pspy
related_post_gen
pspy | related_post_gen | |
---|---|---|
8 | 15 | |
4,510 | 279 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 9.9 | |
over 1 year ago | about 2 months ago | |
Go | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
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.
pspy
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Ask HN: What's the big deal with Go (Golang)?
* https://github.com/DominicBreuker/pspy
When you deploy them they just work. Compare that to compiled C++ code you often face issues with the deployment in my experience. And production machines usually do not ship compilers.
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Need help getting rid of malware "perfcc / perfctl"
Configure auditd to log everything. Then use ausearch and aureport to inspect the events. You could also configure rsyslog to send the logs to a remote grafana server. There're a lot of tools you could use: falco, tracee, osquery, go-auditd+elastic, pspy , ...
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LinPEAS
Literally using this right now on a pentest looking for privesc in some Linux boxes - the great thing about this tool is it's a shell script that's portable and does a significant amount of enumeration - big time saver. Feel as if it's better then the most others out there.
The second go-to tool after Linpeas is pspy which "allows you to see commands run by other users, cron jobs, etc. as they execute" [1]
[1] https://github.com/DominicBreuker/pspy
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Tips to improve speed during CTFs
skipping processes (use tools such as pspy)
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I passed with 100 points on second attempt AMA
I also forgot https://github.com/DominicBreuker/pspy obviously for linux privesc
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What are some underrated (legal) tools that you have used during the OSCP that no one talks about or knows?
![pspy](https://github.com/DominicBreuker/pspy)
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Startup CTF room, priv esc
It’s not in crontab either. You need to use a tool like pspy to find it.
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alpha-sudo - my first emacs package
All you need to do is run a tool like ps or top often enough and eventually you'll catch a short-lived process exposing sensitive data in its command line. In fact, people wrote specialized scripts doing that at fast enough speed to catch them: https://github.com/DominicBreuker/pspy
related_post_gen
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Speed up your code: don't pass structs bigger than 16 bytes on AMD64
Looks like the HO means hand optimized, with special datastructures for this benchmark.
see: https://github.com/jinyus/related_post_gen/#user-content-fn-...
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Benchmarking 20 programming languages on N-queens and matrix multiplication
There is one for data processing here: https://github.com/jinyus/related_post_gen
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The Neat Programming Language
Is it ready for benchmarking? D currently sits at the top of https://github.com/jinyus/related_post_gen and it would be interesting to see how neat stacks up.
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Murder is a pixel art ECS game engine in C#
[2] https://github.com/jinyus/related_post_gen#multicore-results
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Jaq – A jq clone focused on correctness, speed, and simplicity
I think my benchmark[1] would be a great test for this. The jq[2] version takes 50s on my machine.
[1] : https://github.com/jinyus/related_post_gen
[2]: https://github.com/jinyus/related_post_gen/blob/main/jq/rela...
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Gleam vs Erlang vs Go vs Zig vs Rust for data processing
I added gleam to my data processing benchmark and the performance is less than stellar...so I hope someone here can make suggestions to improve it.
- jinyus/related_post_gen: Data Processing benchmark featuring Rust, Go, Swift, Zig, Julia etc.
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Ask HN: What's the big deal with Go (Golang)?
Easy concurrency.
ps: I wrote a data processing benchmark[1] and go is currently leading the charts. I ported it to c++ but it's not performing as expected. Take a look if you have the time.
[1]: https://github.com/jinyus/related_post_gen
- Julia leads Rust,Zig,Go and Java in data processing benchmark
- Julia Ranks First in Data Processing Microbenchmark
What are some alternatives?
PEASS-ng - PEASS - Privilege Escalation Awesome Scripts SUITE (with colors)
uiua - A stack-based array programming language
hackenv - Manage and access your Kali Linux or Parrot Security VM from the terminal (SSH support + file sharing, especially convenient during CTFs, Hack The Box, etc.) :rocket::wrench:
ivy - ivy, an APL-like calculator
traitor - :arrow_up: :skull_and_crossbones: :fire: Automatic Linux privesc via exploitation of low-hanging fruit e.g. gtfobins, pwnkit, dirty pipe, +w docker.sock
BQN - An APL-like programming language. Self-hosted!
PrivEsc-MindMap
cognate - A human readable quasi-concatenative programming language
feroxbuster - A fast, simple, recursive content discovery tool written in Rust.
Saxon-HE - Saxon-HE open source repository
OSCP-Priv-Esc - Mind maps / flow charts to help with privilege escalation on the OSCP.
git-xargs-tasks - Keep git-xargs changes together