log4shell-tools
log4jshell-pdf
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log4shell-tools | log4jshell-pdf | |
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8 | 2 | |
84 | 153 | |
- | - | |
4.5 | 0.0 | |
23 days ago | over 2 years ago | |
Go | Java | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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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.
log4shell-tools
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Log4j: The Pain Just Keeps Going and Going
I'm seeing this as well. While the amount of traffic has certainly decreased compared to the first couple of days after the CVE was announced, https://log4shell.tools is still being used by people every day.
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How to send similar payload to different http headers?
e.g. from log4j. Taken from https://log4shell.tools/
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Received a visit from the infamous Dejmnok420 today. Can anyone ELI5 the steps to take now?
I run tests with https://log4shell.tools, and it seems I'm vulnerable on client side, but my server is safe, which makes sense as I compiled the .jar 2 weeks ago with BuildTools as indicated here https://www.spigotmc.org/threads/spigot-security-releases-%E2%80%94-1-8-8%E2%80%931-18.537204/
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Log4Shell Vulnerability Test Tool
You're right, but this has always been the trade off with tools like this. You put some trust in the tool's authors and gain some insight in return. Remember the services that tested for Heartbleed (e.g. https://filippo.io/Heartbleed/)? Fairly similar trade-off, but still these tools were widely used.
If you really don't trust me and have some technical know-how, you can self host the service. It's open source: https://github.com/alexbakker/log4shell-tools.
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Log4j 2.15.0 – Previously suggested mitigations may not be enough
I can't say I'm feeling the same. Still lots of people testing over at https://log4shell.tools almost a week after this vulnerability became widely known. Plenty of people still discovering they're vulnerable as well. I think it's likely that these are just the people who know they're using log4j. If you're running a black box product from a vendor you'll have no clue you're vulnerable until it's too late.
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Analysis of the 2nd Log4j CVE published earlier (CVE-2021-45046 / Log4Shell2)
I have a feeling this vulnerability is going to be with us for years. Shameless plug: I built a tool that assists in detecting whether you're vulnerable to this or the previous CVE: https://log4shell.tools. Just enter the JNDI URI it gives you anywhere you suspect it ends up causing a message lookup in log4j. If log4j does so much as a DNS lookup, this tool will tell you about it.
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log4shell.tools - Check if you're vulnerable to an egregious case of log4shell
Done! https://github.com/alexbakker/log4shell-tools
log4jshell-pdf
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Analysis of the 2nd Log4j CVE published earlier (CVE-2021-45046 / Log4Shell2)
https://github.com/eelyvy/log4jshell-pdf/blob/main/pom.xml#L...
So, for others out there that find this: just because you're using `PDFBox` does not necessarily mean that you are also using `log4j`, and therefore likely vulnerable to this latest issue.
What are some alternatives?
ysoserial - A proof-of-concept tool for generating payloads that exploit unsafe Java object deserialization.
lunasec - LunaSec - Dependency Security Scanner that automatically notifies you about vulnerabilities like Log4Shell or node-ipc in your Pull Requests and Builds. Protect yourself in 30 seconds with the LunaTrace GitHub App: https://github.com/marketplace/lunatrace-by-lunasec/
log4j-affected-db - A community sourced list of log4j-affected software
Logout4Shell - Use Log4Shell vulnerability to vaccinate a victim server against Log4Shell
log4j2-without-jndi - log4j2-core JAR w/o JndiLookup.class
log4shell-ldap - A tool for checking log4shell vulnerability mitigations
log4j-log4shell-affected - Lists of affected components and affected apps/vendors by CVE-2021-44228 (aka Log4shell or Log4j RCE). This list is meant as a resource for security responders to be able to find and address the vulnerability
aegis4j - A Java agent that disables platform features you don't use, before an attacker uses them against you.