration Testing with Metasploit

You're reading from   Hands-On Web Penetration Testing with Metasploit The subtle art of using Metasploit 5.0 for web application exploitation

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789953527
Length 544 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Harpreet Singh Harpreet Singh
Author Profile Icon Harpreet Singh
Harpreet Singh
Himanshu Sharma Himanshu Sharma
Author Profile Icon Himanshu Sharma
Himanshu Sharma
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Toc

Table of Contents (23) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction
2. Introduction to Web Application Penetration Testing FREE CHAPTER 3. Metasploit Essentials 4. The Metasploit Web Interface 5. The Pentesting Life Cycle with Metasploit
6. Using Metasploit for Reconnaissance 7. Web Application Enumeration Using Metasploit 8. Vulnerability Scanning Using WMAP 9. Vulnerability Assessment Using Metasploit (Nessus) 10. Pentesting Content Management Systems (CMSes)
11. Pentesting CMSes - WordPress 12. Pentesting CMSes - Joomla 13. Pentesting CMSes - Drupal 14. Performing Pentesting on Technological Platforms
15. Penetration Testing on Technological Platforms - JBoss 16. Penetration Testing on Technological Platforms - Apache Tomcat 17. Penetration Testing on Technological Platforms - Jenkins 18. Logical Bug Hunting
19. Web Application Fuzzing - Logical Bug Hunting 20. Writing Penetration Testing Reports 21. Assessment 22. Other Books You May Enjoy

Chapter 12

  1. You can identify them by using Shodan, ZoomEye, Censys.io, and similar services. You can also identify them by performing port scans and service enumeration. Sometimes, the Tomcat service won't be running on a common port (such as 80, 443, 8080, and so on). In that case, perform a full port scan and identify the service through the server response.

  2. Not necessarily. The Release-Notes.txt and Changelog.html files are only available on the default installation. If the server administrator has removed these files, you need to look for other ways (mentioned in this chapter) to detect and identify the Apache Tomcat instance.

  3. This generally happens when an anti-virus program detects the JSP web shell. To bypass such security measures, you can obfuscate the web shell.

  4. In OOB-based OGNL injections, there are two ways that you can exploit this vulnerability—...

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