Key Extraction By Uprobe Attachment On Openssl For Ssl Inspection
Blog post from Keploy
TLS 1.3 enhances security by introducing robust encryption protocols and a streamlined handshake process that reduces vulnerabilities to man-in-the-middle attacks, while also eliminating outdated cipher suites to maintain confidentiality and data integrity during transit. SSL inspection, integral to network security, involves decrypting encrypted traffic for deep packet inspection to identify threats like malware and unauthorized access. Keploy.io integrates with OpenSSL to securely generate API test cases without compromising encryption, making it suitable for building secure APIs. SSL inspection can be performed using methods like Man-in-the-Middle proxies and SSL decryption with uprobes, which capture data via OpenSSL functions without disrupting the TLS handshake. OpenSSL remains a critical tool for secure communication, available across platforms like Windows, macOS, and Linux, with utilities like openssl s_client and uprobe-based key extraction offering powerful methods for monitoring encrypted traffic.
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