Sockets, Shellcode, Porting, and Coding: Reverse Engineering Exploits and Tool Coding for Security Professionals :Reverse Engineering Exploits and Tool Coding for Security Professionals

Publication subTitle :Reverse Engineering Exploits and Tool Coding for Security Professionals

Author: Foster   James C  

Publisher: Elsevier Science‎

Publication year: 2005

E-ISBN: 9780080489728

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9781597490054

P-ISBN(Hardback):  9781597490054

Subject: TP309 安全保密

Language: ENG

Access to resources Favorite

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Description

The book is logically divided into 5 main categories with each category representing a major skill set required by most security professionals:

1. Coding – The ability to program and script is quickly becoming a mainstream requirement for just about everyone in the security industry. This section covers the basics in coding complemented with a slue of programming tips and tricks in C/C++, Java, Perl and NASL.

2. Sockets – The technology that allows programs and scripts to communicate over a network is sockets. Even though the theory remains the same – communication over TCP and UDP, sockets are implemented differently in nearly ever language.

3. Shellcode – Shellcode, commonly defined as bytecode converted from Assembly, is utilized to execute commands on remote systems via direct memory access.

4. Porting – Due to the differences between operating platforms and language implementations on those platforms, it is a common practice to modify an original body of code to work on a different platforms. This technique is known as porting and is incredible useful in the real world environments since it allows you to not “recreate the wheel.”

5. Coding Tools – The culmination of the previous four sections, coding tools brings all of the techniques that you have learned to the forefront. With the background technologies and techniques you will now be able to code quick utilities that will not only make you more productive, they will arm you with a

Chapter

NASL Scripting

BSD Sockets

Windows Sockets (Winsock)

Java Sockets

Writing Portable Code

Portable Network Programming

Writing Shellcode I

Writing Shellcode II

Writing Exploits I

Writing Exploits II

Writing Exploits III

Writing Security Components

Creating a Web Security Tool

Glossary

Security Tool Compendium

Exploit Archives

Syscall Reference

Data Conversion Reference

Index

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