bstry
INim
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bstry
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Abusing Monday.com's Project Manager As A Command & Control Server
I'm removing this post, just because it doesn't reach the quality standards of this subreddit. Anything can be a C&C, it's not new or novel nor interesting research. Sorry, we do welcome your posts though. I looked through the GitHub and something like https://github.com/1d8/bstry may be more appropriate.
- Tutorial On Coding Ransomware
- (Tutorial) Coding Ransomware
- Tutorial On Coding Ransomware In Nimlang
- Coding Ransomware In Nimlang - A Tutorial
INim
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Nim
- `nim secret`[0]: code is interpreted with Nim's vm, it is limited to compile-time (e.g. no C/C++).
- `nlvm r`[1]: nlvm backend supports JIT compilation and repl-like interface was added in latest release.
- `inim`[2]: supports all nim code, but it's not really a true repl. It adds code to a file and recompiles it (you can see the source file with `ctrl+x`). I'd recommend to use it with clang compiler, because it's a bit faster than gcc in my experience. It's the best option right now. And I use it almost daily.
First two options have rudimentary input system. But you can get command history and left-right navigation by wrapping them with rlwrap (should be preinstalled on most *nixes): `rlwrap nim secret`, `rlwrap nlvm r`.
There are plans to support incremental compilation for the next Nim release (it is currently broken). That would improve inim and other repls experience significantly.
[0]: https://nim-lang.org/docs/manual.html#restrictions-on-compil...
[1]: https://forum.nim-lang.org/t/10697
[2]: https://github.com/inim-repl/INim
- Could Nim be a complete replacement for Python?
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Writing a presentation to introduce rustlang to my dev team, and I've got to the "downsides" part.
Go must be terrible to google too! Nim's easy to google though, it's how I got to rust really. I'm actually the maintainer of inim, the nim repl: https://github.com/inim-repl/INim
- Nim Version 1.6 Released