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Building and Automating Penetration Testing Labs in the Cloud

You're reading from  Building and Automating Penetration Testing Labs in the Cloud

Product type Book
Published in Oct 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837632398
Pages 562 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Joshua Arvin Lat Joshua Arvin Lat
Profile icon Joshua Arvin Lat

Table of Contents (15) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1: A Gentle Introduction to Vulnerable-by-Design Environments
2. Chapter 1: Getting Started with Penetration Testing Labs in the Cloud 3. Chapter 2: Preparing Our First Vulnerable Cloud Lab Environment 4. Chapter 3: Succeeding with Infrastructure as Code Tools and Strategies 5. Part 2: Setting Up Isolated Penetration Testing Lab Environments in the Cloud
6. Chapter 4: Setting Up Isolated Penetration Testing Lab Environments on GCP 7. Chapter 5: Setting Up Isolated Penetration Testing Lab Environments on Azure 8. Chapter 6: Setting Up Isolated Penetration Testing Lab Environments on AWS 9. Part 3: Exploring Advanced Strategies and Best Practices in Lab Environment Design
10. Chapter 7: Setting Up an IAM Privilege Escalation Lab 11. Chapter 8: Designing and Building a Vulnerable Active Directory Lab 12. Chapter 9: Recommended Strategies and Best Practices 13. Index 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

Preparing the necessary components and prerequisites

In this section, we will focus on preparing the prerequisites needed for this chapter. We will start by retrieving the IP address of your local machine. We’ll use this IP address value later when configuring the firewall rules to allow our local machine to access specific resources inside the lab environment. In addition to this, we will also set up the Google Cloud project where the cloud resources will be deployed in this chapter.

Lastly, we will generate SSH keys (a public key and a private key) for accessing the attacker VM instance later in this chapter. As we can see in Figure 4.1, the private key will be stored inside your local machine while the public key will be stored inside the attacker VM instance.

Figure 4.1 – Generating SSH keys for accessing the attacker VM instance

With this setup, the server (the attacker VM instance) can confirm the identity of the client (your local...

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