go-formatter
bettercap
Our great sponsors
go-formatter | bettercap | |
---|---|---|
108 | 28 | |
120,785 | 15,681 | |
- | 1.7% | |
9.1 | 1.0 | |
2 days ago | 18 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
go-formatter
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Why Go is great choice for Software engineering.
A curated list of awesome Go frameworks, libraries and software - Awesome Go / Golang (awesome-go.com)
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Golang Web: GET Method
Awesome Go projects and frmaeworks
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How I do technology watch
Go: https://github.com/avelino/awesome-go
- Go
- Essential Command Line Tools for Developers
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I created a search engine that helps you compare and determine quality, trends, and popularity in GO packages
✨ Includes all packages from Awesome Go ✨ (some entries did not exist anymore)
- A curated list of Go frameworks, libraries and software
- Awesome Go Frameworks, Libraries and Software
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Golang: Channels
Awesome Go projects and frmaeworks
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Goravel, Web framework inspired from Laravel in Golang
AFAIK, no. There are some helper frameworks [1], but none of them is dominant. Two possible reasons: it's quite easy to write a (web) service with the library functions (it even includes a gzip stream), and it's practically impossible to write an ORM framework like you have in Java and Python, so the Go frameworks I've seen are basically a bunch of helper functions.
[1] https://github.com/avelino/awesome-go#web-frameworks
bettercap
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bettercap VS petep - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 3 Oct 2023
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Malware installed in this bluetooth remote?
you can do this with Bettercap
- bettercap hell
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quicklisp security (or total lack of it)
I've been learning some common lisp, reading through Practical Common Lisp, and it's really neat. People say the good ideas of lisp got adapted in other languages and sure that's true of garbage collection, lambda's and some others, but I'm seeing plenty incredible stuff I haven't seen elsewhere, the condition system that among other things lets you fix and resume your program on exception, real interactive development, flexible object system, macros way more understandable than in other languages with AST macros as in lisp the AST is simple, an expressive dynamic language at high level of ruby and python while being an order of magnitude faster performance. Quicklisp also is really neat, how many other package managers can load new dependencies without restarting your application? And I was learning it with idea that it's not just of historical or hobby interest but legitimately a good choice I can use for new programming projects today for many tasks, but I just learned something that makes it impossible for me to consider, which is complete lack of security of quicklisp. You go to the website and see sha256 hash and PGP signature for quicklisp download, awesome it seems at the security standard you expect for a package manager. But then the actual quicklisp client does all downloads over http with no verification. What this means in practical terms is basically if you use quicklisp, anyone on your local network can easily hack your computer, by MITM (man-in-the-middle) the traffic and serving you backdoored software when you install packages from quicklisp. mitm6 will MITM windows machines on normal networks, bettercap can MITM linux and os x on most networks. Aside from attackers on your local network there's plenty other scenarios, you can go near office of CL using company and set up a open WIFI access point with same name as company wifi and hack their developers, using quicklisp over something like Tor is extremely dangerous at present as it would let the exit node backdoor the packages you download, and then in less likely but still should be protected against scenarios is just if quicklisp.org or any router between you and it is compromised, you can be hacked.
- Grannar från helvetet
- Bettercap – Swiss Army Knife for 802.11, BLE, IPv4 and IPv6 Networks
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Hacker News top posts: Dec 3, 2022
Bettercap – Swiss Army Knife for 802.11, BLE, IPv4 and IPv6 Networks\ (5 comments)
What are some alternatives?
gobeam/Stringy - Convert string to camel case, snake case, kebab case / slugify, custom delimiter, pad string, tease string and many other functionalities with help of by Stringy package.
aircrack-ng - WiFi security auditing tools suite
go-shortid - Super short, fully unique, non-sequential and URL friendly Ids
MITMf - Framework for Man-In-The-Middle attacks
numa - NUMA is a utility library, which is written in go. It help us to write some NUMA-AWARED code.
mitmproxy - An interactive TLS-capable intercepting HTTP proxy for penetration testers and software developers.
stateless - Go library for creating finite state machines
wifipumpkin3 - Powerful framework for rogue access point attack.
morse - Morse Code Library in Go
pwnagotchi-display-password-plugin - Pwnagotchi plugin to display the most recently cracked password on the Pwnagotchi face
bexp - Go implementation of Brace Expansion mechanism to generate arbitrary strings.
Metasploit - Metasploit Framework