Not all web applications are built in the same ways, and hence, many
must be analyzed individually. SPIKE Proxy is a professional-grade
tool for looking for application-level vulnerabilities in web
applications. SPIKE Proxy covers the basics, such as SQL Injection and
cross-site-scripting, but it's completely open Python infrastructure
allows advanced users to customize it for web applications that other
tools fall apart on.
This library is used to gain direct access to the functions exposed by Daniel
J. Bernstein's nacl library via libsodium or tweetnacl. It has been constructed
to maintain extensive documentation on how to use nacl as well as being
completely portable. The file in libnacl/__init__.py can be pulled out and
placed directly in any project to give a single file binding to all of nacl.
"... sslwrap is a simple Unix service that sits over any simple TCP service
such as POP3, IMAP, SMTP, and encrypts all of the data on the
connection using TLS/SSL. It uses ssleay to support SSL version 2 and
3. It can run out of inetd. It can also encrypt data for services
located on another computer.
It works with the servers you already have, and does not require any
modifications to your existing servers. ..."
Of course, it works with OpenSSL, too.
The Apache-XML-Security-J supports XML-Signature Syntax and Processing,
W3C Recommendation 12 February 2002 and XML Encryption Syntax and
Processing, W3C Recommendation 10 December 2002.
The Java library supports the standard Java API JSR-105: XML Digital
Signature APIs for creating and validating XML Signatures. A standard
Java API for XML Encryption JSR-106: XML Digital Encryption APIs is
in progress and is not final, so this API is not yet supported.
Shelly provides convenient systems programming in Haskell, similar in
spirit to POSIX shells. Shelly:
* is aimed at convenience and getting things done rather than being a
demonstration of elegance.
* has detailed and useful error messages.
* maintains its own environment, making it thread-safe.
* is modern, using Text and system-filepath/system-fileio.
Shelly is originally forked from the Shellish package. See the shelly-extra
package for additional functionality.
Zsh is the Swiss Army knife of shells. It combines the most popular
features of every other shell, and then lets you customize every
inch of it. Users of bourne-style and C-style shells will feel at
home in it.
Zsh does intelligent completion, spell-checking, has a rich syntax
for precise globbing, and is fully extensible through plugin
systems.
To fire up the zsh completion system, type the following commands:
$ autoload -U compinstall
$ compinstall
The aird daemon handles Apple IR receiver button events. If your system
has an USB Apple IR receiver, most likely you'll also have an Apple
Remote. An Apple remote has six (6) buttons: Volume up, Volume down,
Play/Pause, Forward, Backward and Menu. For each button you can assign a
command to execute.
Apple IR receiver modules are found on:
o MacBook (any generation)
o MacBook Pro (any generation)
o Intel iMac
o Intel MacMini
PEFS is a kernel level stacked cryptographic filesystem for FreeBSD.
Key features:
* Transparently runs on top of existing file systems
* Random per file tweak value for encryption
* Stores metadata only in encrypted file name
* Arbitrary number of keys per file system, mixing keys in same
directory and key chains
* Modern cryptographic algorithms: AES and Camellia in XTS mode,
PKCS#5v2 and HKDF for key generation.
cdrkit is a suite of programs for recording CDs and DVDs, blanking CD-RW media,
creating ISO-9660 filesystem images, extracting audio CD data, and more. The
programs included in the cdrkit package were originally derived from several
sources, most notably mkisofs by Eric Youngdale and others, cdda2wav by Heiko
Eissfeldt, and cdrecord by Joerg Schilling. However, cdrkit is not affiliated
with any of these authors; it is now an independent project.
Simple command-line pseudo terminal manager:
allows to run coprocesses talking to each other thru their tty and/or pty.
Most useful to drive from scripts programs that want a tty, as in
cotty -d -- pppd silent 192.168.0.1:192.168.0.2 \
-- ssh -t root@remote pppd
This particular use has been obsoleted under Linux
(but probably not under the various free BSDs and proprietary Unices),
as it can be done without cotty with
pppd pty 'ssh -t root@remote pppd' silent 192.168.0.1:192.168.0.2