This learning path teaches you how to test APIs that aren't fully used by the website front-end. You'll learn key API recon skills to help you discover more attack surface. In addition, you'll learn ...
A Burp extension to generate async Python code from HTTP requests. This extension generates different flavors of scripts (e.g. with/without session, with/without main function). The resulting codes ...
Best for pentesters and hands-on security professionals. Free up testing time with scalable, automated scanning Automated DAST scanning without limits. Free up testing time with trusted Burp ...
Application responses may depend systematically on the presence or absence of the Referer header in requests. This behavior does not necessarily constitute a security vulnerability, and you should ...
HTTP requests sometimes contain SQL syntax. If this is incorporated into a SQL query and executed by the server, then the application is almost certainly vulnerable to SQL injection. When SQL-like ...
The Prototype Pollution Gadgets Finder is a powerful Burp Suite extension designed to detect and analyze server-side prototype pollution vulnerabilities in web applications. This tool automates the ...
We've introduced a feature that enables you to create HTTP match and replace rules using Bambdas. This enables you to handle complex or bulk changes more flexibly and easily. For example, you could ...
Burp Intruder is a powerful tool for performing highly customizable, automated attacks against websites. It enables you to configure attacks that send the same request over and over again, inserting ...
This is a quick reference guide to troubleshooting the most common Burp Scanner error messages. You can use Ctrl/Cmd + F to search for the error you've encountered to ...
Server-side request forgery (SSRF) is a web security vulnerability that allows an attacker to induce the server-side application to make requests to an unintended location. SSRF vulnerabilities may ...
SQL injection vulnerabilities occur when an attacker can interfere with the queries that an application makes to its database. You can use Burp to test for these vulnerabilities: Professional Use Burp ...
Open redirections are potential vulnerabilities for web applications in which a redirection is performed to a location specified in user-supplied data. By redirecting or forwarding a user to a ...