DependencyCheck
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DependencyCheck | openvas-scanner | |
---|---|---|
11 | 9 | |
5,863 | 2,870 | |
- | 4.0% | |
9.4 | 9.3 | |
6 days ago | 8 days ago | |
Java | C | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
DependencyCheck
- OWASP dependency check (<9.0.0) could fail to work after Dec 15th, 2023
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How To Secure Your JavaScript Applications
Use Security Tools: To identify known vulnerabilities in your project's dependencies, you can utilize commands like npm audit or employ third-party security scanners such as DependencyCheck or Dependabot. These tools thoroughly analyze the dependency tree and offer actionable insights to assist you in resolving any identified vulnerabilities.
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Do you use dependency analysis and vulnerability detection tools?
OWASP DependencyCheck - a really decent tool for scanning your project for vulnerable dependencies. It is actively developed and updated and up to date with the most latest vulnerabilities. Sometimes it can be a pain in the ass, though. Some security researchers and such find a vulnerability, publish it and the next day our CI/CD pipelines fail (the dependency check build step prevents the code from going to production). And not always there is a fix available. So, some vulnerabilities have to be ignored, temporarily. Also, to be able to ignore a vulnerability one has to do a fast risk assessment. And that will require from him to read about the vulnerability and decide if it is safe to be ignored or some different workaround must be found.
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The ultimate guide to Java Security Vulnerabilities (CVE)
The ultimate guide somehow fails to mention the best CVE checker: https://github.com/jeremylong/DependencyCheck
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Is Clojure suitable for my use cases?
We run https://github.com/jeremylong/DependencyCheck over our dependency tree regularly, via this Clojure wrapper: https://github.com/clj-holmes/clj-watson which tells us the dependency tree path to each item that has a CVE and also the version in which the CVE is addressed, if known.
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Gitlab community dependency scanning
We use OWASP dependency-check and pass reports to SonarQube.
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Security in CICD / DevSecOps
From OWASP for those class of tools you could look into DependencyCheck and DependencyTrack
- Is there a tool to track CVEs for the software that we use?
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Does anybody know any good materials for java defensive coding please?.
DependencyCheck is an open source tool that checks for vulnerabilities in dependencies used within a project. While it is a reactive tool, it's an important one since the code a developer writes is not the only code an application uses.
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Are there any tools I can use to safely upgrade my Nuget packages? What are some strategies I can incorporate?
One more aspect to consider, although I know it is not the primary ask of the post, is to be sure and run something like dependency check on your repository. There are quite a few vulnerabilities being injected through the packaging process these days.
openvas-scanner
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Monthly Security Checklist
OpenVAS - https://github.com/greenbone/openvas-scanner
- Kaseya Acquired Vonahi Security
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Looking for Recommendations for New Vulnerability & PHI/PII Scanner
OWASP Zap, OWASP Amass, OpenVAS Scanner
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OpenAI Execs Say They're Shocked by ChatGPT's Popularity
And OpenVAS and OpenSSH and OpenBSD and OpenNN and OpenAFS and on and on and on
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Implement DevSecOps to Secure your CI/CD pipeline
We can create an automation pipeline to patch the server using Foreman or Red Hat Satellite and for scanning, we can use OpenVAS or Nessus to get the list of vulnerabilities.
- Free alternative to something like Tenable's Nessus Monitor?
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Priv Sec Audit?
OpenVAS
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Is there a tool to track CVEs for the software that we use?
I don't recommend cheaping out on vuln scanning, but if you really can't get any money there's always OpenVAS. That will allow you to do credentialed scanning and track vulnerabilities in your environment. It's no real substitute for Tenable or similar, but it's better than nothing.
- Show HN: Easy to use vulnerability exploitation data
What are some alternatives?
dependency-track - Dependency-Track is an intelligent Component Analysis platform that allows organizations to identify and reduce risk in the software supply chain.
Wazuh - Wazuh - The Open Source Security Platform. Unified XDR and SIEM protection for endpoints and cloud workloads.
SonarQube - Continuous Inspection
trivy - Find vulnerabilities, misconfigurations, secrets, SBOM in containers, Kubernetes, code repositories, clouds and more
opencve - CVE Alerting Platform
GVM-Docker - Greenbone Vulnerability Management Docker Image with OpenVAS
uml-reverse-mapper - Automatically generate class diagram from code. Supports Graphviz, PlantUML and Mermaid output formats.
vulscan - Advanced vulnerability scanning with Nmap NSE
slsa - Supply-chain Levels for Software Artifacts
ArchUnit - A Java architecture test library, to specify and assert architecture rules in plain Java
lynis - Lynis - Security auditing tool for Linux, macOS, and UNIX-based systems. Assists with compliance testing (HIPAA/ISO27001/PCI DSS) and system hardening. Agentless, and installation optional.