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The Ultimate Kali Linux Book - Third Edition

You're reading from  The Ultimate Kali Linux Book - Third Edition

Product type Book
Published in Apr 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835085806
Pages 828 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Glen D. Singh Glen D. Singh
Profile icon Glen D. Singh

Table of Contents (21) Chapters

Preface 1. Introduction to Ethical Hacking 2. Building a Penetration Testing Lab 3. Setting Up for Advanced Penetration Testing Techniques 4. Passive Reconnaissance 5. Exploring Open-Source Intelligence 6. Active Reconnaissance 7. Performing Vulnerability Assessments 8. Understanding Network Penetration Testing 9. Performing Network Penetration Testing 10. Post-Exploitation Techniques 11. Delving into Command and Control Tactics 12. Working with Active Directory Attacks 13. Advanced Active Directory Attacks 14. Advanced Wireless Penetration Testing 15. Social Engineering Attacks 16. Understanding Website Application Security 17. Advanced Website Penetration Testing 18. Best Practices for the Real World 19. Index
Appendix

Working with bind and reverse shells

Bind shells are commonly used by penetration testers to logically set up a service port in a listening state on a targeted system while binding the listening service port to a native shell such as Bourne Again Shell (Bash) on Linux or Command Prompt on Windows; this is commonly referred to as a listener. Once the penetration tester initiates a connection to the listener and a session is established, the penetration tester will gain access to the targeted system’s native shell, whether it’s Bash on Linux or Command Prompt on a Windows-based system.

Imagine your target is a vulnerable server on the internet with a public IP address, while your attacker machine, such as Kali Linux, is behind a router or firewall with network address translation (NAT) enabled. If there is a firewall between the source and destination, some firewalls are usually configured to allow outbound traffic from their internal network to the internet, but not...

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