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  1. <p align="center">
  2. <img src="https://github.com/trimstray/awesome-ninja-admins/blob/master/doc/img/awesome_ninja_admins.png"
  3. alt="Master">
  4. </p>
  5. <br>
  6. <h4 align="center">A collection of awesome lists, manuals, blogs, hacks, one-liners and tools for <b>Awesome Ninja Admins</b>.</h4>
  7. <br>
  8. <p align="center">
  9. <a href="https://github.com/trimstray/awesome-ninja-admins/tree/master">
  10. <img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/Branch-master-green.svg?longCache=true"
  11. alt="Branch">
  12. </a>
  13. <a href="https://awesome.re">
  14. <img src="https://awesome.re/badge.svg"
  15. alt="Awesome">
  16. </a>
  17. <a href="http://www.gnu.org/licenses/">
  18. <img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/License-GNU-blue.svg?longCache=true"
  19. alt="License">
  20. </a>
  21. </p>
  22. <div align="center">
  23. <sub>Created by
  24. <a href="https://twitter.com/trimstray">trimstray</a> and
  25. <a href="https://github.com/trimstray/awesome-ninja-admins/graphs/contributors">
  26. contributors
  27. </a>
  28. </div>
  29. <br>
  30. ***
  31. ## Who is Ninja Admins?
  32. - race of pure evil who rule the network through a monarchist feudal system
  33. - they never opened the door for strangers (or anyone at all)
  34. - they know very nasty piece of code like a **[fork bombs](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fork_bomb)**
  35. - they can make dd is not a **[destroyer of disks](http://www.noah.org/wiki/Dd_-_Destroyer_of_Disks)**
  36. - they know that `#!/usr/bin/env bash` superior to `#!/bin/bash`
  37. - they know that `su -` logs in completely as root
  38. - they miss and cry for **[Slackware](http://www.slackware.com/)** on production
  39. - they love the old admin nix-world
  40. ## What is this list?
  41. This list is a collection of various materials that I use every day in my work. It contain a lot of useful information gathered in one piece. It is intended for everyone and anyone who is or wants to become a Ninja Admin (and not only).
  42. This is not a final and full version - I update it on an ongoing basis.
  43. ## :ballot_box_with_check: Todo
  44. - [ ] Add useful shell functions
  45. - [ ] Add one-liners for collection tools (eg. CLI Tools)
  46. - [ ] Add Ninja Admins T-Shirt stickers
  47. - [ ] Generate Awesome Ninja Admins book (eg. pdf format)
  48. ## Ninja Admins Collection
  49. #### CLI Tools
  50. ##### :black_small_square: Shells
  51. <p>
  52. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://ohmyz.sh/"><b>Oh My ZSH!</b></a> - the best framework for managing your Zsh configuration.<br>
  53. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/Bash-it/bash-it"><b>bash-it</b></a> - framework for using, developing and maintaining shell scripts and custom commands for your daily work.<br>
  54. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/oh-my-fish/oh-my-fish"><b>Oh My Fish</b></a> - the Fishshell framework.<br>
  55. </p>
  56. ##### :black_small_square: Managers
  57. <p>
  58. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://midnight-commander.org/"><b>Midnight Commander</b></a> - visual file manager, licensed under GNU General Public License.<br>
  59. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.gnu.org/software/screen/"><b>screen</b></a> - full-screen window manager that multiplexes a physical terminal.<br>
  60. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/tmux/tmux/wiki"><b>tmux</b></a> - terminal multiplexer, lets you switch easily between several programs in one terminal.<br>
  61. </p>
  62. ##### :black_small_square: Network
  63. <p>
  64. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://curl.haxx.se/"><b>Curl</b></a> - command line tool and library
  65. for transferring data with URLs.<br>
  66. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/jkbrzt/httpie"><b>HTTPie</b></a> - a user-friendly HTTP client.<br>
  67. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/asciimoo/wuzz"><b>wuzz</b></a> - interactive cli tool for HTTP inspection.<br>
  68. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/reorx/httpstat"><b>httpstat</b></a> - visualizes curl statistics in a way of beauty and clarity.<br>
  69. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://gnutls.org/manual/html_node/gnutls_002dcli-Invocation.html"><b>gnutls-cli</b></a> - client program to set up a TLS connection to some other computer.<br>
  70. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://nmap.org/"><b>nmap</b></a> - free and open source (license) utility for network discovery and security auditing.<br>
  71. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://www.hping.org/"><b>hping</b></a> - command-line oriented TCP/IP packet assembler/analyzer.<br>
  72. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/traviscross/mtr"><b>mtr</b></a> - functionality of the 'traceroute' and 'ping' programs in a single network diagnostic tool.<br>
  73. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/robertdavidgraham/masscan"><b>masscan</b></a> - the fastest Internet port scanner, spews SYN packets asynchronously.<br>
  74. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://netcat.sourceforge.net/"><b>netcat</b></a> - networking utility which reads and writes data across network connections, using the TCP/IP protocol.<br>
  75. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.tcpdump.org/"><b>tcpdump</b></a> - powerful command-line packet analyzer.<br>
  76. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.wireshark.org/docs/man-pages/tshark.html"><b>tshark</b></a> - dump and analyze network traffic (wireshark cli).<br>
  77. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/mschwager/fierce"><b>fierce</b></a> - a DNS reconnaissance tool for locating non-contiguous IP space.<br>
  78. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/aboul3la/Sublist3r"><b>sublist3r</b></a> - fast subdomains enumeration tool for penetration testers.<br>
  79. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/OWASP/Amass"><b>amass</b></a> - tool obtains subdomain names by scraping data sources, crawling web archives and more.<br>
  80. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/troglobit/nemesis"><b>Nemesis</b></a> - packet manipulation CLI tool; craft and inject packets of several protocols.<br>
  81. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/packetfu/packetfu"><b>packetfu</b></a> - a mid-level packet manipulation library for Ruby.<br>
  82. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://scapy.net/"><b>Scapy</b></a> - packet manipulation library; forge, send, decode, capture packets of a wide number of protocols.<br>
  83. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/GouveaHeitor/nipe"><b>Nipe</b></a> - script to make Tor Network your default gateway.<br>
  84. </p>
  85. ##### :black_small_square: SSL
  86. <p>
  87. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/nabla-c0d3/sslyze"><b>sslyze
  88. </b></a> - fast and powerful SSL/TLS server scanning library.<br>
  89. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/rbsec/sslscan"><b>sslscan</b></a> - tests SSL/TLS enabled services to discover supported cipher suites.<br>
  90. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/drwetter/testssl.sh"><b>testssl.sh</b></a> - testing TLS/SSL encryption anywhere on any port.<br>
  91. </p>
  92. ##### :black_small_square: Auditing Tools
  93. <p>
  94. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://cisofy.com/lynis/"><b>lynis</b></a> - battle-tested security tool for systems running Linux, macOS, or Unix-based operating system.<br>
  95. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/rebootuser/LinEnum"><b>LinEnum</b></a> - scripted Local Linux Enumeration & Privilege Escalation Checks.<br>
  96. </p>
  97. ##### :black_small_square: System Diagnostics/Debuggers
  98. <p>
  99. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/strace/strace"><b>strace</b></a> - diagnostic, debugging and instructional userspace utility for Linux.<br>
  100. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/draios/sysdig"><b>sysdig</b></a> - system exploration and troubleshooting tool with first class support for containers.<br>
  101. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://nicolargo.github.io/glances/"><b>glances</b></a> - cross-platform system monitoring tool written in Python.<br>
  102. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lsof"><b>lsof</b></a> - displays in its output information about files that are opened by processes.<br>
  103. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://www.brendangregg.com/flamegraphs.html"><b>FlameGraph</b></a> - stack trace visualizer.<br>
  104. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/zevv/lsofgraph"><b>lsofgraph</b></a> - small utility to convert Unix lsof output to a graph showing FIFO and UNIX interprocess communication.<br>
  105. </p>
  106. ##### :black_small_square: Log Analyzers
  107. <p>
  108. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://goaccess.io/"><b>GoAccess</b></a> - real-time web log analyzer and interactive viewer that runs in a terminal.<br>
  109. </p>
  110. ##### :black_small_square: Databases
  111. <p>
  112. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/xo/usql"><b>usql</b></a> - universal command-line interface for SQL databases.<br>
  113. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/dbcli/pgcli"><b>pgcli</b></a> - postgres CLI with autocompletion and syntax highlighting.<br>
  114. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/dbcli/mycli"><b>mycli</b></a> - terminal client for MySQL with autocompletion and syntax highlighting.<br>
  115. </p>
  116. ##### :black_small_square: Pentesting
  117. <p>
  118. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.metasploit.com/"><b>Metasploit</b></a> - tool and framework for pentesting system, web and many more, contains a lot a ready to use exploit.<br>
  119. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://portswigger.net/burp"><b>Burp Suite</b></a> - tool for testing Web application security, intercepting proxy to replay, inject, scan and fuzz HTTP requests.<br>
  120. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.owasp.org/index.php/OWASP_Zed_Attack_Proxy_Project"><b>OWASP Zed Attack Proxy</b></a> - intercepting proxy to replay, inject, scan and fuzz HTTP requests.<br>
  121. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://cirt.net/Nikto2"><b>Nikto2</b></a> - web server scanner which performs comprehensive tests against web servers for multiple items.<br>
  122. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://sqlmap.org/"><b>sqlmap</b></a> - tool that automates the process of detecting and exploiting SQL injection flaws.<br>
  123. </p>
  124. #### Web Tools
  125. ##### :black_small_square: SSL
  126. <p>
  127. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.ssllabs.com/ssltest/"><b>SSL Server Test</b></a> - free online service performs a deep analysis of the configuration of any SSL web server.<br>
  128. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://dev.ssllabs.com/ssltest/"><b>SSL Server Test (DEV)</b></a> - free online service performs a deep analysis of the configuration of any SSL web server.<br>
  129. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.htbridge.com/ssl/"><b>ImmuniWeb® SSLScan</b></a> - test SSL/TLS (PCI DSS, HIPAA and NIST).<br>
  130. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://urlscan.io/"><b>urlscan.io</b></a> - service to scan and analyse websites.<br>
  131. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://report-uri.com/home/tools"><b>Report URI</b></a> - monitoring security policies like CSP and HPKP.<br>
  132. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://csp-evaluator.withgoogle.com/"><b>CSP Evaluator</b></a> - allows developers and security experts to check if a Content Security Policy.<br>
  133. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://whynohttps.com/"><b>Why No HTTPS?</b></a> - list of the world's top 100 websites by Alexa rank not automatically redirecting insecure requests.<br>
  134. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://cipherli.st/"><b>cipherli.st</b></a> - strong ciphers for Apache, Nginx, Lighttpd and more.<br>
  135. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://badssl.com/"><b>badssl.com</b></a> - memorable site for testing clients against bad SSL configs.<br>
  136. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://tlsfun.de/"><b>tlsfun.de</b></a> - registered for various tests regarding the TLS/SSL protocol.<br>
  137. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://ccadb.org/resources"><b>Common CA Database</b></a> - repository of information about CAs, and their root and intermediate certificates.<br>
  138. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://certstream.calidog.io/"><b>CERTSTREAM</b></a> - real-time certificate transparency log update stream.<br>
  139. </p>
  140. ##### :black_small_square: HTTP Headers
  141. <p>
  142. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://securityheaders.com/"><b>Security Headers</b></a> - analyse the HTTP response headers (with rating system to the results).<br>
  143. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://observatory.mozilla.org/"><b>Observatory by Mozilla</b></a> - set of tools to analyze your website.<br>
  144. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://enable-cors.org/index.html"><b>Enable CORS</b></a> - enable cross-origin resource sharing.<br>
  145. </p>
  146. ##### :black_small_square: DNS
  147. <p>
  148. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://viewdns.info/"><b>ViewDNS</b></a> - one source for free DNS related tools and information.<br>
  149. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://dnslytics.com/"><b>DNSlytics</b></a> - online investigation tool.<br>
  150. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://dnsspy.io/"><b>DNS Spy</b></a> - monitor, validate and verify your DNS configurations.<br>
  151. </p>
  152. ##### :black_small_square: Mail
  153. <p>
  154. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://mxtoolbox.com/SuperTool.aspx"><b>MX Toolbox</b></a> - all of your MX record, DNS, blacklist and SMTP diagnostics in one integrated tool.<br>
  155. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://www.blacklistalert.org/"><b>blacklistalert</b></a> - checks to see if your domain is on a Real Time Spam Blacklist.<br>
  156. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://multirbl.valli.org/"><b>MultiRBL</b></a> - complete IP check for sending Mailservers.<br>
  157. </p>
  158. ##### :black_small_square: Mass scanners (search engines)
  159. <p>
  160. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://censys.io/"><b>Censys</b></a> - platform that helps information security practitioners discover, monitor, and analyze devices.<br>
  161. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.shodan.io/"><b>Shodan</b></a> - the world's first search engine for Internet-connected devices.<br>
  162. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://2000.shodan.io/#/"><b>Shodan 2000</b></a> - if you use Shodan for everyday work, be sure to see it - looks for randomly generated data from Shodan.<br>
  163. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://viz.greynoise.io/table"><b>GreyNoise</b></a> - mass scanner (such as Shodan and Censys).<br>
  164. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://buckets.grayhatwarfare.com/"><b>Buckets by Grayhatwarfar</b></a> - database with public search for Open Amazon S3 Buckets and their contents.<br>
  165. </p>
  166. ##### :black_small_square: Net-tools
  167. <p>
  168. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://toolbar.netcraft.com/site_report"><b>Netcraft</b></a> - detailed report about the site, helping you to make informed choices about their integrity.<br>
  169. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.ripe.net/"><b>RIPE NCC</b></a> - not-for-profit membership association, a Regional Internet Registry and the secretariat for the RIPE.<br>
  170. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://securitytrails.com/"><b>Security Trails</b></a> - APIs for Security Companies, Researchers and Teams.<br>
  171. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://tools.keycdn.com/curl"><b>Online Curl</b></a> - curl test, analyze HTTP Response Headers.<br>
  172. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://ping.eu/"><b>Ping.eu</b></a> - online Ping, Traceroute, DNS lookup, WHOIS and others.<br>
  173. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://network-tools.com/"><b>Network-Tools</b></a> - network tools for webmasters, IT technicians & geeks.<br>
  174. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.url-encode-decode.com/"><b>URL Encode/Decode</b></a> - tool from above to either encode or decode a string of text.<br>
  175. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://regexr.com/"><b>RegExr</b></a> - online tool to learn, build, & test Regular Expressions (RegEx / RegExp).<br>
  176. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.hardenize.com/"><b>Hardenize</b></a> - deploy the security standards.<br>
  177. </p>
  178. ##### :black_small_square: Code parsers/playgrounds
  179. <p>
  180. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.shellcheck.net/"><b>ShellCheck</b></a> - finds bugs in your shell scripts.<br>
  181. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://jsbin.com/?html,output"><b>jsbin</b></a> - live pastebin for HTML, CSS & JavaScript and more.<br>
  182. </p>
  183. ##### :black_small_square: Performance
  184. <p>
  185. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://gtmetrix.com/"><b>GTmetrix</b></a> - analyze your site’s speed and make it faster.<br>
  186. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://performance.sucuri.net/"><b>Sucuri loadtimetester</b></a> - test here the
  187. performance of any of your sites from across the globe.<br>
  188. </p>
  189. ##### :black_small_square: Passwords
  190. <p>
  191. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.random.org/passwords/"><b>Random.org</b></a> - generate random passwords.<br>
  192. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://gotcha.pw/"><b>Gotcha?</b></a> - list of 1.4 billion accounts circulates around the Internet.<br>
  193. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://haveibeenpwned.com/"><b>have i been pwned?</b></a> - check if you have an account that has been compromised in a data breach.<br>
  194. </p>
  195. ##### :black_small_square: CVE
  196. <p>
  197. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://cve.mitre.org/"><b>CVE Mitre</b></a> - list of publicly known cybersecurity vulnerabilities.<br>
  198. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.cvedetails.com/"><b>CVE Details</b></a> - CVE security vulnerability advanced database.<br>
  199. </p>
  200. #### Manuals/Howtos/Tutorials
  201. ##### :black_small_square: Bash
  202. <p>
  203. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/dylanaraps/pure-bash-bible"><b>pure-bash-bible</b></a> - a collection of pure bash alternatives to external processes.<br>
  204. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://wiki.bash-hackers.org/start"><b>The Bash Hackers Wiki</b></a> - hold documentation of any kind about GNU Bash.<br>
  205. </p>
  206. ##### :black_small_square: Programming
  207. <p>
  208. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://posts.specterops.io/fawk-yeah-advanced-sed-and-awk-usage-parsing-for-pentesters-3-e5727e11a8ad?gi=c8f9506b26b6"><b>F’Awk Yeah!</b></a> - advanced sed and awk usage (Parsing for Pentesters 3).<br>
  209. </p>
  210. ##### :black_small_square: Unix & Network
  211. <p>
  212. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.cyberciti.biz/"><b>nixCraft</b></a> - linux and unix tutorials for new and seasoned sysadmin.<br>
  213. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.tecmint.com/"><b>TecMint</b></a> - the ideal Linux blog for Sysadmins & Geeks.<br>
  214. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://www.omnisecu.com/"><b>Omnisecu</b></a> - Free Networking, System Administration and Security Tutorials.<br>
  215. </p>
  216. ##### :black_small_square: Security
  217. <p>
  218. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Main_Page"><b>OWASP</b></a> - worldwide not-for-profit charitable organization focused on improving the security of software.<br>
  219. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Category:OWASP_Application_Security_Verification_Standard_Project"><b>OWASP ASVS 3.0.1</b></a> - OWASP Application Security Verification Standard Project.<br>
  220. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/Santandersecurityresearch/asvs"><b>OWASP ASVS 3.0.1 Web App</b></a> - simple web app that helps developers understand the ASVS requirements.<br>
  221. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.offensive-security.com/"><b>Offensive Security</b></a> - true performance-based penetration testing training for over a decade.<br>
  222. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://www.hackingarticles.in/"><b>Hacking Articles</b></a> - LRaj Chandel's Security & Hacking Blog.<br>
  223. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://gtfobins.github.io/"><b>GTFOBins</b></a> - list of Unix binaries that can be exploited by an attacker to bypass local security restrictions.<br>
  224. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/toniblyx/my-arsenal-of-aws-security-tools"><b>AWS security tools</b></a> - make your AWS cloud environment more secure.<br>
  225. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://html5sec.org/"><b>HTML5 Security Cheatsheet</b></a> - a collection of HTML5 related XSS attack vectors.<br>
  226. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://www.pentest-standard.org/index.php/Main_Page"><b>PTES</b></a> - the penetration testing execution standard.<br>
  227. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/zardus/ctf-tools"><b>ctf-tools</b></a> - some setup scripts for security research tools.<br>
  228. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://guif.re/"><b>Guifre Ruiz Notes</b></a> - collection of secuirty, system, network and pentest cheatsheets.<br>
  229. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://inventory.rawsec.ml/index.html"><b>Rawsec's CyberSecurity Inventory</b></a> - an inventory of tools and resources about CyberSecurity.<br>
  230. </p>
  231. ##### :black_small_square: Pentesting
  232. <p>
  233. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://brutelogic.com.br/blog/"><b>Brute XSS</b></a> - master the art of Cross Site Scripting.<br>
  234. </p>
  235. ##### :black_small_square: Web Apps
  236. <p>
  237. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://infosec.mozilla.org/guidelines/web_security.html"><b>Mozilla Web Security</b></a> - help operational teams with creating secure web applications.<br>
  238. </p>
  239. ##### :black_small_square: Secret Knowledge
  240. <p>
  241. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://bitvijays.github.io/LFC-VulnerableMachines.html"><b>CTF Series : Vulnerable Machines</b></a> - the steps below could be followed to find vulnerabilities and exploits.<br>
  242. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://hshrzd.wordpress.com/how-to-start/"><b>How to start RE/malware analysis?</b></a> - collection of some hints and useful links for the beginners.<br>
  243. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://lzone.de/cheat-sheet/"><b>LZone Cheat Sheets</b></a> - all cheat sheets.<br>
  244. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://cheat.readthedocs.io/en/latest/"><b>Dan’s Cheat Sheets’s</b></a> - massive cheat sheets documentation.<br>
  245. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://www.kegel.com/c10k.html"><b>The C10K problem</b></a> - it's time for web servers to handle ten thousand clients simultaneously, don't you think?<br>
  246. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://bankgradesecurity.com/"><b>Bank Grade Security</b></a> - when companies say they have "Bank Grade Security" they imply that it is a good thing.<br>
  247. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://drawings.jvns.ca/"><b>Julia's Drawings</b></a> - some drawings about programming and unix world, zines about systems & debugging tools.<br>
  248. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://media.defcon.org/DEF%20CON%2026/"><b>DEF CON Media Server</b></a> - great stuff from DEFCON 26.<br>
  249. </p>
  250. #### Blogs
  251. <p>
  252. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://www.brendangregg.com/"><b>Brendan Gregg's Blog</b></a> - Brendan Gregg is an industry expert in computing performance and cloud computing.<br>
  253. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://gynvael.coldwind.pl/"><b>Gynvael "GynDream" Coldwind</b></a> - Gynvael is a IT security engineer at Google.<br>
  254. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/"><b>Michał "lcamtuf" Zalewski</b></a> - "white hat" hacker, computer security expert.<br>
  255. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://ma.ttias.be/"><b>Mattias Geniar</b></a> - developer, Sysadmin, Blogger, Podcaster and Public Speaker.<br>
  256. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://nickcraver.com/"><b>Nick Craver</b></a> - Software Developer and Systems Administrator for Stack Exchange.<br>
  257. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://robert.penz.name/"><b>Robert Penz</b></a> - IT security Expert.<br>
  258. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://scotthelme.co.uk/"><b>Scott Helme</b></a> - Security Researcher, international speaker and founder of securityheaders.com and report-uri.com.<br>
  259. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://security.szurek.pl/"><b>Kacper Szurek</b></a> - Detection Engineer at ESET.<br>
  260. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.troyhunt.com/"><b>Troy Hunt</b></a> - Microsoft Regional Director and Microsoft Most Valuable Professional for Developer Security.<br>
  261. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://linux-audit.com/"><b>Linux Audit</b></a> - the Linux security blog about Auditing, Hardening and Compliance by Michael Boelen.<br>
  262. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://linuxsecurity.expert/"><b>
  263. Linux Security Expert</b></a> - trainings, howtos, checklists, security tools and more.<br>
  264. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://www.grymoire.com/"><b>The Grymoire</b></a> - collection of useful incantations for wizards, be you computer wizards, magicians, or whatever.<br>
  265. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://raymii.org/s/index.html"><b>raymii.org</b></a> - linux/unix sysadmin specializing in building high availability cloud environments.<br>
  266. </p>
  267. #### Systems/Services
  268. ##### :black_small_square: Systems
  269. <p>
  270. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://www.slackware.com/"><b>Slackware</b></a> - the most "Unix-like" Linux distribution.<br>
  271. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.openbsd.org/"><b>OpenBSD</b></a> - multi-platform 4.4BSD-based UNIX-like operating system.<br>
  272. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://hardenedbsd.org/"><b>HardenedBSD</b></a> - HardenedBSD aims to implement innovative exploit mitigation and security solutions.<br>
  273. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.kali.org/"><b>Kali Linux</b></a> - Linux distribution used for Penetration Testing, Ethical Hacking and network security assessments.<br>
  274. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://backbox.org/"><b>Backbox Linux</b></a> - penetration test and security assessment oriented Ubuntu-based Linux distribution.<br>
  275. </p>
  276. ##### :black_small_square: Network
  277. <p>
  278. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.capanalysis.net/ca/"><b>CapAnalysis</b></a> - web visual tool to analyze large amounts of captured network traffic (PCAP analyzer).<br>
  279. </p>
  280. ##### :black_small_square: HTTP(s) Services
  281. <p>
  282. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://varnish-cache.org/"><b>Varnish HTTP Cache</b></a> - HTTP accelerator designed for content-heavy dynamic web sites.<br>
  283. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://varnish-cache.org/"><b>Nginx</b></a> - open source web and reverse proxy server that is similar to Apache, but very light weight.<br>
  284. </p>
  285. ##### :black_small_square: Security/hardening
  286. <p>
  287. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://emeraldonion.org/"><b>Emerald Onion</b></a> - seattle-based encrypted-transit internet service provider.<br>
  288. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.unbound.net/"><b>Unbound</b></a> - validating, recursive, and caching DNS resolver (with TLS).<br>
  289. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.knot-resolver.cz/"><b>Knot Resolver</b></a> - caching full resolver implementation, including both a resolver library and a daemon.<br>
  290. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://vulnreport.io/"><b>Vulnreport</b></a> - open-source pentesting management and automation platform by Salesforce Product Security.<br>
  291. </p>
  292. #### Awesome Lists
  293. <p>
  294. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/kahun/awesome-sysadmin"><b>Awesome Sysadmin</b></a> - amazingly awesome open source sysadmin resources.<br>
  295. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/alebcay/awesome-shell"><b>Awesome Shell</b></a> - awesome command-line frameworks, toolkits, guides and gizmos.<br>
  296. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/Hack-with-Github/Awesome-Hacking"><b>Awesome Hacking</b></a> - awesome lists for hackers, pentesters and security researchers.<br>
  297. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/vitalysim/Awesome-Hacking-Resources"><b>Awesome Hacking Resources</b></a> - collection of hacking/penetration testing resources to make you better.<br>
  298. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/k4m4/movies-for-hackers"><b>Movies for Hackers</b></a> - list of movies every hacker & cyberpunk must watch.<br>
  299. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/enaqx/awesome-pentest"><b>Awesome Pentest</b></a> - collection of awesome penetration testing resources, tools and other shiny things.<br>
  300. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/caesar0301/awesome-pcaptools"><b>Awesome Pcaptools</b></a> - collection of tools developed by other researchers to process network traces.<br>
  301. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/danielmiessler/SecLists"><b>SecLists</b></a> - collection of multiple types of lists used during security assessments, collected in one place.<br>
  302. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/learnbyexample/Command-line-text-processing"><b>Command-line-text-processing</b></a> - from finding text to search and replace, from sorting to beautifying text and more.<br>
  303. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/binhnguyennus/awesome-scalability"><b>Awesome Scalability</b></a> - best practices in building High Scalability, High Availability, High Stability and more.<br>
  304. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/dhamaniasad/awesome-postgres"><b>Awesome Postgres</b></a> - list of awesome PostgreSQL software, libraries, tools and resources.<br>
  305. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/Hack-with-Github/Free-Security-eBooks"><b>Free Security eBooks</b></a> - list of a Free Security and Hacking eBooks.<br>
  306. </p>
  307. #### Hacking/Penetration testing
  308. ##### :black_small_square: Bounty programs
  309. <p>
  310. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://bountyfactory.io/"><b>Bounty Factory</b></a> - European bug bounty platform based on the legislation and rules in force in European countries.<br>
  311. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.openbugbounty.org/"><b>Openbugbounty</b></a> - allows any security researcher reporting a vulnerability on any website.<br>
  312. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.hackerone.com/"><b>hackerone</b></a> - global hacker community to surface the most relevant security issues.<br>
  313. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.bugcrowd.com/"><b>bugcrowd</b></a> - crowdsourced cybersecurity for the enterprise.<br>
  314. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://crowdshield.com/"><b>Crowdshield</b></a> - crowdsourced Security & Bug Bounty Management.<br>
  315. </p>
  316. ##### :black_small_square: Web Training Apps (local installation)
  317. <p>
  318. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://metasploit.help.rapid7.com/docs/metasploitable-2"><b>Metasploitable 2</b></a> - vulnerable web application amongst security researchers.<br>
  319. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://www.dvwa.co.uk/"><b>DVWA</b></a> - PHP/MySQL web application that is damn vulnerable.<br>
  320. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://sourceforge.net/projects/mutillidae/"><b>OWASP Mutillidae II</b></a> - free, open source, deliberately vulnerable web-application.<br>
  321. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.owasp.org/index.php/OWASP_Juice_Shop_Project"><b>OWASP Juice Shop Project</b></a> - the most bug-free vulnerable application in existence.<br>
  322. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Category:OWASP_WebGoat_Project"><b>OWASP WebGoat Project</b></a> - insecure web application maintained by OWASP designed to teach web app security.<br>
  323. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://github.com/opendns/Security_Ninjas_AppSec_Training"><b>Security Ninjas</b></a> - open source application security training program.<br>
  324. </p>
  325. ##### :black_small_square: Labs
  326. <p>
  327. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.hackthebox.eu/"><b>Hack The Box</b></a> - online platform allowing you to test your penetration testing skills.<br>
  328. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.hacking-lab.com/index.html"><b>Hacking-Lab</b></a> - online ethical hacking, computer network and security challenge platform.<br>
  329. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="http://pwnable.kr/index.php"><b>pwnable.kr</b></a> - non-commercial wargame site which provides various pwn challenges regarding system exploitation.<br>
  330. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://silesiasecuritylab.com/"><b>Silesia Security Lab</b></a> - high quality security testing services.<br>
  331. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://practicalpentestlabs.com/"><b>Practical Pentest Labs</b></a> - pentest lab, take your Hacking skills to the next level.<br>
  332. &nbsp;&nbsp;:small_orange_diamond: <a href="https://www.root-me.org/?lang=en"><b>Root Me</b></a> - the fast, easy, and affordable way to train your hacking skills.<br>
  333. </p>
  334. #### One-liners
  335. ##### Table of Contents
  336. - **[System](#system)**
  337. * [terminal](#tool-terminal)
  338. * [mount](#tool-mount)
  339. * [fuser](#tool-fuser)
  340. * [ps](#tool-ps)
  341. * [top](#tool-top)
  342. * [strace](#tool-strace)
  343. * [kill](#tool-kill)
  344. * [find](#tool-find)
  345. * [diff](#tool-diff)
  346. * [tail](#tool-tail)
  347. * [cpulimit](#tool-cpulimit)
  348. * [pwdx](#tool-pwdx)
  349. * [tr](#tool-tr)
  350. * [chmod](#tool-chmod)
  351. * [who](#tool-who)
  352. * [screen](#tool-screen)
  353. * [du](#tool-du)
  354. * [inotifywait](#tool-inotifywait)
  355. * [openssl](#tool-openssl)
  356. * [gnutls-cli](#tool-gnutls-cli)
  357. * [secure-delete](#tool-secure-delete)
  358. * [dd](#tool-dd)
  359. - **[HTTP/HTTPS](#http-https)**
  360. * [curl](#tool-curl)
  361. * [httpie](#tool-httpie)
  362. - **[Network](#network)**
  363. * [ssh](#tool-ssh)
  364. * [linux-dev](#tool-linux-dev)
  365. * [tcpdump](#tool-tcpdump)
  366. * [tcpick](#tool-tcpick)
  367. * [ngrep](#tool-ngrep)
  368. * [hping3](#tool-hping3)
  369. * [netcat](#tool-netcat)
  370. * [socat](#tool-socat)
  371. * [lsof](#tool-lsof)
  372. * [netstat](#tool-netstat)
  373. * [rsync](#tool-rsync)
  374. * [host](#tool-host)
  375. * [dig](#tool-dig)
  376. * [network-other](#tool-network-other)
  377. - **[Programming](#programming)**
  378. * [awk](#tool-awk)
  379. * [sed](#tool-sed)
  380. * [grep](#tool-grep)
  381. <a name="system"><b>System</b></a>
  382. ##### Tool: [terminal](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux_console)
  383. ###### Reload shell without exit
  384. ```bash
  385. exec $SHELL -l
  386. ```
  387. ###### Close shell keeping all subprocess running
  388. ```bash
  389. disown -a && exit
  390. ```
  391. ###### Exit without saving shell history
  392. ```bash
  393. kill -9 $$
  394. unset HISTFILE && exit
  395. ```
  396. ###### Perform a branching conditional
  397. ```bash
  398. true && { echo success;} || { echo failed; }
  399. ```
  400. ###### Pipe stdout and stderr to separate commands
  401. ```bash
  402. some_command > >(/bin/cmd_for_stdout) 2> >(/bin/cmd_for_stderr)
  403. ```
  404. ###### Redirect stdout and stderr each to separate files and print both to the screen
  405. ```bash
  406. (some_command 2>&1 1>&3 | tee errorlog ) 3>&1 1>&2 | tee stdoutlog
  407. ```
  408. ###### List of commands you use most often
  409. ```bash
  410. history | \
  411. awk '{CMD[$2]++;count++;}END { for (a in CMD)print CMD[a] " " CMD[a]/count*100 "% " a;}' | \
  412. grep -v "./" | \
  413. column -c3 -s " " -t | \
  414. sort -nr | nl | head -n 20
  415. ```
  416. ###### Quickly backup a file
  417. ```bash
  418. cp filename{,.orig}
  419. ```
  420. ###### Empty a file (truncate to 0 size)
  421. ```bash
  422. >filename
  423. ```
  424. ###### Delete all files in a folder that don't match a certain file extension
  425. ```bash
  426. rm !(*.foo|*.bar|*.baz)
  427. ```
  428. ###### Pass multi-line string to a file
  429. ```bash
  430. # cat >filename ... - overwrite file
  431. # cat >>filename ... - append to file
  432. cat > filename << __EOF__
  433. data data data
  434. __EOF__
  435. ```
  436. ###### Edit a file on a remote host using vim
  437. ```bash
  438. vim scp://user@host//etc/fstab
  439. ```
  440. ###### Create a directory and change into it at the same time
  441. ```bash
  442. mkd () { mkdir -p "$@" && cd "$@"; }
  443. ```
  444. ###### Convert uppercase files to lowercase files
  445. ```bash
  446. rename 'y/A-Z/a-z/' *
  447. ```
  448. ###### Print a row of characters across the terminal
  449. ```bash
  450. printf "%`tput cols`s" | tr ' ' '#'
  451. ```
  452. ###### Show shell history without line numbers
  453. ```bash
  454. history | cut -c 8-
  455. fc -l -n 1 | sed 's/^\s*//'
  456. ```
  457. ###### Run command(s) after exit session
  458. ```bash
  459. cat > /etc/profile << __EOF__
  460. _after_logout() {
  461. username=$(whoami)
  462. for _pid in $(ps afx | grep sshd | grep "$username" | awk '{print $1}') ; do
  463. kill -9 $_pid
  464. done
  465. }
  466. trap _after_logout EXIT
  467. __EOF__
  468. ```
  469. ###### Generate a sequence of numbers
  470. ```bash
  471. for ((i=1; i<=10; i+=2)) ; do echo $i ; done
  472. # alternative: seq 1 2 10
  473. for ((i=5; i<=10; ++i)) ; do printf '%02d\n' $i ; done
  474. # alternative: seq -w 5 10
  475. ```
  476. ___
  477. ##### Tool: [mount](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_(Unix))
  478. ###### Mount a temporary ram partition
  479. ```bash
  480. mount -t tmpfs tmpfs /mnt -o size=64M
  481. ```
  482. * `-t` - filesystem type
  483. * `-o` - mount options
  484. ###### Remount a filesystem as read/write
  485. ```bash
  486. mount -o remount,rw /
  487. ```
  488. ___
  489. ##### Tool: [fuser](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuser_(Unix))
  490. ###### Kills a process that is locking a file
  491. ```bash
  492. fuser -k filename
  493. ```
  494. ###### Show what PID is listening on specific port
  495. ```bash
  496. fuser -v 53/udp
  497. ```
  498. ___
  499. ##### Tool: [ps](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ps_(Unix))
  500. ###### Show a 4-way scrollable process tree with full details
  501. ```bash
  502. ps awwfux | less -S
  503. ```
  504. ###### Processes per user counter
  505. ```bash
  506. ps hax -o user | sort | uniq -c | sort -r
  507. ```
  508. ___
  509. ##### Tool: [find](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Find_(Unix))
  510. ###### Find files that have been modified on your system in the past 60 minutes
  511. ```bash
  512. find / -mmin 60 -type f
  513. ```
  514. ###### Find all files larger than 20M
  515. ```bash
  516. find / -type f -size +20M
  517. ```
  518. ###### Find duplicate files (based on MD5 hash)
  519. ```bash
  520. find -type f -exec md5sum '{}' ';' | sort | uniq --all-repeated=separate -w 33
  521. ```
  522. ###### Change permission only for files
  523. ```bash
  524. cd /var/www/site && find . -type f -exec chmod 766 {} \;
  525. cd /var/www/site && find . -type f -exec chmod 664 {} +
  526. ```
  527. ###### Change permission only for directories
  528. ```bash
  529. cd /var/www/site && find . -type d -exec chmod g+x {} \;
  530. cd /var/www/site && find . -type d -exec chmod g+rwx {} +
  531. ```
  532. ###### Find files and directories for specific user
  533. ```bash
  534. find . -user <username> -print
  535. ```
  536. ###### Find files and directories for all without specific user
  537. ```bash
  538. find . \!-user <username> -print
  539. ```
  540. ###### Delete older files than 60 days
  541. ```bash
  542. find . -type f -mtime +60 -delete
  543. ```
  544. ###### Recursively remove all empty sub-directories from a directory
  545. ```bash
  546. find . -depth -type d -empty -exec rmdir {} \;
  547. ```
  548. ###### How to find all hard links to a file
  549. ```bash
  550. find </path/to/dir> -xdev -samefile filename
  551. ```
  552. ###### Recursively find the latest modified files
  553. ```bash
  554. find . -type f -exec stat --format '%Y :%y %n' "{}" \; | sort -nr | cut -d: -f2- | head
  555. ```
  556. ___
  557. ##### Tool: [top](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Top_(software))
  558. ###### Use top to monitor only all processes with the specific string
  559. ```bash
  560. top -p $(pgrep -d , <str>)
  561. ```
  562. * `<str>` - process containing str (eg. nginx, worker)
  563. ___
  564. ##### Tool: [strace](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strace)
  565. ###### Track the open request of a network port
  566. ```bash
  567. strace -f -e trace=bind nc -l 80
  568. ```
  569. ###### Track the open request of a network port (show TCP/UDP)
  570. ```bash
  571. strace -f -e trace=network nc -lu 80
  572. ```
  573. ___
  574. ##### Tool: [kill](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kill_(command))
  575. ###### Kill a process running on port
  576. ```bash
  577. kill -9 $(lsof -i :<port> | awk '{l=$2} END {print l}')
  578. ```
  579. ___
  580. ##### Tool: [diff](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diff)
  581. ###### Compare two directory trees
  582. ```bash
  583. diff <(cd directory1 && find | sort) <(cd directory2 && find | sort)
  584. ```
  585. ___
  586. ##### Tool: [tail](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tail_(Unix))
  587. ###### Annotate tail -f with timestamps
  588. ```bash
  589. tail -f file | while read ; do echo "$(date +%T.%N) $REPLY" ; done
  590. ```
  591. ###### Analyse an Apache access log for the most common IP addresses
  592. ```bash
  593. tail -10000 access_log | awk '{print $1}' | sort | uniq -c | sort -n | tail
  594. ```
  595. ###### Analyse web server log and show only 5xx http codes
  596. ```bash
  597. tail -n 100 -f /path/to/logfile | grep "HTTP/[1-2].[0-1]\" [5]"
  598. ```
  599. ___
  600. ##### Tool: [tar](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tar_(computing))
  601. ###### System backup with exclude specific directories
  602. ```bash
  603. cd /
  604. tar -czvpf /mnt/system$(date +%d%m%Y%s).tgz --directory=/ \
  605. --exclude=proc/* --exclude=sys/* --exclude=dev/* --exclude=mnt/* .
  606. ```
  607. ###### System backup with exclude specific directories (pigz)
  608. ```bash
  609. cd /
  610. tar cvpf /backup/snapshot-$(date +%d%m%Y%s).tgz --directory=/ \
  611. --exclude=proc/* --exclude=sys/* --exclude=dev/* \
  612. --exclude=mnt/* --exclude=tmp/* --use-compress-program=pigz .
  613. ```
  614. ___
  615. ##### Tool: [dump](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dump_(program))
  616. ###### System backup to file
  617. ```bash
  618. dump -y -u -f /backup/system$(date +%d%m%Y%s).lzo /
  619. ```
  620. ###### Restore system from lzo file
  621. ```bash
  622. cd /
  623. restore -rf /backup/system$(date +%d%m%Y%s).lzo
  624. ```
  625. ___
  626. ##### Tool: [cpulimit](http://cpulimit.sourceforge.net/)
  627. ###### Limit the cpu usage of a process
  628. ```bash
  629. cpulimit -p pid -l 50
  630. ```
  631. ___
  632. ##### Tool: [pwdx](https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/unix-linux-pwdx-command-examples-usage-syntax/)
  633. ###### Show current working directory of a process
  634. ```bash
  635. pwdx <pid>
  636. ```
  637. ___
  638. ##### Tool: [taskset](https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/taskset-cpu-affinity-command/)
  639. ###### Start a command on only one CPU core
  640. ```bash
  641. taskset -c 0 <command>
  642. ```
  643. ___
  644. ##### Tool: [tr](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tr_(Unix))
  645. ###### Show directories in the PATH, one per line
  646. ```bash
  647. tr : '\n' <<<$PATH
  648. ```
  649. ___
  650. ##### Tool: [chmod](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chmod)
  651. ###### Remove executable bit from all files in the current directory
  652. ```bash
  653. chmod -R -x+X *
  654. ```
  655. ###### Restore permission for /bin/chmod
  656. ```bash
  657. # 1:
  658. cp /bin/ls chmod.01
  659. cp /bin/chmod chmod.01
  660. ./chmod.01 700 file
  661. # 2:
  662. /bin/busybox chmod 0700 /bin/chmod
  663. # 3:
  664. setfacl --set u::rwx,g::---,o::--- /bin/chmod
  665. ```
  666. ___
  667. ##### Tool: [who](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Who_(Unix))
  668. ###### Find last reboot time
  669. ```bash
  670. who -b
  671. ```
  672. ___
  673. ##### Tool: [screen](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Screen)
  674. ###### Start screen in detached mode
  675. ```bash
  676. screen -d -m [<command>]
  677. ```
  678. ___
  679. ##### Tool: [du](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Screen)
  680. ###### Show 20 biggest directories with 'K M G'
  681. ```bash
  682. du | \
  683. sort -r -n | \
  684. awk '{split("K M G",v); s=1; while($1>1024){$1/=1024; s++} print int($1)" "v[s]"\t"$2}' | \
  685. head -n 20
  686. ```
  687. ___
  688. ##### Tool: [inotifywait](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Screen)
  689. ###### Init tool everytime a file in a directory is modified
  690. ```bash
  691. while true ; do inotifywait -r -e MODIFY dir/ && ls dir/ ; done;
  692. ```
  693. ___
  694. ##### Tool: [openssl](https://www.openssl.org/)
  695. ###### Testing connection to remote host
  696. ```bash
  697. echo | openssl s_client -connect google.com:443 -showcerts
  698. ```
  699. ###### Testing connection to remote host (with SNI support)
  700. ```bash
  701. echo | openssl s_client -showcerts -servername google.com -connect google.com:443
  702. ```
  703. ###### Testing connection to remote host with specific ssl version
  704. ```bash
  705. openssl s_client -tls1_2 -connect google.com:443
  706. ```
  707. ###### Testing connection to remote host with specific ssl cipher
  708. ```bash
  709. openssl s_client -cipher 'AES128-SHA' -connect google.com:443
  710. ```
  711. ###### Generate private key
  712. ```bash
  713. # _ciph: des3, aes
  714. ( _ciph="des3" ; _fd="private.key" ; _len="2048" ; \
  715. openssl genrsa -${_ciph} -out ${_fd} ${_len} )
  716. ```
  717. ###### Remove password from private key
  718. ```bash
  719. ( _fd="private.key" ; _fd_unp="private_unp.key" ; \
  720. openssl rsa -in ${_fd} -out ${_fd_unp} )
  721. ```
  722. ###### Get public key from private key
  723. ```bash
  724. ( _fd="private.key" ; _fd_pub="public.key" ; \
  725. openssl rsa -pubout -in ${_fd} -out ${_fd_pub} )
  726. ```
  727. ###### Generate private key + csr
  728. ```bash
  729. ( _fd="private.key" ; _fd_csr="request.csr" ; _len="2048" ; \
  730. openssl req -out ${_fd_csr} -new -newkey rsa:${_len} -nodes -keyout ${_fd} )
  731. ```
  732. ###### Generate csr
  733. ```bash
  734. ( _fd="private.key" ; _fd_csr="request.csr" ; \
  735. openssl req -out ${_fd_csr} -new -key ${_fd} )
  736. ```
  737. ###### Generate csr (metadata from exist certificate)
  738. ```bash
  739. ( _fd="private.key" ; _fd_csr="request.csr" ; _fd_crt="cert.crt" ; \
  740. openssl x509 -x509toreq -in ${_fd_crt} -out ${_fd_csr} -signkey ${_fd} )
  741. ```
  742. ###### Generate csr with -config param
  743. ```bash
  744. ( _fd="private.key" ; _fd_csr="request.csr" ; \
  745. openssl req -new -sha256 -key ${_fd} -out ${_fd_csr} \
  746. -config <(
  747. cat <<-EOF
  748. [req]
  749. default_bits = 2048
  750. prompt = no
  751. default_md = sha256
  752. req_extensions = req_ext
  753. distinguished_name = dn
  754. [ dn ]
  755. C=<two-letter ISO abbreviation for your country>
  756. ST=<state or province where your organization is legally located>
  757. L=<city where your organization is legally located>
  758. O=<legal name of your organization>
  759. OU=<section of the organization>
  760. CN=<fully qualified domain name>
  761. [ req_ext ]
  762. subjectAltName = @alt_names
  763. [ alt_names ]
  764. DNS.1 = <fully qualified domain name>
  765. DNS.2 = <next domain>
  766. DNS.3 = <next domain>
  767. EOF
  768. ))
  769. ```
  770. ###### Convert DER to PEM
  771. ```bash
  772. ( _fd_der="cert.crt" ; _fd_pem="cert.pem" ; \
  773. openssl x509 -in ${_fd_der} -inform der -outform pem -out ${_fd_pem} )
  774. ```
  775. ###### Convert PEM to DER
  776. ```bash
  777. ( _fd_der="cert.crt" ; _fd_pem="cert.pem" ; \
  778. openssl x509 -in ${_fd_pem} -outform der -out ${_fd_der} )
  779. ```
  780. ###### Checking whether the private key and the certificate match
  781. ```bash
  782. (openssl rsa -noout -modulus -in private.key | openssl md5 ; openssl x509 -noout -modulus -in certificate.crt | openssl md5) | uniq
  783. ```
  784. ___
  785. ##### Tool: [gnutls-cli](https://gnutls.org/manual/html_node/gnutls_002dcli-Invocation.html)
  786. ###### Testing connection to remote host (with SNI support)
  787. ```bash
  788. gnutls-cli -p 443 google.com
  789. ```
  790. ###### Testing connection to remote host (without SNI support)
  791. ```bash
  792. gnutls-cli --disable-sni -p 443 google.com
  793. ```
  794. ___
  795. ##### Tool: [secure-delete](https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Securely_wipe_disk)
  796. ###### Secure delete with shred
  797. ```bash
  798. shred -vfuz -n 10 file
  799. shred --verbose --random-source=/dev/urandom -n 1 /dev/sda
  800. ```
  801. ###### Secure delete with scrub
  802. ```bash
  803. scrub -p dod /dev/sda
  804. scrub -p dod -r file
  805. ```
  806. ###### Secure delete with badblocks
  807. ```bash
  808. badblocks -s -w -t random -v /dev/sda
  809. badblocks -c 10240 -s -w -t random -v /dev/sda
  810. ```
  811. ###### Secure delete with secure-delete
  812. ```bash
  813. srm -vz /tmp/file
  814. sfill -vz /local
  815. sdmem -v
  816. swapoff /dev/sda5 && sswap -vz /dev/sda5
  817. ```
  818. ___
  819. ##### Tool: [dd](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dd_(Unix))
  820. ###### Show dd status every so often
  821. ```bash
  822. dd <dd_params> status=progress
  823. watch --interval 5 killall -USR1 dd
  824. ```
  825. ###### Redirect output to a file with dd
  826. ```bash
  827. echo "string" | dd of=filename
  828. ```
  829. <a name="http-https"><b>HTTP/HTTPS</b></a>
  830. ##### Tool: [curl](https://curl.haxx.se)
  831. ```bash
  832. curl -Iks https://www.google.com
  833. ```
  834. * `-I` - show response headers only
  835. * `-k` - insecure connection when using ssl
  836. * `-s` - silent mode (not display body)
  837. ```bash
  838. curl -Iks --location -X GET -A "x-agent" https://www.google.com
  839. ```
  840. * `--location` - follow redirects
  841. * `-X` - set method
  842. * `-A` - set user-agent
  843. ```bash
  844. curl -Iks --location -X GET -A "x-agent" --proxy http://127.0.0.1:16379 https://www.google.com
  845. ```
  846. * `--proxy [socks5://|http://]` - set proxy server
  847. ###### Check DNS and HTTP trace with headers for specific domains
  848. ```bash
  849. ### Set domains and external dns servers.
  850. _domain_list=(google.com) ; _dns_list=("8.8.8.8" "1.1.1.1")
  851. for _domain in "${_domain_list[@]}" ; do
  852. printf '=%.0s' {1..48}
  853. echo
  854. printf "[\\e[1;32m+\\e[m] resolve: %s\\n" "$_domain"
  855. for _dns in "${_dns_list[@]}" ; do
  856. # Resolve domain.
  857. host "${_domain}" "${_dns}"
  858. echo
  859. done
  860. for _proto in http https ; do
  861. printf "[\\e[1;32m+\\e[m] trace + headers: %s://%s\\n" "$_proto" "$_domain"
  862. # Get trace and http headers.
  863. curl -Iks -A "x-agent" --location "${_proto}://${_domain}"
  864. echo
  865. done
  866. done
  867. unset _domain_list _dns_list
  868. ```
  869. ___
  870. ##### Tool: [httpie](https://httpie.org/)
  871. ```bash
  872. http -p Hh https://www.google.com
  873. ```
  874. * `-p` - print request and response headers
  875. * `H` - request headers
  876. * `B` - request body
  877. * `h` - response headers
  878. * `b` - response body
  879. ```bash
  880. http -p Hh --follow --max-redirects 5 --verify no https://www.google.com
  881. ```
  882. * `-F, --follow` - follow redirects
  883. * `--max-redirects N` - maximum for `--follow`
  884. * `--verify no` - skip SSL verification
  885. ```bash
  886. http -p Hh --follow --max-redirects 5 --verify no --proxy http:http://127.0.0.1:16379 https://www.google.com
  887. ```
  888. * `--proxy [http:]` - set proxy server
  889. <a name="network"><b>Network</b></a>
  890. ##### Tool: [ssh](https://www.openssh.com/)
  891. ###### Compare a remote file with a local file
  892. ```bash
  893. ssh user@host cat /path/to/remotefile | diff /path/to/localfile -
  894. ```
  895. ###### SSH connection through host in the middle
  896. ```bash
  897. ssh -t reachable_host ssh unreachable_host
  898. ```
  899. ###### Run command over ssh on remote host
  900. ```bash
  901. cat > cmd.txt << __EOF__
  902. cat /etc/hosts
  903. __EOF__
  904. ssh host -l user $(<cmd.txt)
  905. ```
  906. ###### Get public key from private key
  907. ```bash
  908. ssh-keygen -y -f ~/.ssh/id_rsa
  909. ```
  910. ###### Get all fingerprints
  911. ```bash
  912. ssh-keygen -l -f .ssh/known_hosts
  913. ```
  914. ###### Ssh authentication with user password
  915. ```bash
  916. ssh -o PreferredAuthentications=password -o PubkeyAuthentication=no user@remote_host
  917. ```
  918. ###### Ssh authentication with publickey
  919. ```bash
  920. ssh -o PreferredAuthentications=publickey -o PubkeyAuthentication=yes -i id_rsa user@remote_host
  921. ```
  922. ###### Simple recording SSH session
  923. ```bash
  924. function _ssh_sesslog() {
  925. _sesdir="<path/to/session/logs>"
  926. mkdir -p "${_sesdir}" && \
  927. ssh $@ 2>&1 | tee -a "${_sesdir}/$(date +%Y%m%d).log"
  928. }
  929. # Alias:
  930. alias ssh='_ssh_sesslog'
  931. ```
  932. ###### Using Keychain for SSH logins
  933. ```bash
  934. ### Delete all of ssh-agent's keys.
  935. function _scl() {
  936. /usr/bin/keychain --clear
  937. }
  938. ### Add key to keychain.
  939. function _scg() {
  940. /usr/bin/keychain /path/to/private-key
  941. source "$HOME/.keychain/$HOSTNAME-sh"
  942. }
  943. ```
  944. ___
  945. ##### Tool: [linux-dev](https://www.tldp.org/LDP/abs/html/devref1.html)
  946. ###### Testing remote connection to port
  947. ```bash
  948. timeout 1 bash -c "</dev/<proto>/<host>/<port>" >/dev/null 2>&1 ; echo $?
  949. ```
  950. * `<proto` - set protocol (tcp/udp)
  951. * `<host>` - set remote host
  952. * `<port>` - set destination port
  953. ###### Read and write to TCP or UDP sockets with common bash tools
  954. ```bash
  955. exec 5<>/dev/tcp/<host>/<port>; cat <&5 & cat >&5; exec 5>&-
  956. ```
  957. ___
  958. ##### Tool: [tcpdump](http://www.tcpdump.org/)
  959. ```bash
  960. tcpdump -ne -i eth0 -Q in host 192.168.252.1 and port 443
  961. ```
  962. * `-n` - don't convert addresses
  963. * `-e` - print the link-level headers
  964. * `-i [iface|any]` - set interface
  965. * `-Q|-D [in|out|inout]` - choose send/receive direction (`-D` - for old tcpdump versions)
  966. * `host [ip|hostname]` - set host, also `[host not]`
  967. * `[and|or]` - set logic
  968. * `port [1-65535]` - set port number, also `[port not]`
  969. ```bash
  970. tcpdump -ne -i eth0 -Q in host 192.168.252.1 and port 443 -c 5 -w tcpdump.pcap
  971. ```
  972. * `-c [num]` - capture only num number of packets
  973. * `-w [filename]` - write packets to file, `-r [filename]` - reading from file
  974. ___
  975. ##### Tool: [tcpick](http://tcpick.sourceforge.net/)
  976. ###### Analyse packets in real-time
  977. ```bash
  978. while true ; do tcpick -a -C -r dump.pcap ; sleep 2 ; clear ; done
  979. ```
  980. ___
  981. ##### Tool: [ngrep](http://ngrep.sourceforge.net/usage.html)
  982. ```bash
  983. ngrep -d eth0 "www.google.com" port 443
  984. ```
  985. * `-d [iface|any]` - set interface
  986. * `[domain]` - set hostname
  987. * `port [1-65535]` - set port number
  988. ```bash
  989. ngrep -d eth0 "www.google.com" (host 10.240.20.2) and (port 443)
  990. ```
  991. * `(host [ip|hostname])` - filter by ip or hostname
  992. * `(port [1-65535])` - filter by port number
  993. ```bash
  994. ngrep -d eth0 -qt -O ngrep.pcap "www.google.com" port 443
  995. ```
  996. * `-q` - quiet mode (only payloads)
  997. * `-t` - added timestamps
  998. * `-O [filename]` - save output to file, `-I [filename]` - reading from file
  999. ```bash
  1000. ngrep -d eth0 -qt 'HTTP' 'tcp'
  1001. ```
  1002. * `HTTP` - show http headers
  1003. * `tcp|udp` - set protocol
  1004. * `[src|dst] host [ip|hostname]` - set direction for specific node
  1005. ```bash
  1006. ngrep -l -q -d eth0 -i "User-Agent: curl*"
  1007. ```
  1008. * `-l` - stdout line buffered
  1009. * `-i` - case-insensitive search
  1010. ___
  1011. ##### Tool: [hping3](http://www.hping.org/)
  1012. ```bash
  1013. hping3 -V -p 80 -s 5050 <scan_type> www.google.com
  1014. ```
  1015. * `-V|--verbose` - verbose mode
  1016. * `-p|--destport` - set destination port
  1017. * `-s|--baseport` - set source port
  1018. * `<scan_type>` - set scan type
  1019. * `-F|--fin` - set FIN flag, port open if no reply
  1020. * `-S|--syn` - set SYN flag
  1021. * `-P|--push` - set PUSH flag
  1022. * `-A|--ack` - set ACK flag (use when ping is blocked, RST response back if the port is open)
  1023. * `-U|--urg` - set URG flag
  1024. * `-Y|--ymas` - set Y unused flag (0x80 - nullscan), port open if no reply
  1025. * `-M 0 -UPF` - set TCP sequence number and scan type (URG+PUSH+FIN), port open if no reply
  1026. ```bash
  1027. hping3 -V -c 1 -1 -C 8 www.google.com
  1028. ```
  1029. * `-c [num]` - packet count
  1030. * `-1` - set ICMP mode
  1031. * `-C|--icmptype [icmp-num]` - set icmp type (default icmp-echo = 8)
  1032. ```bash
  1033. hping3 -V -c 1000000 -d 120 -S -w 64 -p 80 --flood --rand-source <remote_host>
  1034. ```
  1035. * `--flood` - sent packets as fast as possible (don't show replies)
  1036. * `--rand-source` - random source address mode
  1037. * `-d --data` - data size
  1038. * `-w|--win` - winsize (default 64)
  1039. ___
  1040. ##### Tool: [netcat](http://netcat.sourceforge.net/)
  1041. ```bash
  1042. nc -kl 5000
  1043. ```
  1044. * `-l` - listen for an incoming connection
  1045. * `-k` - listening after client has disconnected
  1046. * `>filename.out` - save receive data to file (optional)
  1047. ```bash
  1048. nc 192.168.0.1 5051 < filename.in
  1049. ```
  1050. * `< filename.in` - send data to remote host
  1051. ```bash
  1052. nc -vz 10.240.30.3 5000
  1053. ```
  1054. * `-v` - verbose output
  1055. * `-z` - scan for listening daemons
  1056. ```bash
  1057. nc -vzu 10.240.30.3 1-65535
  1058. ```
  1059. * `-u` - scan only udp ports
  1060. ###### Transfer data file (archive)
  1061. ```bash
  1062. server> nc -l 5000 | tar xzvfp -
  1063. client> tar czvfp - /path/to/dir | nc 10.240.30.3 5000
  1064. ```
  1065. ###### Launch remote shell
  1066. ```bash
  1067. server> nc -l 5000 -e /bin/bash
  1068. client> nc 10.240.30.3 5000
  1069. ```
  1070. ###### Simple file server
  1071. ```bash
  1072. while true ; do nc -l 5000 | tar -xvf - ; done
  1073. ```
  1074. ###### Simple minimal HTTP Server
  1075. ```bash
  1076. while true ; do nc -l -p 1500 -c 'echo -e "HTTP/1.1 200 OK\n\n $(date)"' ; done
  1077. ```
  1078. ###### Simple HTTP Server
  1079. > Restarts web server after each request - remove `while` condition for only single connection.
  1080. ```bash
  1081. cat > index.html << __EOF__
  1082. <!doctype html>
  1083. <head>
  1084. <meta charset="utf-8">
  1085. <meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge,chrome=1">
  1086. <title></title>
  1087. <meta name="description" content="">
  1088. <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
  1089. </head>
  1090. <body>
  1091. <p>
  1092. Hello! It's a site.
  1093. </p>
  1094. </body>
  1095. </html>
  1096. __EOF__
  1097. ```
  1098. ```bash
  1099. server> while : ; do \
  1100. (echo -ne "HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\nContent-Length: $(wc -c <index.html)\r\n\r\n" ; cat index.html;) | \
  1101. nc -l -p 5000 \
  1102. ; done
  1103. ```
  1104. * `-p` - port number
  1105. ###### Simple HTTP Proxy (single connection)
  1106. ```bash
  1107. #!/usr/bin/env bash
  1108. if [[ $# != 2 ]] ; then
  1109. printf "%s\\n" \
  1110. "usage: ./nc-proxy listen-port bk_host:bk_port"
  1111. fi
  1112. _listen_port="$1"
  1113. _bk_host=$(echo "$2" | cut -d ":" -f1)
  1114. _bk_port=$(echo "$2" | cut -d ":" -f2)
  1115. printf " lport: %s\\nbk_host: %s\\nbk_port: %s\\n\\n" \
  1116. "$_listen_port" "$_bk_host" "$_bk_port"
  1117. _tmp=$(mktemp -d)
  1118. _back="$_tmp/pipe.back"
  1119. _sent="$_tmp/pipe.sent"
  1120. _recv="$_tmp/pipe.recv"
  1121. trap 'rm -rf "$_tmp"' EXIT
  1122. mkfifo -m 0600 "$_back" "$_sent" "$_recv"
  1123. sed "s/^/=> /" <"$_sent" &
  1124. sed "s/^/<= /" <"$_recv" &
  1125. nc -l -p "$_listen_port" <"$_back" | \
  1126. tee "$_sent" | \
  1127. nc "$_bk_host" "$_bk_port" | \
  1128. tee "$_recv" >"$_back"
  1129. ```
  1130. ```bash
  1131. server> chmod +x nc-proxy && ./nc-proxy 8080 192.168.252.10:8000
  1132. lport: 8080
  1133. bk_host: 192.168.252.10
  1134. bk_port: 8000
  1135. client> http -p h 10.240.30.3:8080
  1136. HTTP/1.1 200 OK
  1137. Accept-Ranges: bytes
  1138. Cache-Control: max-age=31536000
  1139. Content-Length: 2748
  1140. Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
  1141. Date: Sun, 01 Jul 2018 20:12:08 GMT
  1142. Last-Modified: Sun, 01 Apr 2018 21:53:37 GMT
  1143. ```
  1144. ###### Create a single-use TCP or UDP proxy
  1145. ```bash
  1146. ### TCP -> TCP
  1147. nc -l -p 2000 -c "nc [ip|hostname] 3000"
  1148. ### TCP -> UDP
  1149. nc -l -p 2000 -c "nc -u [ip|hostname] 3000"
  1150. ### UDP -> UDP
  1151. nc -l -u -p 2000 -c "nc -u [ip|hostname] 3000"
  1152. ### UDP -> TCP
  1153. nc -l -u -p 2000 -c "nc [ip|hostname] 3000"
  1154. ```
  1155. ___
  1156. ##### Tool: [socat](http://www.dest-unreach.org/socat/doc/socat.html/)
  1157. ###### Testing remote connection to port
  1158. ```bash
  1159. socat - TCP4:10.240.30.3:22
  1160. ```
  1161. * `-` - standard input (STDIO)
  1162. * `TCP4:<params>` - set tcp4 connection with specific params
  1163. * `[hostname|ip]` - set hostname/ip
  1164. * `[1-65535]` - set port number
  1165. ###### Redirecting TCP-traffic to a UNIX domain socket under Linux
  1166. ```bash
  1167. socat TCP-LISTEN:1234,bind=127.0.0.1,reuseaddr,fork,su=nobody,range=127.0.0.0/8 UNIX-CLIENT:/tmp/foo
  1168. ```
  1169. * `TCP-LISTEN:<params>` - set tcp listen with specific params
  1170. * `[1-65535]` - set port number
  1171. * `bind=[hostname|ip]` - set bind hostname/ip
  1172. * `reuseaddr` - allows other sockets to bind to an address
  1173. * `fork` - keeps the parent process attempting to produce more connections
  1174. * `su=nobody` - set user
  1175. * `range=[ip-range]` - ip range
  1176. * `UNIX-CLIENT:<params>` - communicates with the specified peer socket
  1177. * `filename` - define socket
  1178. ___
  1179. ##### Tool: [lsof](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lsof)
  1180. ###### Show process that use internet connection at the moment
  1181. ```bash
  1182. lsof -P -i -n
  1183. ```
  1184. ###### Show process that use specific port number
  1185. ```bash
  1186. lsof -i tcp:443
  1187. ```
  1188. ###### Lists all listening ports together with the PID of the associated process
  1189. ```bash
  1190. lsof -Pan -i tcp -i udp
  1191. ```
  1192. ###### List all open ports and their owning executables
  1193. ```bash
  1194. lsof -i -P | grep -i "listen"
  1195. ```
  1196. ###### Show all open ports
  1197. ```bash
  1198. lsof -Pnl -i
  1199. ```
  1200. ###### Show open ports (LISTEN)
  1201. ```bash
  1202. lsof -Pni4 | grep LISTEN | column -t
  1203. ```
  1204. ###### List all files opened by a particular command
  1205. ```bash
  1206. lsof -c "process"
  1207. ```
  1208. ###### View user activity per directory
  1209. ```bash
  1210. lsof -u username -a +D /etc
  1211. ```
  1212. ###### Show 10 Largest Open Files
  1213. ```bash
  1214. lsof / | \
  1215. awk '{ if($7 > 1048576) print $7/1048576 "MB" " " $9 " " $1 }' | \
  1216. sort -n -u | tail | column -t
  1217. ```
  1218. ___
  1219. ##### Tool: [netstat](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Netstat)
  1220. ###### Graph # of connections for each hosts
  1221. ```bash
  1222. netstat -an | \
  1223. grep ESTABLISHED | \
  1224. awk '{print $5}' | \
  1225. awk -F: '{print $1}' | \
  1226. grep -v -e '^[[:space:]]*$' | \
  1227. sort | uniq -c | \
  1228. awk '{ printf("%s\t%s\t",$2,$1) ; for (i = 0; i < $1; i++) {printf("*")}; print "" }'
  1229. ```
  1230. ###### Monitor open connections for specific port including listen, count and sort it per IP
  1231. ```bash
  1232. watch "netstat -plan | grep :443 | awk {'print \$5'} | cut -d: -f 1 | sort | uniq -c | sort -nk 1"
  1233. ```
  1234. ___
  1235. ##### Tool: [rsync](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rsync)
  1236. ###### Rsync remote data as root using sudo
  1237. ```bash
  1238. rsync --rsync-path 'sudo rsync' username@hostname:/path/to/dir/ /local/
  1239. ```
  1240. ___
  1241. ##### Tool: [host](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Host_(Unix))
  1242. ###### Resolves the domain name (using external dns server)
  1243. ```bash
  1244. host google.com 9.9.9.9
  1245. ```
  1246. ###### Checks the domain administrator (SOA record)
  1247. ```bash
  1248. host -t soa google.com 9.9.9.9
  1249. ```
  1250. ___
  1251. ##### Tool: [dig](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dig_(command))
  1252. ###### Resolves the domain name (short output)
  1253. ```bash
  1254. dig google.com +short
  1255. ```
  1256. ###### Lookup NS record for specific domain
  1257. ```bash
  1258. dig @9.9.9.9 google.com NS
  1259. ```
  1260. ###### Query only answer section
  1261. ```bash
  1262. dig google.com +nocomments +noquestion +noauthority +noadditional +nostats
  1263. ```
  1264. ###### Query ALL DNS Records
  1265. ```bash
  1266. dig google.com ANY +noall +answer
  1267. ```
  1268. ###### DNS Reverse Look-up
  1269. ```bash
  1270. dig -x 172.217.16.14 +short
  1271. ```
  1272. ___
  1273. ##### Tool: [network-other](https://github.com/trimstray/awesome-ninja-admins#tool-network-other)
  1274. ###### Get all subnets for specific AS (Autonomous system)
  1275. ```bash
  1276. AS="AS32934"
  1277. whois -h whois.radb.net -- "-i origin ${AS}" | \
  1278. grep "^route:" | \
  1279. cut -d ":" -f2 | \
  1280. sed -e 's/^[ \t]//' | \
  1281. sort -n -t . -k 1,1 -k 2,2 -k 3,3 -k 4,4 | \
  1282. cut -d ":" -f2 | \
  1283. sed -e 's/^[ \t]/allow /' | \
  1284. sed 's/$/;/' | \
  1285. sed 's/allow */subnet -> /g'
  1286. ```
  1287. ###### Resolves domain name from dns.google.com with curl and jq
  1288. ```bash
  1289. _dname="google.com" ; curl -s "https://dns.google.com/resolve?name=${_dname}&type=A" | jq .
  1290. ```
  1291. <a name="programming"><b>Programming</b></a>
  1292. ##### Tool: [awk](http://www.grymoire.com/Unix/Awk.html)
  1293. ###### Remove duplicate entries in a file without sorting
  1294. ```bash
  1295. awk '!x[$0]++' filename
  1296. ```
  1297. ###### Exclude multiple columns using AWK
  1298. ```bash
  1299. awk '{$1=$3=""}1' filename
  1300. ```
  1301. ___
  1302. ##### Tool: [sed](http://www.grymoire.com/Unix/Sed.html)
  1303. ###### To print a specific line from a file
  1304. ```bash
  1305. sed -n 10p /path/to/file
  1306. ```
  1307. ###### Remove a specific line from a file
  1308. ```bash
  1309. sed -i 10d /path/to/file
  1310. # alternative (BSD): sed -i'' 10d /path/to/file
  1311. ```
  1312. ###### Remove a range of lines from a file
  1313. ```bash
  1314. sed -i <file> -re '<start>,<end>d'
  1315. ```
  1316. ___
  1317. ##### Tool: [grep](http://www.grymoire.com/Unix/Grep.html)
  1318. ###### Search for a "pattern" inside all files in the current directory
  1319. ```bash
  1320. grep -rn "pattern"
  1321. grep -RnisI "pattern" *
  1322. fgrep "pattern" * -R
  1323. ```
  1324. ###### Remove blank lines from a file and save output to new file
  1325. ```bash
  1326. grep . filename > newfilename
  1327. ```
  1328. ###### Except multiple patterns
  1329. ```bash
  1330. grep -vE '(error|critical|warning)' filename
  1331. ```
  1332. ###### Show data from file without comments
  1333. ```bash
  1334. grep -v ^[[:space:]]*# filename
  1335. ```
  1336. ###### Show data from file without comments and new lines
  1337. ```bash
  1338. egrep -v '#|^$' filename
  1339. ```