The Rekall Framework is a completely open collection of tools, implemented in
Python under the GNU General Public License, for the extraction of digital
artifacts from volatile memory (RAM) samples. The extraction techniques are
performed completely independent of the system being investigated but offer
visibility into the runtime state of the system. The framework is intended to
introduce people to the techniques and complexities associated with extracting
digital artifacts from volatile memory samples and provide a platform for
further work into this exciting area of research.
The Rekall Framework is a completely open collection of tools, implemented in
Python under the GNU General Public License, for the extraction of digital
artifacts from volatile memory (RAM) samples. The extraction techniques are
performed completely independent of the system being investigated but offer
visibility into the runtime state of the system. The framework is intended to
introduce people to the techniques and complexities associated with extracting
digital artifacts from volatile memory samples and provide a platform for
further work into this exciting area of research.
The Rekall Framework is a completely open collection of tools, implemented in
Python under the GNU General Public License, for the extraction of digital
artifacts from volatile memory (RAM) samples. The extraction techniques are
performed completely independent of the system being investigated but offer
visibility into the runtime state of the system. The framework is intended to
introduce people to the techniques and complexities associated with extracting
digital artifacts from volatile memory samples and provide a platform for
further work into this exciting area of research.
Duo provides simple two-factor authentication as a service via:
1. Phone callback
2. SMS-delivered one-time passcodes
3. Duo mobile app to generate one-time passcodes
4. Duo mobile app for smartphone push authentication
5. Duo hardware token to generate one-time passcodes
This package allows an admin (or ordinary user) to quickly add Duo
authentication to any Unix login without setting up secondary user
accounts, directory synchronization, servers, or hardware.
An authentication handler for using Kerberos with Python Requests.
Requests is an HTTP library, written in Python, for human beings. This
library adds optional Kerberos/GSSAPI authentication support and supports
mutual authentication. Basic GET usage:
>>> import requests
>>> from requests_kerberos import HTTPKerberosAuth
>>> r = requests.get("http://example.org", auth=HTTPKerberosAuth())
...
The entire requests.api should be supported.
This utility is a wrapper for the md5(3), sha1(3), rmd160(3), and
tiger hash routines. It is remarkably similar to the digest package,
except that it can recursively checksum directory trees.
While a simple checksum on a tar file is usually satisfactory, once
said archive has been extracted, it is virtually impossible to
repackage the extracted tree in a form that can yield a repeatable
checksum. To be specific, changes in timestamps and ownership, and
changes in file ordering within directories can affect the checksum of
the archive, while not really impacting the actual code at all.
The algorithm used to checksum a directory in this implementation
is considers only the files' pathnames, the files' types (ie,
directory vs. file vs. symbolic link), and their contents (for
the latter two). It is described in greater detail in the man
page.
Python-RSA is a pure-Python RSA implementation. It supports encryption and
decryption, signing and verifying signatures, and key generation according to
PKCS#1 version 1.5.
Is your password safe?
Safe will check the password strength for you.
Heimdal is an implementation of Kerberos 5, largely written in Sweden
(due to crypto export legal issues in the US at the time). It is freely
available under a three clause BSD style license.
service_identity aspires to give you all the tools you need
for verifying whether a certificate is valid for the intended
purposes.
In the simplest case, this means host name verification.
However, service_identity implements RFC 6125 fully and
plans to add other relevant RFCs too.