Difference between revisions of "Spring Training 2017 - Corelan Bootcamp"
From BruCON 2017
(→Testimonials) |
(→Testimonials) |
||
Line 112: | Line 112: | ||
=Testimonials= | =Testimonials= | ||
− | In case you still need it ;-), you can find a large amount of testimonials on | + | In case you still need it ;-), you can find a large amount of testimonials on this [https://www.corelan-training.com/index.php/testimonials/ page] of the Corelan Training website. |
=Trainer Biography= | =Trainer Biography= |
Latest revision as of 16:12, 20 February 2017
Contents
Corelan Bootcamp
Once again we bring you Corelan ! One of the best exploit development courses available, now in our spring training track. Prepare yourself for 3 long days (+10 hours/day) of intensive exploit development ! Lunch and dinner are included and, as always enough coffee to keep you going!
We will be hosting the Advanced course in October (2 - 4 October 2017) and you can now already register for both!
Course Description
The Corelan “BOOTCAMP” is a truly unique opportunity to learn both basic & advanced techniques from an experienced exploit developer, at a conference. During this (typically 3 ‘long’ day) course, students will be able to learn all ins and outs about writing reliable exploits for the Win32 platform. The trainer will share his “notes from the field” and various tips & tricks to become more effective at writing exploits.
We believe it is important to start the course by explaining the basics of stack buffer overflows and exploit writing, but this is most certainly not “your average” entry level course. In fact, this is a true bootcamp and one of the finest and most advanced courses you will find on Win32 stack based exploit development.
This hardcore hands-on course will provide students with solid understanding of current Win32 (stack based) exploitation techniques and memory protection bypass techniques. We make sure the course material is kept updated with current techniques, includes previously undocumented tricks and techniques, and details about research we performed ourselves. Combined with the way the course is built up, this will turn this class into a truly unique experience.
During all of our courses, we don’t just focus on techniques and mechanics, but we also want to make sure you understand why a given technique is used, why something works and why something doesn’t work.
We believe those are just a few arguments that makes this training stand out between other exploit development training offerings. Feel free to check our testimonials page if you want to see real, voluntary, unmodified and uncensored reactions by some of our students.
Finally, we offer you post-training support as well. If you have taken the course and you still have questions afterwards, we will help.
Course contents
- The x86 environment
- System Architecture
- Windows Memory Management
- Registers
- Introduction to Assembly
- The stack
- The exploit development lab environment
- Setting up the exploit developer lab
- Using debuggers and debugger plugins to gather primitives
- Stack Buffer Overflows
- Stack Buffers
- Functions
- Saved return pointer overwrites
- Stack cookies
- Structured Exception Handlers
- Function pointers
- Data/object pointers
- vtable/virtual functions
- Off-by-one
- Integer overflows
- Size limitations
- Limited buffers, shellcode splitting
- Reliability++ & Reusability++
- Finding and avoiding bad characters
- Creative ways to deal with character set limitations
- Metasploit framework Exploit Modules
- Writing exploits for the Metasploit Framework
- Porting exploits to the Metasploit Framework
- ASLR
- Bypassing ASLR
- DEP
- Bypassing NX/DEP
- Return Oriented Programming / Code Reuse (ROP)
- Heap Spraying
- Heap Management and behaviour
- Heap Spraying for Internet Explorer 6 and 7
- Heap Feng Shui & heaplib
- Precise Heap Spraying in modern browsers
- IE8 -> IE 11, Firefox
- Browser Exploitation (*)
- Exploiting Browser Use-After-Free conditions
(*) Providing enough time
During the course, students will get the opportunity to work on real vulnerabilities in real applications and use the latest exploitation techniques that work on current Operating Systems.
Make no mistake. Although this course will explain the basics of exploit development, students will need to be able to transition to more complex theory and exercises quickly. The course has a steep learning curve and will require your full attention and focus.
The “Course Contents” on this page is subject to change without prior notice & can be updated between the moment of registration and the actual course. We will try to cover as much as we can from the “Course Contents”, based on the overall ability to absorb knowledge and time needed to complete the exercises, but BruCON and Corelan cannot ever guarantee that we will be able to cover everything.
Target audience
Pentesters, auditors, network/system administrators, reverse engineers, malware analysts, developers, members of a security department, security enthusiasts, or anyone interested in exploit development.
Why take this course ?
- Are you interested in the process of turning an advisory into a working exploit ?
- Do you want to figure out if a given security patch/hotfix should be applied immediately or not ?
- Do you want to learn how to read and understand existing exploits ?
- Have you ever found yourself in a position where you have to change an existing exploit but failed to make it work.
- Do you want to write reliable exploits and integrate them into Metasploit ?
- Do you want to know how shellcode works ?
- Do you have some basic knowledge about win32 exploit development already, and do you want to a good refresher and learn more advanced topcis ?
- Have you read the Corelan exploit development tutorials, but still want to take the classes to fully understand and master the concepts ?
- Do you have other reasons to learn how to write exploits for the Win32 platform ?
- Are you willing to suffer and bleed a bit, learn fast and not intimidated by debuggers and assembly instructions…
…then this course is exactly what you need !
Requirements
Students should :
- be able to read simple C code and simple scripts
- be familiar with writing basic scripts using python/ruby/…
- be ready to dive into a debugger and read asm for hours and hours and hours
- be ready to think out of the box and have a strong desire to learn
- be fluent with managing Windows / Linux operating system and with using vmware workstation/virtualbox
- be familiar with using Metasploit
- No prior knowledge of assembly is required, but it will certainly help if you have some basic knowledge :)
Hardware/software Requirements
Unless specified otherwise, students are required to bring the following :
- A laptop (no netbook) with vmware workstation/virtualbox and enough processing power and RAM (we recommend 4Gb of RAM) to run up to 2 virtual machines at the same time. The use of a 64bit processor and a 64bit operating system on the laptop will make the exercises more realistic.
- 2 Virtual machines installed (Windows 7 SP1, Kali Linux)
Note : you will receive the exact installation instructions after registration, so don’t start installing the VMs yet.
All required tools and applications will be provided during the training or will be downloaded from the internet during the training.
You must have full administrator access to all machines. You must be able to install and remove software, and you must be able to disable and/or remove firewall/antivirus/… when necessary.
Testimonials
In case you still need it ;-), you can find a large amount of testimonials on this page of the Corelan Training website.
Trainer Biography
Peter Van Eeckhoutte is the founder of Corelan Team and the author of the well-known tutorials on Win32 Exploit Development Training, available at www.corelan.be. The team gathers a group of IT Security enthusiasts and researchers from around the world, who all share common interests : doing research, gather & share knowledge, and perform responsible/coordination disclosure. Above all, the team is well known for their ethics and their dedication to helping other people in the community. Together with the team, he has developed and published numerous tools that will assist pentesters and exploit developers, and published whitepapers/video’s on a wide range of IT Security related topics (pentesting tools, (malware) reverse engineering, etc). The team also moderates a forum that provides a platform for people who want to talk about exploit development, and operates an IRC channel (freenode, channel #corelan)
Peter has been an active member of the IT Security community since 2000 and has been working on exploit development since 2006.
He presented at various international security conferences (Athcon, Hack In Paris, DerbyCon, ISSA Belgium) and taught various Win32 Exploit Development courses at numerous places around the globe. He trained security enthusiasts & professionals from private companies, government agencies and military organizations.
Links :
Wed. 19 - 21 April 2017 (09:00 - 22:00) (3-day - +10 hours/day)
You can also register for both the Bootcamp as well as the Advanced course. Please follow the link below.