dfirtrack | DFIRTrack - The Incident Response Tracking Application | Cybersecurity library
kandi X-RAY | dfirtrack Summary
kandi X-RAY | dfirtrack Summary
DFIRTrack (Digital Forensics and Incident Response Tracking application) is an open source web application mainly based on Django using a PostgreSQL database back end. In contrast to other great incident response tools, which are mainly case-based and support the work of CERTs, SOCs etc. in their daily business, DFIRTrack is focused on handling one ore more major incidents with a lot of affected systems as it is often observed in APT cases. It is meant to be used as a tool for dedicated incident response teams in large cases. So, of course, CERTs and SOCs may use DFIRTrack as well, but they may feel it will be more appropriate in special cases instead of every day work. In contrast to case-based applications, DFIRTrack rather works in a system-based fashion. It keeps track of the status of various systems and the tasks and forensic artifacts associated with them, keeping the analyst well-informed about the status and number of affected systems at any time during the investigation phase up to the remediation phase of the incident response process.
Support
Quality
Security
License
Reuse
Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA
- A method to start system modificator
- Shows an informational message
- Queue a message for a user
- Logs a debug message
- Generate markdown directory for all domains
- Write the report domains sorted by name
- End user exporter
- Check if csv import path exists
- Display an error message
- Start system modificator
- Get context data
- Creates case creation
- Generate final final message
- Create tag creation
- Create cron cron
- View to update system exporter csv config
- View function to update SystemExporter XLS configuration
- View for an artifact exporter spreadsheet
- Create artifact creator
- Render system exporter config
- Upload csv files
- Creates artifact creation
- Creates task creation
- Changes csv file csv config
- Creates system creation
- Get all system sections sorted by name
dfirtrack Key Features
dfirtrack Examples and Code Snippets
Community Discussions
Trending Discussions on Cybersecurity
QUESTION
I am aiming to build a hardware based password manager that will store credentials like -username and passwords- externally, right now I am searching about it but I am having trouble in identifying that how will that external device integrate with browsers and websites when connected to provide the credentials stored in it. I mean what technique is used to integrate the hardware password managers to the device or browser.
I would appreciate any sort of help and guidance from your side, Thanks!
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Apr-28 at 12:48Usually they inject passwords using a HID device acting as a keyboard. Check out the OnlyKey as an example.
The way these work is by injecting/typing username and password based on pressing a hardware button against which you have stored the relevant credentials. There is also the option to complete MFA by storing an OTP token. Some will act like any other password manager by parsing the website URL against what is stored, but I guess this opens an attack surface when feeding data back to the device.
-- BVS
QUESTION
I have to write the "assumptions" part of a pentest report and I am having trouble understanding what I should write. I checked multiple pentest reports (from https://github.com/juliocesarfort/public-pentesting-reports) but none of them had this paragraph.
Also I found this explanation "In case there are some assumptions that the pen-tester considers before or during the test, the assumptions need to be clearly shown in the report. Providing the assumption will help the report audiences to understand why penetration testing followed a specific direction.", but still what I do have in mind it is more suited for "attack narative".
Can you provide me a small example (for one action, situation) so I can see exactly how it should be written?
ANSWER
Answered 2021-Apr-16 at 15:25I would think the "assumptions" paragraph and the "Attack narrative" paragraph are somehow overlapping. I would use the "Assumptions" paragraph to state a couple of high level decisions made before starting the attack, with whatever little information the pentester would have on the attack. I would expand on the tools and techniques used in the "Attack narrative" paragraph
For example an assumption could be: "The pentester is carrying on the exercise against the infrastructure of a soho company with less than 5 people It is common for soho companies to use consumer networking equipment that is usually unsecure, and left configured as defualt. For this reason the attacker focused on scanning for http and ssh using a database of vendors default username and passwords"
QUESTION
I'm trying to analyse a compiled file for cybersec learning purposes and want to use a particular function.
Here is the output of nm --defined-only ./compiled_file
:
ANSWER
Answered 2021-Mar-09 at 12:54Yes, it is possible. The point of having exported symbols in shared libraries is to be able to use them - after all. In C, you can do this either by linking the library to the application (not really an option for python), or runtime loading the library and finding the required symbol (on linux: dlopen, dlsym). The manpage example shows how to do this in C.
QUESTION
Currently, I have set the following CSP header in the HTML file of my webpage -
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-Nov-04 at 19:09The issue was caused and fixed as follows -
The button that takes XML file as input in the HTML form has an inline event handler, which the CSP Policy was blocking, thereby blocking the upload. I moved this inline event handler to an external function and called the function. This fixed the issue and CSP is no longer blocking the function.
Community Discussions, Code Snippets contain sources that include Stack Exchange Network
Vulnerabilities
No vulnerabilities reported
Install dfirtrack
Support
Reuse Trending Solutions
Find, review, and download reusable Libraries, Code Snippets, Cloud APIs from over 650 million Knowledge Items
Find more librariesStay Updated
Subscribe to our newsletter for trending solutions and developer bootcamps
Share this Page