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PowerShell Automation and Scripting for Cybersecurity

You're reading from  PowerShell Automation and Scripting for Cybersecurity

Product type Book
Published in Aug 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800566378
Pages 572 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Miriam C. Wiesner Miriam C. Wiesner
Profile icon Miriam C. Wiesner

Table of Contents (19) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1: PowerShell Fundamentals
2. Chapter 1: Getting Started with PowerShell 3. Chapter 2: PowerShell Scripting Fundamentals 4. Chapter 3: Exploring PowerShell Remote Management Technologies and PowerShell Remoting 5. Chapter 4: Detection – Auditing and Monitoring 6. Part 2: Digging Deeper – Identities, System Access, and Day-to-Day Security Tasks
7. Chapter 5: PowerShell Is Powerful – System and API Access 8. Chapter 6: Active Directory – Attacks and Mitigation 9. Chapter 7: Hacking the Cloud – Exploiting Azure Active Directory/Entra ID 10. Chapter 8: Red Team Tasks and Cookbook 11. Chapter 9: Blue Team Tasks and Cookbook 12. Part 3: Securing PowerShell – Effective Mitigations In Detail
13. Chapter 10: Language Modes and Just Enough Administration (JEA) 14. Chapter 11: AppLocker, Application Control, and Code Signing 15. Chapter 12: Exploring the Antimalware Scan Interface (AMSI) 16. Chapter 13: What Else? – Further Mitigations and Resources 17. Index 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

PowerShell endpoints (session configurations)

In this chapter, you might have read the term endpoint several times.

If we are talking about endpoints, we are not talking about one computer: PSRemoting is designed to work with multiple endpoints on a computer.

But what exactly is an endpoint?

When we are talking about PowerShell endpoints, each endpoint is a session configuration, which you can configure to offer certain services or which you can also restrict.

So, every time we run Invoke-Command or enter a PowerShell session, we are connecting to an endpoint (also known as a remote session configuration).

Sessions that offer fewer cmdlets, functions, and features, as those that are usually available if no restrictions are in place, are called constrained endpoints.

Before we enable PSRemoting, no endpoint will have been configured on the computer.

You can see all the available session configurations by running the Get-PSSessionConfiguration command:

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