Nanne Baars a11d3d0b1b - Made movie little bit shorter because webgoat-server.jar was over 200Mb
- Movie was copy and pasted to csrf and auth lesson removed it from those lessons
- Made jars which are not necessary in the webgoat-server.jar optional
2017-11-02 15:39:49 +01:00
..
2017-10-18 19:58:14 +02:00

WebWolf

Introduction

During workshops one of the feedback items was that in some lesson it was not clear what you controlled as an attacker and what was part of the lesson. To make this separation more distinct we created WebWolf which is completely controlled by you as the attacker and runs as a separate application.

Instead of using your own machine which would involve WebGoat being connected to your local network or internet (remember WebGoat is a vulnerable webapplication) we created WebWolf which is the the environment for you as an attacker.

At the moment WebWolf offers support for:

  • Receiving e-mails
  • Serving files
  • Logging of incoming requests (cookies etc)

Run instructions

1. Run using Docker

If you use the Docker image of WebGoat this application will automatically be available. Use the following URL: http://localhost:8081/WebWolf

2. Standalone

cd WebGoat
git checkout develop
mvn clean install

Now we are ready to run the project. WebGoat 8.x is using Spring-Boot.

mvn -pl webwolf spring-boot:run

... you should be running WebWolf on localhost:8081/WebWolf momentarily

Mapping

The web application runs on '/' and the controllers and Thymeleaf templates are hardcoded to '/WebWolf' we need to have '/' available which acts as a landing page for incoming requests.