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Sysdig Alternatives
Similar projects and alternatives to Sysdig
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budibase
Budibase is an open-source low code platform that helps you build internal tools in minutes 🚀
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appsmith
Platform to build admin panels, internal tools, and dashboards. Integrates with 25+ databases and any API.
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WorkOS
The modern identity platform for B2B SaaS. The APIs are flexible and easy-to-use, supporting authentication, user identity, and complex enterprise features like SSO and SCIM provisioning.
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ThreatMapper
Open source cloud native security observability platform. Linux, K8s, AWS Fargate and more.
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Wireshark
Read-only mirror of Wireshark's Git repository at https://gitlab.com/wireshark/wireshark. ⚠️ GitHub won't let us disable pull requests. ⚠️ THEY WILL BE IGNORED HERE ⚠️ Upload them at GitLab instead.
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InfluxDB
Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.
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perf-tools
Performance analysis tools based on Linux perf_events (aka perf) and ftrace
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mitmproxy
An interactive TLS-capable intercepting HTTP proxy for penetration testers and software developers.
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SaaSHub
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Sysdig reviews and mentions
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Sysdig VS ThreatMapper - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 11 Apr 2022
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Systemd service sandboxing and security hardening 101
FWIU, e.g. sysdig is justified atop whichever MAC system.
In the SELinux MAC system on RHEL and Debian, in /etc/config/selinux, you have SELINUXTYPE=minimal|targeted|mls. RHEL (CentOS and Rocky Linux) and Fedora have SELINUXTYPE=targeted out-of-the-box. The compiled rulesets in /etc/selinux/targeted are generated when
With e.g gnome-system-monitor on a machine with SELINUX=permissive|enforcing, you can right-click the column header in the process table to also display the 'Security context' column that's also visible with e.g. `ps -Z`. The stopdisablingselinux video is a good SELinux tutorial.
I'm out of date on Debian/Ubuntu's policy set, which could also probably almost just be sed'ed from the current RHEL policy set.
> * SELinux is deny by default, while in systemd you're playing whack-a-mole anyway, and are expected to add directives one by one until the application stops working. Unit logs usually make it obvious if something was denied.*
DENY if not unconfined is actually the out-of-the-box `targeted` config on RHEL and Fedora. For example, Firefox and Chrome currently run as unconfined processes. While decent browsers do do their own process sandboxing, SELinux and/or AppArmor and/or 'containers' with a shared X socket file (and drop-privs and setcap and cgroups and namespaces fwtw) are advisable atop really any process sandboxing?
Given that the task is to generate a hull of rules that allow for the observed computational workload to complete with least-privileges, if you enable like every rule and log every process hitting every rung on the way down while running integration tests that approximate the workload, you should end up with enough rule violations in the log to even dumbly generate a rule/policy set without the application developer's expertise around to advise on potential access violations to allow.
From https://github.com/draios/sysdig :
> "Sysdig instruments your physical and virtual machines at the OS level by installing into the Linux kernel and capturing system calls and other OS events. Sysdig also makes it possible to create trace files for system activity, similarly to what you can do for networks with tools like tcpdump and Wireshark.
Probably also worth mentioning: "[BETA] Auditing Sysdig Platform Activities"
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Ask HN: What’s your favorite free, self-hosted monitoring dashboard?
DO offers metrics directly from the Dash, just sayin.
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2020, the year of unexpectedness
fix(driver/bpf): exact check on bpf_probe_read_str() return value #1612
The positive aspect of the lockdown was that having unexpected free time came in really handy to look at a set of strange issues (896, 1610) users were experiencing for some months (~October 2019) while trying to get Falco to work fine on some Linux kernels (with the eBPF driver, clearly).
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A note from our sponsor - SaaSHub
www.saashub.com | 17 Apr 2024
Stats
draios/sysdig is an open source project licensed under GNU General Public License v3.0 or later which is an OSI approved license.
The primary programming language of Sysdig is Lua.