Practical Lock Picking
eBook - ePub

Practical Lock Picking

A Physical Penetration Tester's Training Guide

Deviant Ollam

  1. 296 pagine
  2. English
  3. ePUB (disponibile sull'app)
  4. Disponibile su iOS e Android
eBook - ePub

Practical Lock Picking

A Physical Penetration Tester's Training Guide

Deviant Ollam

Dettagli del libro
Anteprima del libro
Indice dei contenuti
Citazioni

Informazioni sul libro

Practical Lock Picking, Second Edition, is an instructional manual that covers everything from straightforward lockpicking to quick-entry techniques such as shimming, bumping, and bypassing. Written by Deviant Ollam, one of the security industry's best-known lockpicking teachers, and winner of the Best Book Bejtlich Read in 2010 award, this book contains detailed photos that make learning as easy as picking a lock. Material is offered in easy-to-follow lessons that allow even beginners to acquire the knowledge very quickly. Whether the student will be hired at some point to penetrate security or simply trying to harden his or her own defenses, this book is essential.This edition has been updated to reflect the changing landscape of tools and tactics which have emerged in recent years. It consists of 6 chapters that discuss topics such as the fundamentals of pin tumbler and wafer locks; the basics of picking, with emphasis on how to exploit weaknesses; tips for beginners on how to get very good and very fast in picking locks; advanced training; quick-entry tricks about shimming, bumping, and bypassing; and pin tumblers in other configurations.This book is geared specifically toward penetration testers, security consultants, IT security professionals, and hackers.

  • Detailed full-color photos make learning as easy as picking a lock
  • Extensive appendix details tools and toolkits currently available for all your lock picking needs

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Informazioni

Editore
Syngress
Anno
2012
ISBN
9781597499903

Chapter 1

Fundamentals of Pin Tumbler and Wafer Locks

Chapter Outline

Pin Tumbler Locks
Wafer Locks
Summary
While there are a multitude of lock designs on the market today, produced by many different manufacturers, the bulk of these offerings are not in widespread use. Nearly all of the locks that you are likely to encounter on a day-to-day basis stem from just a few basic varieties, and the mechanisms inside of all of these devices operate in almost the exact same manner. If you can understand the basics of just a few styles of locks, I’m confident in suggesting that you should be able to open with great ease at least three quarters of the locks you’re likely to encounter… even more, as you become more skilled with time.
The overwhelming majority of locks that are in use today, particularly in North America, are either pin tumbler locks or wafer locks. A handful of other designs are prevalent in certain international regions. Lever locks, for example, are an older design originating in the 17th century with keys that tend to be larger and their operation more cumbersome than more recent designs. These are a common sight in Europe, central Asia, and parts of South America. Rotating disk mechanisms are popular in northern Europe and parts of the Pacific Rim, while some locks in Austria and Japan feature magnetic components. However, in all cases—even in the regions outside of North America—it should be understood that these designs are usually not nearly as prominent as basic pin tumbler locks and wafer locks, particularly as far as penetration testing is concerned.
Typical office doors, desk drawers, filing cabinets, and access panels will usually be equipped by default with lower quality locks because they are the easiest to mass produce, the simplest to service, and the most economical to replace or re-key should the need arise. Until furniture manufacturers and hardware stores cease ordering bulk shipments of locks with low production costs and lax quality standards, we are likely to continue encountering them for a very long time.

Pin Tumbler Locks

The style of lock with which the majority of people are most familiar is the pin tumbler design. I realize that many of you may already be somewhat aware of this hardware (and, indeed, diagrams and photographs of all shapes and sizes seem to abound on the internet and in other printed works), but I feel it would be helpful for us to analyze this mechanism briefly, from the ground up, in order to properly understand how it functions and how it can be exploited.
Pin tumbler locks come in many forms and styles and can be incorporated into hardware that appears in a number of different shapes. Take a look at the locks in Figures 1.1, 1.2, and 1.3.
image
Figure 1.1 A padlock featuring an embedded pin tumbler mechanism.
image
Figure 1.2 A doorknob featuring a key-in-knob pin tumbler core.
image
Figure 1.3 A deadbolt featuring a pin tumbler lock in a mortise cylinder.
While each lock is clearly a very different form factor, all three function with a traditional pin tumbler mechanism which is operated by means of a simple “blade” style key, shown in Figure 1.4, the likes of which you have seen multiple times before.
image
Figure 1.4 Blade style keys, which feature bitting cuts along their thin edge. Many well-known manufacturers’ keys can be identified simply by the shape of the key’s bow.
The pin tumbler mechanism is one of the oldest lock designs in existence and is still widely used today. Let’s take a closer look at how the components of these locks are made and assembled, paying particular attention to how the lock attempts to hold itself shut without the key present. There are two primary large pieces that comprise the bulk of a pin tumbler lock: the housing and the plug. These are the two items that can easily be seen from an exterior perspective and are thus the most understood. We will now walk through the manner in which these two segments are fabricated and how they fit together.

The plug

The plug of a pin tumbler lock is constructed from a cylindrical billet, typically made of brass although occasionally steel is used in high quality models. Often the first feature to be added, after the metal is cut to the requisite length, is a small divot in what will become the front face of the plug. This helps to seat and align the key during user operation. See Figure 1.5 for a better understanding of how we shall look upon the various components of lock hardware. On the left is a frontal view, what the user would typically see from a straightforward perspective. On the right of the diagrams in Figures 1.5 through 1.12 we see a perspective from the side.
image
Figure 1.5 A blank plug featuring the key-seating divot, ready for milling.
image
Figure 1.6 The left side of the diagrams in Figures 1.6 through 1.12 will begin to focus on a cross-section slightly inward from the exterior front facing surface of the lock.
image
Figure 1.7 The milled lip at the front of a plug. Note how our “front perspective” on the left side has reduced in size slightly, since we are focusing our attention on a cross-section approximately 5 mm inward from the front face.
image
Figure 1.8 The milled notch in the rear of the plug which will later accommodate a retaining clip. Some lock styles utilize a screw-on threaded end cap instead.
image
Figure 1.9 The keyway has now been milled into the plug. Note that it often extends fully through the bottom of the plug. This will come into play later when we discuss picking techniques and tool placement in Chapter 2.
image
Figure 1.10 Some additional milling has been cut into the rear of the plug in order to accommodate a tailpiece.
image
Figure 1.11 Five pin chambers have been milled into the plug. Our cross-section (on the left side of this diagram) is still focused on an area approximately 5 mm inward from the front face and thus is showing the first pin chamber as well as the keyway milling.
image
Figure 1.12 From the side perspective of our lock plug (on the right half of this diagram) we see the additional hole drilled in front of the pin chambers. It has been filled with both a steel ball bearing as well as a ceramic block.
Given that the bulk of what concerns us takes place further inside of the lock, we will begin to focus our “straight forward” view (on the left side of these diagrams) further inward. In Figures 1.6 through 1.12, that image will correlate to a cross-section of the plug (or the lock as a whole) approximately 5 mm in from the front face.
The plug will be milled with a small lip around the front facing edge. This is dual-purpose, in that it prevents the plug from sliding inward through the lock housing while also precluding a potential attacker’s insertion of material that could penetrate the front of the lock and interfere with the operation of the pin tumblers within.
It is quite common for this front milling process to be more intricate, involving additional ridges or deeper grooves. Again, this is to prevent pieces of thin metal or other tools from being inserted and worked into the depths of the lock from the outside.
In addition to th...

Indice dei contenuti

  1. Cover image
  2. Title page
  3. Table of Contents
  4. Copyright
  5. Dedication
  6. Foreword
  7. Author’s Note
  8. About the Author
  9. About the Technical Editor
  10. Ethical Considerations
  11. Chapter 1. Fundamentals of Pin Tumbler and Wafer Locks
  12. Chapter 2. The Basics of Picking—Exploiting Weaknesses
  13. Chapter 3. Beginner Training—How to Get Very Good, Very Fast
  14. Chapter 4. Advanced Training—Learning Some Additional Skills
  15. Chapter 5. Quick-Entry Tricks—Shimming, Bumping, and Bypassing
  16. Chapter 6. They All Come Tumbling Down—Pin Tumblers in Other Configurations
  17. APPENDIX: Guide to Tools and Toolkits
  18. Index
Stili delle citazioni per Practical Lock Picking

APA 6 Citation

Ollam, D. (2012). Practical Lock Picking (2nd ed.). Elsevier Science. Retrieved from https://www.perlego.com/book/1809910/practical-lock-picking-a-physical-penetration-testers-training-guide-pdf (Original work published 2012)

Chicago Citation

Ollam, Deviant. (2012) 2012. Practical Lock Picking. 2nd ed. Elsevier Science. https://www.perlego.com/book/1809910/practical-lock-picking-a-physical-penetration-testers-training-guide-pdf.

Harvard Citation

Ollam, D. (2012) Practical Lock Picking. 2nd edn. Elsevier Science. Available at: https://www.perlego.com/book/1809910/practical-lock-picking-a-physical-penetration-testers-training-guide-pdf (Accessed: 15 October 2022).

MLA 7 Citation

Ollam, Deviant. Practical Lock Picking. 2nd ed. Elsevier Science, 2012. Web. 15 Oct. 2022.