OWASP EU Summit 2008 Training (Courses to be Approved)

The courses listed on this page are to be approved by OWASP Board.

Source Code Review
Instructor

Eoin Keary and Daniel Cuthbert

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Advanced Phishing and Social Engineering Training
Instructor

Joshua Perrymon

Duration

1 day

Summary

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Table of Contents

This class is designed to illustrate hands-on methods used in the real world attacking the human layer. This includes a focus on spear-phishing using the newly introduced OWASP phishing framework (LUNKER). Attendees will identify target emails using a variety of methods, identify potential phish sites, create a spoofed email and send the attack all in a locally ran test environment in Vmware or LiveCD.

Upon completion of this course, attendees will have an in-depth understanding of the latest techniques used to perform these type of attacks. The class will also include additional social engineering attack methods such as impersonation, authority attacks, pre-text attacks, and much more. Advanced topics such as Email Payloads and 2nd Factor token MITM attacks will be covered as well.

1. Introduction to Social Engineering

2. Understanding the Human Aspect of Security

3. Review of aggressively vertical hacking methodology

4. Analysis of attack trending over the years (Up the OSI Model)

5. Review of public Social Engineering Attacks in the media

6. Hands on: Spear Phishing Demo using the Lunker Framework a. Understanding the Social Engineering Scope of work b. Setup Client Info c. Gather Email addresses/targets d. Identify potential phishing sites e. Creation of spoofed emails i. Custom footers ii. Attack Scenarios iii. Email header options

f. Test Environment: Review the spoofed email and phishing site

g. Send attack

h. Monitor: Discuss steps to take at this point once the users send in credentials.

i. Advanced Phishing Attacks: Recon, XSS/CSRF/Browser Exploit/Trojan payloads

j. MITM Attacks on 2-factor Authentication

k. Summary

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Web server/services hardening using SELinux
Instructor

Pavol Luptak

Duration

1 day

Summary

Security-Enhanced Linux (SELinux) is a FLASK implementation integrated in the Linux kernel with a number of utilities designed to provide mandatory access controls (MAC) through the use of Linux Security Modules (LSM) in the Linux kernel. SELinux generally supports many kinds of mandatory access control policies, including those based on the concepts of type enforcement, role-based access control, and multi-level security.

A Linux kernel integrating SELinux enforces mandatory access control policies that confine user programs and system servers to the minimum amount of privilege they require to do their jobs. This reduces or eliminates the ability of these programs and daemons to cause harm when compromised (via buffer overflows or misconfigurations, for example). This confinement mechanism operates independently of the traditional Linux access control  mechanisms. It has no concept of a "root" super-user, and does not share the well-known shortcomings of the traditional Linux security mechanisms (such as a dependence on setuid/setgid binaries).

This training provides basic concepts of SELinux, its differences to classical UNIX/Linux systems, describe security advantages of mandatory access control policies and teach how to effectively and rapidly configure a fully functional LAMP environment on SELinux system.

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Table of Contents

1. SELinux history

2. Unix/Linux DAC (Discretionary Access Control) and its problems

3. MAC (Mandatory Access Control)

4. Advantages of using MAC

5. DTE (Domain Type Enforcement) model

6. RBAC (Roles Based Access Control) model

7. MLS (Multi Level Security) model

8. SELinux FLASK Architecture

9. SELinux policy (EXERCISE)

10. File System Security Contexts (EXERCISE)

11. SELinux Object Classes and Permissions

12. TE (Type Enforcement) Rules (Attributes, Type Declaration, Type Transitions, Domain Type Transitions, Object Labeling Transitions, Access Vectors)

13. Understanding AVC, log messages

14. audit2allow and audit2why (EXERCISE)

15. SELinux Troubleshoot Tool (EXERCISE)

16. Auditing and Auditing tools

17. Policy Macros

18. Backtracking rule (EXERCISE)

19. SELinux Users, Roles, MLS Levels

20. Strict Policy

21. Targeted Policy

22. SELinux Booleans and their use for Apache web server (EXERCISE)

23. Files and Directories in Targeted Policy, common SELinux Macros (EXERCISE)

24. Analyzing Example Policy - apache.te (EXERCISE)

25. Assigning Object and Process Types

26. SELinux Booting

27. Copying and moving files, checking security contexts, relabeling a file and directory's security context (EXERCISE)

28. Policy core utilities

29. Managing File Labeling, Relabeling a File System (EXERCISE)

30. SELinux Administrator GUI (EXERCISE)

31. SELinux Modules (EXERCISE)

32. Hardening existing LAMP environments using SELinux (EXERCISE)

33. Writing New Policy for a Daemon (EXERCISE for clever students)

Course Specifics

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Secure Programming with Java
Instructor

Lucas C. Ferreira

Duration

1 Day

Summary

This training class will present best practices of secure programming in the Java language. It includes Java specific practices (i.e. how to avoid problems that arise from the compilation of Java source code to the bytecode language used by the JVM) and practices that may arise in other programming languages (with examples in Java). Some tools that may be used to verify the security of Java code and systems will be shown.

The topics include a quick overview of the OWASP Top 10, in order to contextualize the practices presented, and several best practices aimed at the different software layers. At the presentation layer, we focus on input validation, access control issues and dealing with exceptions. At the business objects layer, the practices deal with cloning and serialization issues. Practices to prevent command injection are presented at the persistence layer. Practices that should be used throughout all the software are also presented, including input data validation, class and method visibility, using and storing secrets, dealing with inner classes, overflows and boxing, and object initialization.

Audience

Java web application developers. This training requires basic understanding of web applications and an intermediate level of proficiency in the Java language and Object Oriented concepts. People with interest in other OO languages may also benefit from this training, but specific techniques, examples and tools used are targeted to Java.

Table of Contents


 * 1) OWASP Top 10 - quick overview
 * 2) Secure Programming Best Practices
 * 3) Presentation layer
 * 4) Preventing cross-site scripting
 * 5) Access control
 * 6) Request validation
 * 7) Error treatment
 * 8) Business object layer
 * 9) Cloning and serialization issues
 * 10) Persistence layer
 * 11) Command injection issues
 * 12) Database access users and permissions
 * 13) file manipulation
 * 14) Infra-structure layer
 * 15) J2EE container-related best practices
 * 16) Native method issues
 * 17) SSL and encryption
 * 18) Practices for all software layers
 * 19) Data validation
 * 20) Garbage collection issues
 * 21) Classes and method scoping
 * 22) Use of secrets
 * 23) Inner class issues
 * 24) Over/underflow and boxing issues
 * 25) Tools
 * 26) Code review tool
 * 27) Data flow tool
 * 28) Pen-testing tool

Course Specifics

Due to the lack of time, we will only show tool usage (no practical exercises with the audience).

Advanced Web Application Penetration Testing
Instructor

Aspect Security

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Leading, Planning, and Executing an Application Security Initiative
Instructor

Aspect Security

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Foundations of Web Application Security
Instructor

Aspect Security

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Secure Coding .NET Web Applications
Instructor

Aspect Security

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Building Secure Rich Internet Applications
Instructor

Aspect Security

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Web Application Security - Advanced Attacks and Defense
Instructor

Aspect Security

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What Developers Should Know on Web Application Security
Instructor

Sebastien Deleersnyder and Martin Knobloch

Duration

4 h To be scheduled on Wednesday afternoon Nov 5.

Summary

Application security is an essential component of any successful project; this includes web applications, open source PHP applications, web services and proprietary business web sites. Web application security education and awareness is needed throughout the entire development and deployment organization. Each area and level of development or deployment organizations have specific needs and requirements regarding web application security education. A manager needs other information than a security professional or developer. Novices to the profession require other training than people with several years of experience.

The OWASP Education project aims to provide in building blocks of web application security information. These modules can be combined together in education tracks targeting different audiences. This Education Track provides in a 4 hour session covering what developers should know on web application security. It starts with an explanation of web application security and why it is important. Then the OWASP Top 10 is used to explain the nastiest vulnerabilities and how these can be prevented or re mediated. A secure coding initiative must deal with all stages of a program’s life cycle. Secure web applications are only possible when a secure SDLC is used. The SDLC is explained from the standpoint of people, processes and tools. Particularly for developers good secure development practices are covered in a separate topic. Finally the track finishes with an exhaustive list of web application security resources for web application developers.

Audience

Web application developers who are unaware there are security issues with contemporary web applications. No prior knowledge of web application security is assumed nor necessary. This track is independent of the coding language or web frameworks used; like PHP, JSF, Java EE or .NET. We must realize that web application developers are only one link - albeit an important one - of the chain that represents the security of a web application. This track aims to make that link as secure as possible, given the constraint of 4 hours. Another important aspect is that web application security should be tailored to the risk profile of an organization and the specific development environment of that organization.

Table of Contents

The challenge is to cover web application security in 4 hours to a web application developer. This is presented in such a way that the developers will be able to recognize and correct web application vulnerabilities in their projects.


 * Why WebAppSec matters (20 min) (direct link)
 * This part is the introduction of the track. It identifies the current security problems with web applications. During the introduction a definition of web application security is given. Trends that are influencing the current state of web application insecurity are also explained.
 * What goes wrong
 * WebAppSec Defined
 * Current trends


 * OWASP Top 10 Introduction & Remedies (90 min) (direct link)
 * The primary aim of the OWASP Top 10 is to educate developers, designers, architects and organizations about the consequences of the most common web application security vulnerabilities. The Top 10 provides basic methods to protect against these vulnerabilities.
 * Cross Site Scripting (XSS)
 * Injection Flaws
 * Malicious File Execution
 * Insecure Direct Object Reference
 * Cross Site Request Forgery (CSRF)
 * Information Leakage and Improper Error Handling
 * Broken Authentication and Session Management
 * Insecure Cryptographic Storage
 * Insecure Communications
 * Failure to Restrict URL Access


 * Embed within SDLC (People, Processes & Tools) (20 min) (direct link)
 * There is no silver bullet when it comes to securing web applications. This problem has to be addressed from different angles, covering the involved actors, processes: development as well as deployment and Technologies.
 * People Awareness and Education
 * Development WebAppSec Controls
 * Deployment WebAppSec Controls
 * WebAppSec Tools


 * Good Secure Development Practices (70 min) (direct link)
 * Next to the Top 10 remedies this module provides some good secure development practices from the OWASP Guide, covering e.g.
 * Validating User Input
 * Authentication
 * Authorization
 * Session Management
 * Using Interpreters
 * Crypto
 * Catching Errors
 * File System
 * Configuration
 * Web 2.0


 * Testing for Vulnerabilities (20 min) (direct link)
 * One important aspect is to test for application vulnerabilities. During this short module an introduction is provided together with some WebGoat test cases.
 * Testing for application vulnerabilities
 * The OWASP Testing Guide
 * WebGoat demonstrated


 * Good WebAppSec Resources (not limited to OWASP) (10 min) (direct link)
 * This 4 hour education track in only the beginning of your journey. Web application security is a moving target. New vulnerabilities and threats are discovered regularly. Web application security controls are becoming mature. The following resources should provide you with enough pointers to serve both as reference and for further research.
 * Hard Copy
 * Web Sites
 * Mailing lists
 * Blogs


 * Roundup (10 min)

Course Specifics

No specific prerequisites.

Linux Software Exploitation
Instructor

Nam Nguyen

Duration

2 days

Summary

This course is a primer into software exploitation on the Linux environment. The course assumes only basic understanding of the Linux commands, and C programming with the standard library. It explains the computer architecture, assembly language then moves on to three basic classes of security bug: buffer overflow, format string, and race condition and methods to take advantage of them. Throughout the course, various examples are introduced with increasing difficulty so that participants will naturally realize the art of software exploitation for themselves.

This course does not discuss about shell coding. Except on one example where provided shell code is used as an illustration, all other challenges require only good analysis and calculation.

The course is conducted as a workshop with heavy interaction between participants and instructor. There will not be any presentation slide. Participants are to take note during the course.

Audience

Software developers, system administrators, security engineers with some experience in Linux and C programming.

Table of Contents


 * 1) Computer architecture
 * 2) Assembly language
 * 3) Buffer overflow
 * 4) Format string
 * 5) Race condition
 * 6) Techniques
 * 7) Overwrite critical variable
 * 8) Overwrite return address
 * 9) Return to .text
 * 10) Return to libc
 * 11) Overwrite .dtors
 * 12) Overwrite .got
 * 13) Overwrite .bss, functors
 * 14) By pass Advanced Space Layout Randomization
 * 15) Tools of the trade: IDA, GDB, and Python

Course Specifics

Bring your own laptop with VMWare Player or equivalent. An VM image will be provided.

Classic ASP Security using OWASP tools
Instructor

Juan Carlos Calderon

Duration

1 day

Summary

Classic ASP 2.0 and 3.0 applications are still largely used as this technology is more than 10 years old and was largely used. there are thousands of sites on the wild that need guidance on the security arena. This is where OWASP can come up and provide help for “making the Web a better place”.

Audience

Classic ASP Developers, Application Architects, people with basic ASP knowledge?

Table of Contents


 * Secure programming on ASP using OWASP ESAPI
 * Auditing ASP code with Code Review Project checklist
 * Implementing OWASP Stinger protection for Classic ASP
 * ASP specific Best Practices to protect ASP applications.

Course Specifics

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