11 projects tagged "Security Analysis"
The ERPXE project simplifies the process of installing and customizing a multi-boot PXE server. Over 100 different plugins are available for download, including Windows, WinPE, Hiren’s Boot CD, Acronis True Image, Symantec Ghost, FOG, Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora, CentOS, openSUSE, Gentoo, RIP Linux, Slackware, Backtrack, PartedMagic, and many more.
LPVS (Linux Package Vulnerability Scanner) is a Linux distribution news feed based package version scanner that shows which security advisories apply to your system, which packages are installed in a vulnerable version, and to which versions you should upgrade. Currently supported distributions: Ubuntu and CentOS.
SecQua is a tool that quantifies the security of a given Information System, using a novel security metric. It tries to provide a deterministic, unbiased, objective, and efficient measurement. The approach is vulnerability driven and uses the National Vulnerability Database. A security metric must answer questions such as "How secure am I?", "Am I better compared to my last checkpoint/year?", "Am I spending the right amount of money for security?", "How do I compare to my peers?", and "What risk transfer options do I have?". SecQua can state that a system is now 60.2% secure, when last month it was 46.5%. Moreover, it tries to depict how vulnerability patterns expose the information system over time.
Patchman is a patch status monitoring tool for Linux systems. Patchman clients send a list of installed packages and enabled repositories to the server. The server (CLI or Web) tells the user which hosts require updates, whether those updates are normal or security updates, and shows installed packages that are not part of any repository. Hosts, packages, repositories. and operating systems can be filtered using features or arbitrary tags. For example, you can find out which hosts have a certain version of a package installed, and which repository it comes from. Patchman does not (yet) have the ability to update packages on hosts.
NetSecL ToolSet is a sub-project of NetSecL Linux containing all penetration tools as in the live CD of NetSecL Linux. The goal of this sub-project is to have a minimal Linux distribution in VM with a shh webshell (ajaxterm), no GrSecurity or hardening as in the live CD. After starting the appliance you can use it remotely via ssh or via Web browser.
Buck-Security is a security scanner for Debian and Ubuntu Linux. It helps you to harden your system by running some important security checks. For example, it finds world-writable files and directories, setuid and setgid programs, superuser accounts, and installed attack tool packages. It also checks your umask and checks if the sticky bit is set for /tmp, among other checks.
SCARE (Source Code Analysis Risk Evaluation) analyzes source code and provides a realistic and factual representation of the potential of that source code to create a problematic binary. This metric will not say that the binary will be exploited, nor does it do a static analysis for known limitations like vulnerabilities. However, it will flag code for a particular interaction type or control and allow the developer to understand which operational security (OpSec) holes are not protected even if it can't say the effectiveness of that protection at this time.
Obeseus is a light-weight, high-speed IP DDOS detector that runs on an Intel probe with an advanced 10 Gb/s FPGA card. Firmware Routines on the FPGA card ensure that the attack is identified right down to host/port with zero load on the PCI bus. This is the pre-port to FPGA beta version written in C with PCAP and BPF. It was released in this form as most users do not have a specialist FPGA card available to them.