React Native Application
Last updated
Last updated
Information copied from https://medium.com/bugbountywriteup/lets-know-how-i-have-explored-the-buried-secrets-in-react-native-application-6236728198f7****
React Native is a mobile application framework that is most commonly used to develop applications for Android and iOS by enabling the use of React and native platform capabilities. These days, it’s become increasingly popular to use React across platforms. But most of the time, the core logic of the application lies in the React Native JavaScript that can be obtained without needing to use dex2jar.
To check this, rename the APK with zip extension and then extract the APK to a new folder using the following command
Browse to the newly created ReactNative
folder, and find the assets
folder. Inside this folder, it should contain index.android.bundle
. This file will contain all of the React JavaScript in a minified format.React Native Reverse Engineering
index.html
in the same directory with the following code in it.React Native Reverse Engineering
Open the index.html file in Google Chrome. Open up the Developer Toolbar (Command+Option+J for OS X or Control+Shift+J for Windows), and click on “Sources”. You should see a JavaScript file, split up into folders and files that make up the main bundle.
If you are able to find a file called
index.android.bundle.map
, you will be able to analyze the source code in an unminified format.map
files contain the source mapping that allows you to map minified identifiers.
In this phase, you have to identify the sensitive keywords to analyze the Javascript code. A pattern that is popular with React Native applications, is the use of a third party services like such as Firebase, AWS s3 service endpoints, private keys etc.,
During my initial recon process, I have observed the application using the Dialogflow service. So based on this, I have searched a pattern related to its configuration. Fortunately, I was able to find sensitive hard-coded credentials in the Javascript code.