trivy
clair
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trivy | clair | |
---|---|---|
82 | 21 | |
21,222 | 10,019 | |
3.1% | 0.8% | |
9.7 | 9.2 | |
3 days ago | 6 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
trivy
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A Deep Dive Into Terraform Static Code Analysis Tools: Features and Comparisons
Trivy Owner/Maintainer: Aqua Security Age: First released on GitHub on May 7th, 2019 License: Apache License 2.0 backward-compatible with tfsec
- Suas imagens de container não estão seguras!
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General Docker Troubleshooting, Best Practices & Where to Go From Here
Trivy. A Simple and Comprehensive Vulnerability Scanner for Containers.
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Distroless images using melange and apko
Using Trivy:
- Friends - needs help choosing solution for SBOM vulnerability
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An Overview of Kubernetes Security Projects at KubeCon Europe 2023
Trivy is a mature and comprehensive open source tool from Aqua Security that supports scanning multiple sources, from file systems to containers and VMs. Trivy also looks beyond vulnerabilities, to scan licenses, secrets, infrastructure as code misconfiguration, and more.
- Best vulnerability scanner for DevOps
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About Cloudflare Tunnels
I would suggest to think about the thread model that you are facing so you can have a better mental model of the weak points of your environment. The very very big majority of these attacks will be automated probing for publicly known vulnerabilities or default credentials. That means the maintainers of the software you are running and the channels on which their updates are shipped to you and deployed are very important factors. For software that is not installed from a trusted and well maintained source (e.g. Ubuntus main repository), you want to make extra sure that vulnerabilities are updated. E.g. your deployed docker containers might contain security issues, you can run checks on these with tools like trivy. The same is also true for appliances, in case your router or firewall contains a software vulnerability, how will you be notified and how will the required updates be deployed?
- Security docker app
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Open source container scanning tool to find vulnerabilities and suggest best practice improvements?
https://github.com/aquasecurity/trivy 17k stars, updated 11 hours ago
clair
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I looked through attacks in my access logs. Here's what I found
Besides pointing pentester tools like metasploit at yourself, there are some nice scanners out there.
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General Docker Troubleshooting, Best Practices & Where to Go From Here
Clair. Vulnerability Static Analysis for Containers.
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Open source container scanning tool to find vulnerabilities and suggest best practice improvements?
https://github.com/quay/clair 9.4k stars, updated 17 hours ago
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Postgres: The Graph Database You Didn't Know You Had
It scaled well compared to a naive graph abstraction implemented outside the database, but when performance wasn't great, it REALLY wasn't great. We ended up throwing it out in later versions to try and get more consistent performance.
I've since worked on SpiceDB[1] which takes the traditional design approach for graph databases and simply treating Postgres as triple-store and that scales far better. IME, if you need a graph, you probably want to use a database optimized for graph access patterns. Most general-purpose graph databases are just bags of optimizations for common traversals.
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Implement DevSecOps to Secure your CI/CD pipeline
Open source: Trivy, Gryp and Clair are widely used open source tools for container scanning.
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Sublime Music - A FLOSS desktop client for Subsonic API servers (Airsonic, Navidrome, Gonic, etc)
Testing the image with github.com/fullhunt/log4j-scan and https://github.com/quay/clair shows no vulnerabilities
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Automatically tag your Docker images as vulnerable in ECR
Amazon Elastic Container Registry is a fully-managed Docker container registry. It makes it easy for developers to store and manage Docker images inside their AWS environment. ECR supports two types of image scanning. Enhanced image scanning requires an integration with Amazon Inspector. It will scan your repositories continuously. Basic image scanning will use the Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVEs) database (open-source Clair) to find vulnerabilities in your images. You can trigger scans on image push or manually.
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SaaS Startup Security 101 - A quick guide for building secure SaaS
Klair: Scan your containersJust like external dependencies can contain security flaws, container images also can contain outdated programs and dependencies subject to security issues. Klair is an open-source tool that can help you find outdated dependencies and security flaws in your docker images.
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How to leverage image vulnerability scanning on AWS ECR using a fully automated solution
AWS Elastic Container Registry has been able to support the scanning of images for vulnerabilities using the open source project Clair for quite some time now. Clair is an open source project used for the static analysis of vulnerabilities in application containers (currently including OCI and Docker). Made available by AWS directly and implemented into ECR, it is a very useful feature to minimize the risk of using endangered software - and stay compliant. The scanning for vulnerabilities should be a good standard in any Dockerized scenario as public images and their heirs can contain many security risks (Top-ten-docker-images) - which might be overlooked while developing applications that are constantly changed and improved - and new versions of images are pushed to your ECR many times a day.
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Hosting my own docker registry, any recommendations on UI and authentication service?
I use Quay and quite like it. It's a lot more flexible to deploy than Harbor. It has a web UI and connects to LDAP or OIDC. You can also add vulnerability scanning to it as well with Clair. The one downside is that it doesn't support a pull-through cache system like Harbor does (to my knowledge), though you can explicitly mirror containers from another source.
What are some alternatives?
snyk - Snyk CLI scans and monitors your projects for security vulnerabilities. [Moved to: https://github.com/snyk/cli]
grype - A vulnerability scanner for container images and filesystems
checkov - Prevent cloud misconfigurations and find vulnerabilities during build-time in infrastructure as code, container images and open source packages with Checkov by Bridgecrew.
syft - CLI tool and library for generating a Software Bill of Materials from container images and filesystems
falco - Cloud Native Runtime Security
dockle - Container Image Linter for Security, Helping build the Best-Practice Docker Image, Easy to start
dependency-track - Dependency-Track is an intelligent Component Analysis platform that allows organizations to identify and reduce risk in the software supply chain.
hadolint - Dockerfile linter, validate inline bash, written in Haskell
kics - Find security vulnerabilities, compliance issues, and infrastructure misconfigurations early in the development cycle of your infrastructure-as-code with KICS by Checkmarx.
kube-bench - Checks whether Kubernetes is deployed according to security best practices as defined in the CIS Kubernetes Benchmark
tfsec - Security scanner for your Terraform code