sslyze
warehouse
sslyze | warehouse | |
---|---|---|
10 | 275 | |
3,144 | 3,470 | |
- | 0.5% | |
7.5 | 9.7 | |
4 days ago | 1 day ago | |
Python | Python | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | 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.
sslyze
- Tool to check whether 0-RTT is enabled or not
- SSL Diag Tool
-
Ways to test SSL Certificates
For Internally and Externally accessible websites – Can use hostname or IP address Sslyze command line tool - https://github.com/nabla-c0d3/sslyze/releases - current version is 4.1.0
- SSL / TLS scanning utility (internal) ?
-
ERR_SSL_VERSION_OR_CIPHER_MISMATCH
3) If you are technically skilled then there are programs/scripts you can run that will tell you exactly what TLS/SSL settings your router supports by scanning it. I have used https://github.com/nabla-c0d3/sslyze in the past but that was a long time ago so not sure it still works well
- the "best" ciphers
-
sslyze VS cryptolyzer - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 24 Jan 2022
-
CryptoLyzer: A comprehensive cryptographic settings analyzer
There are many notable open-source projects (SSLyze, CipherScan, testssl.sh, tls-scan, …) and several SaaS solutions (CryptCheck, CypherCraft, Hardenize, ImmuniWeb, Mozilla Observatory, SSL Labs, …) to do a security setting analysis, especially when we are talking about TLS, which is the most common and popular cryptographic protocol. However, most of these tools heavily depend on one or more versions of one or more cryptographic protocol libraries, like GnuTLS, OpenSSL, or wolfSSL. But why is this such a problem?
- Create a tool to capture the TLS handshake and cipher suite being used
-
Awesome Penetration Testing
SSLyze - Fast and comprehensive TLS/SSL configuration analyzer to help identify security mis-configurations.
warehouse
-
Create an AI prototyping environment using Jupyter Lab IDE with Typescript, LangChain.js and Ollama for rapid AI prototyping
pip install PackageName: installs a package (you can browse the available packages in the Python Package Index)
-
Smooth Packaging: Flowing from Source to PyPi with GitLab Pipelines
python3 -m pip install \ --trusted-host test.pypi.org --trusted-host test-files.pythonhosted.org \ --index-url https://test.pypi.org/simple/ \ --extra-index-url https://pypi.org/simple/ \ piper_whistle==$(python3 -m src.piper_whistle.version)
-
Pickling Python in the Cloud via WebAssembly
In my experience so far, I can use a vast amount of the Python Standard Library to build Wasm-powered serverless applications. The caveat I currently understand is that Python’s implementation of TCP and UDP sockets, as well as Python libraries that use threads, processes, and signal handling behind the scenes, will not compile to Wasm. It is worth noting that a similar caveat exists with libraries that I find on The Python Package Index (PyPI) site. While these caveats might limit what can be compiled to Wasm, there are still a ton of extremely powerful libraries to leverage.
-
Introducing Flama for Robust Machine Learning APIs
We believe that poetry is currently the best tool for this purpose, besides of being the most popular one at the moment. This is why we will use poetry to manage the dependencies of our project throughout this series of posts. Poetry allows you to declare the libraries your project depends on, and it will manage (install/update) them for you. Poetry also allows you to package your project into a distributable format and publish it to a repository, such as PyPI. We strongly recommend you to learn more about this tool by reading the official documentation.
-
PyPI Packaging
From there, I needed to learn a bit about PyPi or Python Package Index, which is the home for all the wonderful packages that you know if you have ever run the handy pip install command. PyPi has a pretty quick and easy onboarding, which requires a secured account be created and, for the purposes of submitting packages from CLI, an API token be generated. This can be done in your PyPi profile. Once logg just navigate to https://pypi.org/manage/account/ and scroll down to the API tokens section. Click “Add Token” and follow the few steps to generate an API token which is your access point to uploading packages. With all this in place, I was able to use twine to handle the package upload. First I needed to install twine, again as simple as pip install twine. In order for twine to access my API token during the package upload process, it needed to read it from .pypirc file that contains the token info. For some that file may exist already, for me I was required to create it. Working in windows I simply used a text editor to create it in my home user directory ($HOME/.pypirc). The file contents had a TOML like format looked like this:
-
Releasing my Python Project
I have published the package to Python Package Index, commonly called PyPi, and in this post, I'll be sharing the steps I had to follow in the process.
-
Publishing my open source project to PyPI!
Register at PyPI.org
-
Show HN: I mirrored all the code from PyPI to GitHub
According to the stats on the original link, there are over 25,000 identified secret ids/keys/tokens in the data. And it looks like that's just identifiable secrets, e.g. "Google API Keys" that I'm guessing are identifiable because they have a specific pattern, and may be missing other secrets that use less recognizable patterns.
I mean, sure, compared to the 478,876 Projects claimed on https://pypi.org/, that's a pretty small minority. On the other hand, I'd guess a many Python packages don't use these particular services, or even need to connect to a remote service at all, so the area for this class of mistake should be even smaller.
And mistakes do happen, but that's a pretty big thing to miss if you are knowingly publishing your code with the expectation other people will be reading it.
-
Pezzo v0.5 - Dashboards, Caching, Python Client, and More!
PyPi package
-
Modifying keywords in python package
Does pypi.org display the Union of all keywords, the keywords of the most recent release, the keywords of the first release or some other weird combination like the intersection?
What are some alternatives?
sslscan - sslscan tests SSL/TLS enabled services to discover supported cipher suites
devpi
RustScan - 🤖 The Modern Port Scanner 🤖
bandersnatch
aioquic - QUIC and HTTP/3 implementation in Python
localshop - local pypi server (custom packages and auto-mirroring of pypi)
tls-scan - An Internet scale, blazing fast SSL/TLS scanner ( non-blocking, event-driven )
Poe the Poet - A task runner that works well with poetry.
scapy - Scapy: the Python-based interactive packet manipulation program & library. Supports Python 2 & Python 3.
scribd-downloader
simpleeval - Simple Safe Sandboxed Extensible Expression Evaluator for Python
Python Packages Project Generator - 🚀 Your next Python package needs a bleeding-edge project structure.