I'm interested in learning system security. I'm thinking of installing Damn Vulnerable Linux on one of my spare machines to test on. Anyone have any recommendations, reads, methods or tutorials?
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Another resource: stackoverflow.com/questions/771069/…– kuriouscoderMay 13, 2011 at 23:23
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1Check out the Security Stack Exchange site. They have several resource lists already, e.g. Resources to learn about security, Courses on “Secure Software Development”, Books about Penetration Testing.– Gilles 'SO- stop being evil'May 13, 2011 at 23:28
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@Gilles HAHA! You're kidding?! There is a Sercurity stack exchange? Wow. I have just been learned.– ahodderMay 13, 2011 at 23:32
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This is not a C or C++ question. I have therefore removed those tags.– Billy ONealMay 14, 2011 at 1:10
2 Answers
These days exploiting C/C++ and operating systems is not easy. You are starting with a massive topic. The only more complex security topic would be cryptography. With anything you need to start small and then work your way up. You should start with web application security. You should be learning about the most common vulnerabilities such as XSS and SQL Injection, Google Gruyre is a good resource.
If you are very skilled then you might be able to get though old paper smashing the stack for fun and profit. A good book for learning how to attack modern c/c++ applications is Exploiting Software: How to break code.
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Hah! Noted sir, thanks for the input. If everyone was detered by the daunting, we wouldn't have much in the ways of innovation.– ahodderMay 13, 2011 at 23:27
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I feel that information security is too broad a topic, and list of interesting problems are too many to enumerate. Since you say about Damn vulnerable linux, I assume that you are confining this to operating system.
If so, some interesting topics would be - i) Buffer Overflow attacks - Stack smashing attacks, Integer overflow and Heap smashing attacks, etc. and ii) TOCTOU attacks. http://insecure.org/ is a good resource and has bunch of tutorials on them. Also, the vulnerabilities, and some attack payload can be found in vulnerability reporting DB such as secunia.org and cert.org. Also, it might be worth to study about network exploits - on how deep-packet inspection can detect simple worms. Advanced topics might include polymorphic and self-modifying worms. Firewalls can be an eventual topic.