openapi-directory
ZAP
openapi-directory | ZAP | |
---|---|---|
11 | 61 | |
3,664 | 11,987 | |
1.0% | 0.7% | |
9.2 | 9.2 | |
2 days ago | 7 days ago | |
Java | ||
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal | 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.
openapi-directory
-
What is API Discovery, and How to Use it to Reduce Your Attack Surface
Use APIs.gurufor exploring well-documented OpenAPI files. For example, imagine you are interested in integrating a weather API. By searching for "weather" on APIs.guru, you find several options.
-
How to Automatically Consume RESTful APIs in Your Frontend
Furthermore, since we can split the generated code into multiple parts based on tag filtering, we can also create different SDKs from different resources or even publicly available APIs. There is an extensive list of publicly available OpenAPI specifications on SwaggerHub, RapidAPI and APIs.guru.
-
ApiVault: One-Stop Resource for API Integration
Maybe you'd like to integrate with APIs.guru?
https://apis.guru
- Show HN: An open-source OpenAPI package manager – openpm.ai
-
Automatic npm publishing, with GitHub Actions & npm granular tokens
In this specific case, I'm auto-publishing (now fully automatically, once a month) a package that wraps content from elsewhere bundling it with some utilities to make that useful in JS and available via NPM. For cases like this it's useful to have a patch update once a month that just updates the upstream content & republishes.
-
APIRank.dev - we crawled and ranked 5651+ public APIs from the internet 🔭
- Crawl API repositories like apis.guru
-
Making a useful REST API Specification
This should go without saying, but the types inside your API specification should be specific in order to be useful. The main way I see this appear is that some specification generators seem to default to "string" for everything, even if something else makes sense. In an analysis of 1154 specifications from OpenAPI directory, I found that 60% of the field types were strings. Many of these were instances that made sense, such as IDs or names, but many were misused types: for example, there was a year value encoded with type "string," and a boolean value with type "string" and enum "true" or "false". Using too-broad types such as strings can make it harder to understand the specification, and decrease the effectiveness of certain tools.
-
Data noob here - I’m looking to create my first ‘data’ project.. I want to create a basic data pipeline via an API with Python into SQL then to Power BI.. what are some well known live data sources that I should practice with?
I haven’t used it but have skimmed through it, but https://apis.guru has collected information on lots of APIs. You might find something interesting.
-
From OpenAPI to a working integration in minutes
Try the integration designer with your OpenAPI documents. If you don’t have any document handy, we prepared a few examples for you, or you can find more OpenAPI documents on APIs.guru.
-
What in your opinion is a growing trend? What should people and organisations be paying attention to going forward?
apis.guru is a nice site with APIs listed for many orgs.
ZAP
-
Bruno
I use ZAP [1] with the OAST add-on for this at the moment. I admit the UX isn't perfect, but it serves my purpose.
If I also want control over the responses (e.g. return a 401 status code for every fifth request), I have a custom extender script [2] for that.
[1]: https://www.zaproxy.org/
-
What is API Discovery, and How to Use it to Reduce Your Attack Surface
Implement tools like Burp Suite or OWASP ZAP for in-depth security scanning of your APIs.
-
Best Hacking Tools for Beginners 2024
OWASP ZAP
-
Autorize – The most popular tool to discover AuthZ/AuthN flaws
The use of capital punctuation implies a warning? an alert? Would this same response be warranted for Burp which is also a commercial, closed source product?
If this is an issue for some, then ZAP being open source[1] maybe favourable.
That said, Burp is the defacto tool for a reason - it's best in class. Every pentester I know, including myself, has a paid subscription. The fact that it's closed source hasn't been an issue.
[1] https://github.com/zaproxy/zaproxy
-
Show HN: Pākiki Proxy – An intercepting proxy for penetration pesting
Briefly reviewed your product. Seems like OWASP ZAP is your competition: https://www.zaproxy.org/
It runs entirely in the browser so it uses the browser "native" frameworks.
-
Vulnerability Scanning of Node.js Applications
Dynamic analysis involves testing your application while it's running. Tools like OWASP ZAP and Burp Suite can help identify vulnerabilities like SQL injection or Cross-Site Scripting by sending malicious requests to your application and analyzing the responses.
-
Is this fraud? And if so, to what extent am I responsible?
> Lying is not an embellishment or puffery, it's a lie. Engaging a company for a 3 day pen test that's totally insufficient, that would be an embellishment.
I agree, but if the RFP question was phrased "have you done penetration testing?" then that leaves a lot of room for embellishment. If the question is "do you have SOC2 certification?" and you answer "yes" untruthfully, then that is a lie. If they ask for the SOC2 or pentest report and you give them a falsified document, that's where you're (probably) committing fraud.
> One of the most important part of pen tests is that they are external.
AWS/Google/etc have internal security teams doing their pen tests, so no, this isn't true.
> Just doing your job as an engineer and looking for bugs is not a pen test.
What about an engineer spending an afternoon running ZAP[0]?
> It's like saying, "what is an audit really? We have accountants and they check our books for anomalies."
Yeah, which is why you don't just ask a company "do you keep track of your finances?" if you're investing in them, you request external auditors.
[0] https://www.zaproxy.org/
-
The essential security checklist for user identity
In addition to manual security reviews, you can also implement DevSecOps practices to automate security checks. For example, you can set up a CI/CD pipeline to run static code analysis tools like CodeQL and automatically run penetration tests using tools like OWASP ZAP.
-
The 36 tools that SaaS can use to keep their product and data safe from criminal hackers (manual research)
OWASP ZAP (open source)
-
How can i make web server from scratch
I would start by installing Burp Suite or OWASP Zap and seeing what the actual messages look like
What are some alternatives?
postman-contract-test-generator - Postman collection and environment that will take an Open API Spec, validate component adherence, generate contract tests, and execute them.
nuclei - Fast and customizable vulnerability scanner based on simple YAML based DSL.
atoz - Amazon Web Services (AWS) APIs in Nim
SonarQube - Continuous Inspection
SpaceX-API - :rocket: Open Source REST API for SpaceX launch, rocket, core, capsule, starlink, launchpad, and landing pad data.
mitmproxy - An interactive TLS-capable intercepting HTTP proxy for penetration testers and software developers.
prism - Turn any OpenAPI2/3 and Postman Collection file into an API server with mocking, transformations and validations.
SQLMap - Automatic SQL injection and database takeover tool
awesomekql - Microsoft Sentinel, Defender for Endpoint - KQL Detection Packs
awesome-dva - A curated list of "damn vulnerable apps" and exploitable VMs / wargames. See contributing.md for information.
openapi-directory-js - Building & bundling https://github.com/APIs-guru/openapi-directory for easy use from JS
HTML Purifier - Standards compliant HTML filter written in PHP