Sunday, April 02, 2006

WebScarab - Open Web Application Security

WebScarab is a tool designed for Web security professionals and Web developers. It allows the user to view the traffic between the Web browser and server, and modify it in transit. WebScarab is intended to become the tool of choice for serious Web debugging.

WebScarab is a framework for analysing applications that communicate using the HTTP and HTTPS protocols. It is written in Java, and is thus portable to many platforms. In its simplest form, WebScarab records the conversations (requests and responses) that it observes, and allows the operator to review them in various ways.

WebScarab provides a number of plugins, mainly aimed at the security functionality for the moment. Those plugins include:

  • Fragments - extracts Scripts and HTML comments from HTML pages as they are seen via the proxy, or other plugins

  • Proxy - observes traffic between the browser and the web server. The WebScarab proxy is able to observe both HTTP and encrypted HTTPS traffic, by negotiating an SSL connection between WebScarab and the browser instead of simply connecting the browser to the server and allowing an encrypted stream to pass through it. Various proxy plugins have also been developed to allow the operator to control the requests and responses that pass through the proxy.
    • Manual intercept - allows the user to modify HTTP and HTTPS requests and responses on the fly, before they reach the server or browser.

    • Beanshell - allows for the execution of arbitrarily complex operations on requests and responses. Anything that can be expressed in Java can be executed.

    • Reveal hidden fields - sometimes it is easier to modify a hidden field in the page itself, rather than intercepting the request after it has been sent. This plugin simply changes all hidden fields found in HTML pages to text fields, making them visible, and editable.

    • Bandwidth simulator - allows the user to emulate a slower network, in order to observe how their website would perform when accessed over, say, a modem.


  • Spider - identifies new URLs on the target site, and fetches them on command.

  • Manual request - Allows editing and replay of previous requests, or creation of entirely new requests.

  • SessionID analysis - collects and analyses a number of cookies (and eventually URL-based parameters too) to visually determine the degree of randomness and unpredictability.

  • Scripted - operators can use BeanShell to write a script to create requests and fetch them from the server. The script can then perform some analysis on the responses, with all the power of the WebScarab Request and Response object model to simplify things.

  • Parameter fuzzer - performs automated substitution of parameter values that are likely to expose incomplete parameter validation, leading to vulnerabilities like Cross Site Scripting (XSS) and SQL Injection.

  • Search - allows the user to craft arbitrary BeanShell expressions to identify conversations that should be shown in the list.

  • Compare - calculates the edit distance between the response bodies of the conversations observed, and a selected baseline conversation. The edit distance is "the number of edits required to transform one document into another". For performance reasons, edits are calculated using word tokens, rather than byte by byte.

  • SOAP - There is a plugin that parses WSDL, and presents the various functions and the required parameters, allowing them to be edited before being sent to the server.

@link

1 Comments:

Anonymous Firoz said...

Thank you very much for sharing security roundup that will make me able to get best knowledge about the things that I did not know before.

1:31 AM  

Post a Comment

<< Home