Detaillierter Kursinhalt
DAY 1
Cyber security basics
- What is security?
- Threat and risk
- Cyber security threat types
- Consequences of insecure software
The OWASP Top Ten
- OWASP Top 10 – 2017
- A1 – Injection
- Injection principles
- Injection attacks
- SQL injection
- SQL injection basics
- Lab – SQL injection
- Attack techniques
- Content-based blind SQL injection
- Time-based blind SQL injection
- SQL injection best practices
- Input validation
- Parameterized queries
- Additional considerations
- Lab – Using prepared statements
- Case study – Hacking Fortnite accounts
- Testing for SQL injection
- Code injection
- OS command injection
- OS command injection best practices
- Using Runtime.exec()
- Using ProcessBuilder
- Case study – Shellshock
- Lab – Shellshock
- Case study – Command injection via ping
- Testing for command injection
- Script injection
- OS command injection
- General protection best practices
- A2 – Broken Authentication
- Authentication basics
- Multi-factor authentication
- Authentication weaknesses – spoofing
- Spoofing on the Web
- Testing for weak authentication
- Case study – PayPal 2FA bypass
- Password management
- Inbound password management
- Storing account passwords
- Password in transit
- Lab – Is just hashing passwords enough?
- Dictionary attacks and brute forcing
- Salting
- Adaptive hash functions for password storage
- Password policy
- NIST authenticator requirements for memorized secrets
- Case study – The Ashley Madison data breach
- The dictionary attack
- The ultimate crack
- Exploitation and the lessons learned
- Password database migration
- (Mis)handling null passwords
- Testing for password management issues
- Inbound password management
DAY 2
Security testing
- Security testing vs functional testing
- Manual and automated methods
- Security testing methodology
- Security testing – goals and methodologies
- Overview of security testing processes
- Identifying and rating assets
- Preparation
- Identifying assets
- Identifying the attack surface
- Assigning security requirements
- Lab – Identifying and rating assets
- Threat modeling
- SDL threat modeling
- Mapping STRIDE to DFD
- DFD example
- Attack trees
- Attack tree example
- Lab – Crafting an attack tree
- Misuse cases
- Misuse case examples
- Risk analysis
- Lab – Risk analysis
- Security testing approaches
- Reporting, recommendations, and review
The OWASP Top Ten
- A3 – Sensitive Data Exposure
- Information exposure
- Exposure through extracted data and aggregation
- Case study – Strava data exposure
- A4 – XML External Entities (XXE)
- DTD and the entities
- Entity expansion
- External Entity Attack (XXE)
- File inclusion with external entities
- Server-Side Request Forgery with external entities
- Lab – External entity attack
- Case study – XXE vulnerability in SAP Store
- Preventing XXE
- Lab – Prohibiting DTD expansion
- A5 – Broken Access Control
- Access control basics
- Failure to restrict URL access
- Testing for authorization issues
- Confused deputy
- Insecure direct object reference (IDOR)
- Lab – Insecure Direct Object Reference
- Authorization bypass through user-controlled keys
- Case study – Authorization bypass on Facebook
- Lab – Horizontal authorization
- Testing for confused deputy weaknesses
- File upload
- Unrestricted file upload
- Good practices
- Lab – Unrestricted file upload
- Testing for file upload vulnerabilities
- A6 – Security Misconfiguration
- Configuration principles
- Configuration management
- Java related components – best practices
- Testing for misconfiguration issues
- A7 – Cross-site Scripting (XSS)
- Cross-site scripting basics
- Cross-site scripting types
- Persistent cross-site scripting
- Reflected cross-site scripting
- Client-side (DOM-based) cross-site scripting
- Lab – Stored XSS
- Lab – Reflected XSS
- Case study – XSS in Fortnite accounts
- XSS protection best practices
- Protection principles – escaping
- XSS protection APIs in Java
- XSS protection in JSP
- Lab – XSS fix / stored
- Lab – XSS fix / reflected
- Additional protection layers
- Client-side protection principles
- Testing for XSS
DAY 3
The OWASP Top Ten
- A8 – Insecure Deserialization
- Serialization and deserialization challenges
- Deserializing untrusted streams
- Deserialization best practices
- Using ReadObject
- Sealed objects
- Look ahead deserialization
- Testing for insecure deserialization
- Property Oriented Programming (POP)
- Creating payload
- POP best practices
- Lab – Creating a POP payload
- Lab – Using the POP payload
- A9 – Using Components with Known Vulnerabilities
- Using vulnerable components
- Untrusted functionality import
- Importing JavaScript
- Lab – Importing JavaScript
- Case study – The British Airways data breach
- Vulnerability management
- Patch management
- Vulnerability databases
- Lab – Finding vulnerabilities in third-party components
- DevOps, the build process and CI / CD
- Dependency checking in Java
- Lab – Detecting vulnerable components
- A10 – Insufficient Logging & Monitoring
- Logging and monitoring principles
- Insufficient logging
- Plaintext passwords at Facebook
- Logging best practices
- OWASP security logging library for Java
- Web application security beyond the Top Ten
- Client-side security
- Tabnabbing
- Lab – Reverse tabnabbing
- Frame sandboxing
- Cross-Frame Scripting (XFS) attack
- Lab – Clickjacking
- Clickjacking beyond hijacking a click
- Clickjacking protection best practices
- Lab – Using CSP to prevent clickjacking
Security testing
- Security testing techniques and tools
- Code analysis
- Security aspects of code review
- Static Application Security Testing (SAST)
- Lab – Using static analysis tools
- Dynamic analysis
- Security testing at runtime
- Penetration testing
- Stress testing
- Dynamic analysis tools
- Dynamic Application Security Testing (DAST)
- Web vulnerability scanners
- Lab – Using web vulnerability scanners
- SQL injection tools
- Proxy servers
- Fuzzing
- Code analysis
Common software security weaknesses
- Input validation
- Input validation principles
- Blacklists and whitelists
- Data validation techniques
- Lab – Input validation
- What to validate – the attack surface
- Where to validate – defense in depth
- How to validate – validation vs transformations
- Output sanitization
- Encoding challenges
- Lab – Encoding challenges
- Validation with regex
- Unsafe reflection
- Reflection without validation
- Lab – Unsafe reflection
- Input validation principles
Wrap up
- Secure coding principles
- Principles of robust programming by Matt Bishop
- Secure design principles of Saltzer and Schröder
- And now what?
- Software security sources and further reading
- Java resources
- Security testing resources