dune
CyberChef
dune | CyberChef | |
---|---|---|
27 | 286 | |
1,536 | 25,649 | |
1.0% | 2.1% | |
9.9 | 9.3 | |
5 days ago | 1 day ago | |
OCaml | JavaScript | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
dune
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Tagging OCaml packages
If you are using the dune build system, add the tag(s) to your dune-project file's package stanza. E.g.:
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NextJS, the App Router and ReasonReact
One way to get around this is to modify the api/dune file with (include_subdirs qualified); this means that every subdirectory of api/ can be referenced by module namespacing and we don't have to write dune files for every route (or pages) folder. However, the OCaml LSP does not like it and red squiggles will show up in the editor (although the app with still compile without errors). Trying to develop the app knowing those red squiggles cannot be vanquished would drive me nuts, so instead of using (include_subdirs qualified) I just wrote dune files for every route (and page) which gets rid of the red squiggles.
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Generating .ml test cases from a glob of text files in a directory using dune
2) Neither would having all source/targets specified, as that would entail listing them all in the dune file as wildcard rules is apparently still not a thing: https://github.com/ocaml/dune/issues/307
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Dune build
There is a small example on the dune home page: https://dune.build/
- The YAML Document from Hell
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Ask HN: Programs that saved you 100 hours? (2022 edition)
Dune (https://dune.build/) is the preeminent build tool for OCaml development. I don't love its input syntax (s-expressions), and I sometimes miss the ability to write high-level functions to reduce boilerplate (especially for unit tests), but it always gets the dependencies right, and it's fast. This is in stark contrast to some of my experiences with various other build systems, and I am super happy that the default option for OCaml build systems is so good.
- Help getting started with Ocaml
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Faster Incremental Builds with Dune 3
It's still weird because dune's own site only makes Jane Street references: https://dune.build/.
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How to print anything in OCaml
ONE of the big benefits of OCaml is its powerful REPL (also called the toplevel), the interactive command-line utility where you can load modules, type in and execute code, and see its results. The modern REPL, utop, has powerful auto-completion and integration with the build system dune, which enables productive workflows like loading an entire project's libraries in the REPL and interactively exploring them.
- Dune 3.2.0
CyberChef
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PicoCTF 2024: packer
Then we take the encrypted text and use CyberChef to decrypt it.
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Unbreakable 2024: secrets-of-winter
Let's go to CyberChef and insert our pieces of evidence.
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YouTube: Google has found a way to break Invidious
A parameter was changed from '2AMBCgIQBg' to 'CgIIAdgDAQ%3D%3D' which is just the correct base64 encoding they should have been using the entire time.
I don't think this was a hostile action by Google, I think someone just added better input validation for security reasons and it accidently broke the bad requests they were sending.
https://gchq.github.io/CyberChef/#recipe=URL_Decode()From_Ba...
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PicoCTF 2024- CanYouSee
❗This is indeed the flag, but the text is encrypted with Base64. Usually, the presence of padding character "=" indicates that's Base64 type of encoding (but that's only one of the hints). To decrypt it, we can use CyberChef. Copy-paste the text and we either:
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CyberChef VS DevToolboxWeb - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 6 Feb 2024
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CyberChef from GCHQ: The Cyber Swiss Army Knife
It uses a combination of magic bytes (like the `file` command), entropy analysis and character frequency detection to determine whether an output is likely to be of interest to the user.
The file type mechanism is written here[0]. There's a list of all signatures we detect here[1].
[0] https://github.com/gchq/CyberChef/blob/master/src/core/lib/F...
- Show HN: File Hider
- UK GCHQ's CyberChef
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Lets try this again. Got a code for you to break.
I think this can be deciphered using CyberChef...
- CyberChef is a useful tool for decoding information.
What are some alternatives?
statsd-filter-proxy-rs - A filter proxy for StatsD
QR-Code-generator - High-quality QR Code generator library in Java, TypeScript/JavaScript, Python, Rust, C++, C.
opam - opam is a source-based package manager. It supports multiple simultaneous compiler installations, flexible package constraints, and a Git-friendly development workflow.
CapRover - Scalable PaaS (automated Docker+nginx) - aka Heroku on Steroids
ocaml - The core OCaml system: compilers, runtime system, base libraries
py4e - Web site for www.py4e.com and source to the Python 3.0 textbook
CorrinoEngine - CorrinoEngine is an open-source project which will recreate the Emperor : Battle for Dune
cyberchef-recipes - A list of cyber-chef recipes and curated links
domainslib - Parallel Programming over Domains
Ciphey - ⚡ Automatically decrypt encryptions without knowing the key or cipher, decode encodings, and crack hashes ⚡
melange - A mixture of tooling combined to produce JavaScript from OCaml & Reason
Monica - Personal CRM. Remember everything about your friends, family and business relationships.