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Damn Vulnerable Serverless Application (DVSA) is a deliberately vulnerable application aiming to be an aid for security professionals to test their skills and tools in a legal environment, help developers better understand the processes of securing serverless applications and to aid both students & teachers to learn about serverless application security in a controlled class room environment.
The aim of DVSA is to practice some of the most common serverless vulnerabilities, with a simple straightforward interface.
Please note, there are both documented and undocumented vulnerabilities with this software. This is intentional. You are encouraged to try and discover as many issues as possible.
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Do not install DVSA on a production account
We do not take responsibility for the way in which any one uses this application (DVSA). We have made the purposes of the application clear and it should not be used maliciously. We have given warnings and taken measures to prevent users from installing DVSA on to production accounts.
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Deploy DVSA from the AWS Serverless Application Repository
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After deployment is complete. Click on 'View CloudFormation Stack'
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Under 'Outputs' you will find the URL for the application (DVSA Website URL)
You must run serverless deploy commands with an environment variable profile (e.g. AWS_PROFILE=<aws-profile-name>
) instead of the serverless argument.
git clone git@github.com:OWASP/DVSA.git
npm install -g serverless
pip install awscli --upgrade --user
aws --version
If you get a "command not found" error, see the "Steps to Take after Installation" section here.
aws configure
npm i
sls deploy
npm run-script client:build
sls client deploy
npm run-script client:start
Note: This will only work if you previously deployed the backend. If this fails, confirm you still have a be-stack.json
file at the root of this project.
npm start
If you want to point your local client to your local backend, edit your be-stack.json
and set ServiceEndpoint
to http://localhost:3000
. Note that you will still be using the Cognito pools in AWS.
DVSA sends receipts in the email (which will help you in hacking it). You can use the built-in Inbox page within the application to get the emails and obtain the receipts.
Note: each user will be assigned an email from mailsac.com
which will be automatically verified. Real emails will be sent to their account and will appear in the application Inbox page. All this is transparent to the user and the deployer).
Note: to make the email verification script work your default AWS region has to be "US East (N. Virginia)", for example by setting region = us-east-1
in your ~/.aws/config file
Alternatively, if you want users to receive emails to their registered email account (e.g. gmail), use one of the followings:
- Send an email verification link to email address, by running the following command (after clicking on the received link, emails will also be sent to their actual email address):
aws ses verify-email-identity --email-address <your_email>
- Request a sending limit increase. This will allow your entire cloud account to send emails to any address.
see LESSONS for information about hacking DVSA.
see VIDEOS for how to deploy, use and hack DVSA.
OWASP Top 10 - Serverless Interpretation
Deep-Dive into Serverless Attacks - Series
OWASP Serverless Top 10 Project
Twitter account (hackable)
Slack Channel #project-sls-top-10
DVSA was created by Tal Melamed
Damn Vulnerable Serverless Application (DVSA) is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
Damn Vulnerable Serverless Application (DVSA) is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with Damn Vulnerable Serverless Application (DVSA). If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.