// Prerequisites

What to read before The Database Hacker's Handbook

If The Database Hacker's Handbook feels too steep at advanced level, here is what to read first. Lighter books in the same topics that build the prerequisites this one assumes.

  1. 01 · 2021

    Real-World Cryptography

    David Wong's hands-on tour of the cryptographic primitives, protocols and pitfalls that show up in actual production systems, with deliberate attention to TLS, Noise, modern AEAD, and post-quantum.

    Intermediate
    5/5David Wong
  2. 02 · 2021

    Designing Secure Software

    Loren Kohnfelder, the original PKI author, on how to weave security thinking through requirements, design, implementation and operations rather than bolt it on at the end.

    Intermediate
    5/5Loren Kohnfelder
  3. 03 · 2014

    Threat Modeling

    Adam Shostack's practitioner-oriented introduction to threat modeling: STRIDE, attack trees, and how to fit the practice into a real software-development lifecycle.

    Intermediate
    5/5Adam Shostack
  4. 04 · 2023

    Black Hat GraphQL

    Aleks and Farhi on attacking GraphQL specifically: introspection abuse, batching, depth and complexity attacks, auth flaws, and the differences from REST that make GraphQL pentests their own discipline.

    Intermediate
    4/5Nick Aleks, Dolev Farhi
  5. 05 · 2010

    Cryptography Engineering

    A working engineer's introduction to cryptography that takes implementation pitfalls more seriously than most.

    Intermediate
    4/5Niels Ferguson, Bruce Schneier, Tadayoshi Kohno
  6. 06 · 2022

    Hacking APIs

    Corey Ball's structured approach to attacking REST and GraphQL APIs: enumeration, auth flaws, business logic, mass assignment, and the testing harness around them.

    Intermediate
    4/5Corey J. Ball
  7. 07 · 2011

    The Web Application Hacker's Handbook

    The exhaustive reference for web app pentesting, comprehensive but increasingly a historical document.

    Intermediate
    4/5Dafydd Stuttard, Marcus Pinto
  8. 08 · 2016

    iOS Application Security

    David Thiel on attacking and defending iOS apps: the platform sandbox, IPC surfaces, keychain semantics, transport security, and the patterns that introduce real bugs.

    Intermediate
    3/5David Thiel
Back to The Database Hacker's HandbookWhat to read after The Database Hacker's Handbook