betterscan-ce
OpenSSL
betterscan-ce | OpenSSL | |
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34 | 150 | |
686 | 24,254 | |
- | 1.1% | |
7.3 | 9.9 | |
24 days ago | 1 day ago | |
Python | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
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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.
betterscan-ce
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Cloud and Code Security - betterscan.io
More on the website: www.betterscan.io
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Do you SLSA or SBOM in your SDLC?
Maybe you will find https://github.com/marcinguy/betterscan-ce useful (scans SBOMs and Dependencies, apart from Code and IaC).
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SBOM and dependencies check tool and vulnerabilities database from Google
P.S I also added it to my Security Automation/Orchestration project, it was missing there: https://github.com/marcinguy/betterscan-ce Hope it helps somebody.
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Nosey Parker: a new scanner to find misplaced secrets in textual data and Git history
Congrats on release. Feel free to check out https://github.com/marcinguy/betterscan-ce It is not that fast, but detects 166+ secret types (modified trufflehog3) and also bugs and vulnerabilities in Code and Cloud setups.
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OpenSSL 3.0.7 Published
If you want to scan binary to see if this uses vulnerable version, use this YARA rule: https://github.com/marcinguy/betterscan-ce/blob/master/analy...
Courtesy of Akamai.
If you don't know YARA tool, you can run this command in the folder where your binary is (it will install everything needed):
sh <(curl https://dl.betterscan.io/cli.sh)
Hope that helps somebody
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Text4shell CVE-2022-42889 scan
More: https://github.com/marcinguy/betterscan-ce
- Asking for feedback about my business website
- PMD Apex Code Scanner with integration with CLI output (HTML, JSON, Terminal) or Platform
- Open Source (with Professional paid version) Apex Scanning Tool for Salesforce for Security, Quality and Best practices using PMD with many other checks (incl. secrets)
- Checkov + Kubescape + Code checks unified in one interface/UI or output
OpenSSL
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RVM Ruby 2.6.0 — built with custom openssl version on Ubuntu 22.04
ENV OPENSSL_PREFIX=/opt/openssl ENV SSL_CERT_FILE=/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt WORKDIR /tmp RUN git clone --branch OpenSSL_1_0_2n https://github.com/openssl/openssl.git RUN cd openssl RUN ./config shared --prefix=$OPENSSL_PREFIX --openssldir=$OPENSSL_PREFIX/ssl RUN make RUN make install RUN rvm install 2.6.0 -C --with-openssl-dir=$OPENSSL_PREFIX ENV PATH /usr/local/rvm/bin:$PATH RUN rvm --default use ruby-2.6.0 ENV PATH /usr/local/rvm/bin:/usr/local/rvm/rubies/ruby-2.6.0/bin:$PATH ENV GEM_HOME /usr/local/rvm/rubies/ruby-2.6.0/lib/ruby/gems/2.6.0
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Heartbleed and XZ Backdoor Learnings: Open Source Infrastructure Can Be Improved Efficiently With Moderate Funding
Today, April 7th, 2024, marks the 10-year anniversary since CVE-2014-0160 was published. This security vulnerability known as "Heartbleed" was a flaw in the OpenSSL cryptography software, the most popular option to implement Transport Layer Security (TLS). In more layman's terms, if you type https:// in your browser address bar, chances are high that you are interacting with OpenSSL.
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Ask HN: How does the xz backdoor replace RSA_public_decrypt?
At this point I pretty much understand the entire process on how the xz backdoor came to be: its execution stages, extraction from binary "test" files etc. But one thing puzzles me: how can the ifunc mechanism be used to replace something like RSA_public_decrypt? Granted this probably stems from my lack of understanding of ifunc, but I was under the impression that in order for the ifunc mechanism to work in your code, you have to explicitly mark specific function with multiple implementations with __attribute__ ((ifunc ("the_resolver_function"))). Looking at the source code of the RSA function in question, ifunc attribute isn't present:
https://github.com/openssl/openssl/blob/master/crypto/rsa/rsa_crpt.c#L51
So how does the backdoor actually replace the call? Does this means that the ifunc mechanism can be used to override pretty much anything on the system?
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Use of HTTPS Resource Records
OpenSSL and Go crypt/tls has no support yet, so none of the webservers that depend on them support it. Apache, Nginx, and Caddy, they all need upstream ECH support first.
- https://github.com/openssl/openssl/issues/7482
- https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/22938
- https://github.com/golang/go/issues/63369
- openssl-3.2.0 released
- Large performance degradation in OpenSSL 3
- OpenSSL 3.2 Alpha 2
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Encrypted Client Hello – the last puzzle piece to privacy
If I'm understanding the draft correctly, I think the webserver you're hosting your sites on would need it implemented as it requires private keys and ECH configuration. In the example of nginx since it uses openssl, openssl would need to implement it. I found an issue on their Github but it's still open: https://github.com/openssl/openssl/issues/7482
- eBPF Practical Tutorial: Capturing SSL/TLS Plain Text Data Using uprobe
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OpenSSL Versions... whats the plan here
I confirmed that the systm was on 1.1.1f with openssl version command. Hmm...... I check the openssl version in the repo with apt list... LOL package names wernt helpful. finally went to the repo pages and found that its still on 1.1.1f, https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/openssl. Meenwhile I looked up the version history on https://www.openssl.org/ and saw that 1.1.1v was released at the beginning of this month... ok. I can understand it it was out less then 30 days. I looked up when f came out, end of MARCH 2020. NEARLY 3-1/2 YEARS
What are some alternatives?
awesome-guidelines - A curated list of high quality coding style conventions and standards.
GnuTLS - GnuTLS
osv-scanner - Vulnerability scanner written in Go which uses the data provided by https://osv.dev
Crypto++ - free C++ class library of cryptographic schemes
noseyparker - Nosey Parker is a command-line program that finds secrets and sensitive information in textual data and Git history.
mbedTLS - An open source, portable, easy to use, readable and flexible TLS library, and reference implementation of the PSA Cryptography API. Releases are on a varying cadence, typically around 3 - 6 months between releases.
ThreatPlaybook - A unified DevSecOps Framework that allows you to go from iterative, collaborative Threat Modeling to Application Security Test Orchestration
libsodium - A modern, portable, easy to use crypto library.
CVE-2022-3602
LibreSSL - LibreSSL Portable itself. This includes the build scaffold and compatibility layer that builds portable LibreSSL from the OpenBSD source code. Pull requests or patches sent to [email protected] are welcome.
osv.dev - Open source vulnerability DB and triage service.
cfssl - CFSSL: Cloudflare's PKI and TLS toolkit