CheatSheetSeries
dirsearch
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CheatSheetSeries | dirsearch | |
---|---|---|
49 | 12 | |
26,480 | 11,213 | |
1.9% | - | |
9.1 | 7.9 | |
9 days ago | 28 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0 | - |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
CheatSheetSeries
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Next.js: consequence of AppRouter on your CSP
Cross Site Scripting Prevention Cheat Sheet from OWASP Cheat Sheet Series
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A guide to Auth & Access Control in web apps 🔐
OWasp cheat sheet on how to do ACL in Web App.
- Ask HN: Best Practices Guides You're Aware Of
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Advice For Securing Backend Code
I recommend reading OWASP cheat sheets , especially these:
- What are some senior level learning resources you recommend for improving as a backend engineer?
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OWASP Attacks spreadsheet?
If it's anywhere it's probably in here, https://cheatsheetseries.owasp.org/
- How do you all SECURE your Apps?
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What is the easiest and most secure way to implement security in a NestJS application?
Im noob but i read somewhere that if u just follow this https://cheatsheetseries.owasp.org/ Your website is secured
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OWASP Needs to Evolve
Fixed: https://github.com/OWASP/CheatSheetSeries/issues/1089#issuec...
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When to implement a back end for a web application?
The most helpful "convention" for building a web application is the OWASP CheatSheet Series that focuses on security best practices.
dirsearch
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Looking for some help with this Python package
I am new to Python. With the help of several users (thanks u/Diapolo10 and u/shiftybyte)I've been able to install Python and the dirsearch package. Dirsearch (https://github.com/maurosoria/dirsearch) allows for checking website paths with a wordlist. For example, I have a wordlist file with words like "dog", "cat", "bird", etc and I want to check the validity of those words as extensions on a website. Something like "example.com/bird", "example.com/cat", etc. I have a test wordlist in the same directory as dirsearch, but I am confused on how to proceed with the commands. I want to have it check my wordlist as extensions on the example.com website and then save output on if the webpath is valid or not. Just need a little bit of help.
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The 36 tools that SaaS can use to keep their product and data safe from criminal hackers (manual research)
DirSearch
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Pentesting Tools I Use Everyday
Learn more about dirsearch here: https://github.com/maurosoria/dirsearch
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Mapping your AWS attack surface
Empowered with a list of all the exposed URLs in your organization, you can then set up a process to scan these using a number of web-focused Dynamic Application Security Testing (DAST) tools and scanners such as Zed Attack Proxy, dirsearch (Web path scanner), Aquatone, and Nikto2. The OWASP® Foundation maintains a full list of scanning tools that could be used.
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Millions of .git folders exposed publicly by mistake
Scan our domains and infrastructure to reveal if we have exposed.git repositories and other critical infrastructure. You can scan your domains and subdomains with many tools such as Amass or dirsearch to name a couple.
- dirsearch - release v0.4.3 - crawling supported
- Release dirsearch v0.4.2 - Web Path Scanner
- recommended tools that do not come with Kali
- How to choose a web path scanner? [closed]
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Tools and Skills to be the Bug Bounty Hunting.
dirsearch:
What are some alternatives?
WhatWeb - Next generation web scanner
gobuster - Directory/File, DNS and VHost busting tool written in Go
webpack - A bundler for javascript and friends. Packs many modules into a few bundled assets. Code Splitting allows for loading parts of the application on demand. Through "loaders", modules can be CommonJs, AMD, ES6 modules, CSS, Images, JSON, Coffeescript, LESS, ... and your custom stuff.
hacktricks - Welcome to the page where you will find each trick/technique/whatever I have learnt in CTFs, real life apps, and reading researches and news.
big-list-of-naughty-strings - The Big List of Naughty Strings is a list of strings which have a high probability of causing issues when used as user-input data.
Bitcoin-wallet-cracker - Automated Bitcoin wallet generator that with mnemonic and passphrases bruteforces wallet addresses
docker-socket-proxy - Proxy over your Docker socket to restrict which requests it accepts
asleep_scanner - Dahua DVRs bruteforcer at port 37777
django-mfa2 - A Django app that handles MFA, it supports TOTP, U2F, FIDO2 U2F (Webauthn), Email Token and Trusted Devices
IPRotate_Burp_Extension - Extension for Burp Suite which uses AWS API Gateway to rotate your IP on every request.
kics - Find security vulnerabilities, compliance issues, and infrastructure misconfigurations early in the development cycle of your infrastructure-as-code with KICS by Checkmarx.
stegseek - :zap: Worlds fastest steghide cracker, chewing through millions of passwords per second :zap: