URL Spidering?
URL spidering (also called web crawling) is an automated technique used in penetration testing, reconnaissance, and security assessment to discover all accessible pages, directories, endpoints, and resources on a web application.
Think of it like a bot that starts at a website and systematically follows every link it finds, just like how search engines index the web.
How URL Spidering Works
A spider typically follows this process:
1. Start with a target URL
- Example: https://target.comptia.org
2. Fetch the page content
- HTML is downloaded and parsed
3. Extract links and resources
- `` links
- Forms (``)
- JavaScript-generated URLs (advanced spiders)
- Images, scripts, APIs, etc.
4. Visit discovered URLs
- Each new link is added to a queue
- The spider continues recursively
5. Record findings
- URLs
- Parameters
- Status codes
- Inputs (GET/POST parameters)
Why URL Spidering is Important in Pen Testing
URL spidering helps testers:
1. Map the attack surface
- Identify:
- Hidden pages
- Admin panels (/admin, /dashboard)
- Backup files (.bak, .old)
- Example:
/search?q=term
/login?redirect=home
- These inputs are potential targets for:
- SQL injection
- XSS
- Command injection
3. Find unlinked or “hidden” resources
Files not visible in navigation but still accessible
- Example:
/test/
/backup.zip
/dev/
4. Understand application structure
- Learn how the site is organized:
- User flows
- API endpoints
- Authentication areas
Types of URL Spidering
1. Passive Spidering
- Observes traffic without actively exploring
- Uses proxies (e.g., Burp Suite passive crawl)
- Safe (low risk of detection)
- Limited discovery
2. Active Spidering
- Actively requests pages and follows links
- Finds more content
- Generates traffic → easier to detect
3. Authenticated Spidering
- Crawls after logging into the application
- Discovers:
- User dashboards
- Restricted APIs
- Admin panels
4. Recursive Spidering
- Follows links multiple levels deep
- Builds a full site map
Common Tools for URL Spidering
- Burp Suite Spider / Crawler
- Automatic crawling
- Handles sessions, forms, and authentication
- OWASP ZAP Spider
- Free and widely used
- Good for beginners
- DirBuster / Gobuster / ffuf
- Brute-force spidering (directory guessing)
Example:
gobuster dir -u https://target.com -w wordlist.txt
- wget (basic spidering)
wget --spider -r https://target.com
- Scrapy (Python framework)
- Advanced crawling and automation
Spidering vs. Directory Brute Forcing
Best practice: Use both together
Limitations of URL Spidering
1. Misses unlinked pages
- If no links point to them → not discovered
2. JavaScript-heavy apps
- Some spiders struggle with dynamic content
3. Authentication barriers
- Cannot access protected areas without credentials
4. Rate limiting / detection
- IDS/WAF may block crawling activity
Example Use Case in Pen Testing
1. Run spider:
https://target.com
2. Discover:
/login
/admin
/api/v1/users
/backup.zip
3. Analyze inputs:
/search?q=
/user?id=
4. Launch attacks on discovered endpoints:
- SQL injection
- XSS
- File download vulnerabilities
Key Takeaway
URL spidering is a core enumeration technique that:
- Maps the target website
- Identifies attack entry points
- Reveals hidden or sensitive resources
It is usually the first step before vulnerability scanning or exploitation.