MagiskTrustUserCerts
objection
MagiskTrustUserCerts | objection | |
---|---|---|
3 | 17 | |
1,575 | 6,993 | |
1.9% | 0.9% | |
0.0 | 3.9 | |
6 months ago | 3 months ago | |
Shell | Python | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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MagiskTrustUserCerts
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Inspecting http traffic from mobile phone applications
I am doing this right now. I'm using burp to proxy the traffic from a mobile application to test it's APIs. I did the following: 1. Root device and install Magisk 2. Connect phone to computer running burp and Android Debug Bridge. 3. Establish proxy connection using adb tunnel and ProxyDroid app. 4. Download Burp certificate to phone (it's stopped in User trust store but needs to be put in System. 5. Use the following Magisk module. MagiskTrustUserCerts 6. Profit
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Mitmproxy 8
This is true, by default Android apps do not trust user-installed certificate authorities. IMO the easiest solution if you're doing security testing on a dedicated device is MagiskTrustUserCerts[1]. If you're not testing on a dedicated device or you don't want to root the device, I'd recommend using the objection[2] tool which has a guided mode for patching an apk, and you can modify the manifest to add your CA or to trust all user-installed CAs.
[1]: https://github.com/NVISOsecurity/MagiskTrustUserCerts
[2]: https://github.com/sensepost/objection/wiki/Patching-Android...
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Scraping an Android App
2) in magisk install https://github.com/NVISOsecurity/MagiskTrustUserCerts
objection
- apk.sh, make reverse engineering Android apps easier!
- Prerequisites for reverse engineering?
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Mitmproxy 8
This is true, by default Android apps do not trust user-installed certificate authorities. IMO the easiest solution if you're doing security testing on a dedicated device is MagiskTrustUserCerts[1]. If you're not testing on a dedicated device or you don't want to root the device, I'd recommend using the objection[2] tool which has a guided mode for patching an apk, and you can modify the manifest to add your CA or to trust all user-installed CAs.
[1]: https://github.com/NVISOsecurity/MagiskTrustUserCerts
[2]: https://github.com/sensepost/objection/wiki/Patching-Android...
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Is this networking knowledge enough ?
Then use runtime tools like Runtime Mobile Security, Grapefruit, and Objection to see stuff in action and practice Frida along with as these tools usually support loading custom Frida scripts.
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Okhttp3 SSL pinning bypass
you might have more luck in some whitehat hacking groups etc. ive used https://github.com/sensepost/objection to try out my own app.
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Beststar all songs + unlimited play v1.1
In some form yes. Internally this is just a Frida gadget script which you can see here does support IOS.
What are some alternatives?
mitmpcap - export mitmproxy traffic to PCAP file
frida - Clone this repo to build Frida
super-auto-pets - A tool to allow for viewing of arbitrary Super Auto Pets replays
drozer - The Leading Security Assessment Framework for Android.
xmppmitm - XMPP Man-in-the-Middle, quick & dirty
Free-RASP-Community - SDK providing app protection and threat monitoring for mobile devices, available for Flutter, Cordova, Android and iOS.
ndbproxy - A proxy/bridge that runs between a Node.JS debug server and a Chromium devtools client and adds some additional features.
awesome-frida - Awesome Frida - A curated list of Frida resources http://www.frida.re/ (https://github.com/frida/frida)
hetty - An HTTP toolkit for security research.
Apktool - A tool for reverse engineering Android apk files
mitmproxy - An interactive TLS-capable intercepting HTTP proxy for penetration testers and software developers.
pwndbg - Exploit Development and Reverse Engineering with GDB Made Easy