mirror of
https://github.com/carlospolop/hacktricks
synced 2024-11-28 15:41:34 +00:00
fec613a298
- Added new tools: Wakaru, Webcrack, Humanify - Added some of my JS related gists to 'resources' - Updated some broken links to use the wayback archives of the pages - Updated some non-linked links to be clickable - etc
499 lines
19 KiB
Markdown
499 lines
19 KiB
Markdown
# Source code Review / SAST Tools
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<details>
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<summary><strong>Learn AWS hacking from zero to hero with</strong> <a href="https://training.hacktricks.xyz/courses/arte"><strong>htARTE (HackTricks AWS Red Team Expert)</strong></a><strong>!</strong></summary>
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Other ways to support HackTricks:
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* If you want to see your **company advertised in HackTricks** or **download HackTricks in PDF** Check the [**SUBSCRIPTION PLANS**](https://github.com/sponsors/carlospolop)!
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* Get the [**official PEASS & HackTricks swag**](https://peass.creator-spring.com)
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* Discover [**The PEASS Family**](https://opensea.io/collection/the-peass-family), our collection of exclusive [**NFTs**](https://opensea.io/collection/the-peass-family)
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* **Join the** 💬 [**Discord group**](https://discord.gg/hRep4RUj7f) or the [**telegram group**](https://t.me/peass) or **follow** us on **Twitter** 🐦 [**@carlospolopm**](https://twitter.com/hacktricks_live)**.**
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* **Share your hacking tricks by submitting PRs to the** [**HackTricks**](https://github.com/carlospolop/hacktricks) and [**HackTricks Cloud**](https://github.com/carlospolop/hacktricks-cloud) github repos.
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</details>
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## Guidance and & Lists of tools
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* [**https://owasp.org/www-community/Source\_Code\_Analysis\_Tools**](https://owasp.org/www-community/Source\_Code\_Analysis\_Tools)
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* [**https://github.com/analysis-tools-dev/static-analysis**](https://github.com/analysis-tools-dev/static-analysis)
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## Multi-Language Tools
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### [Naxus - AI-Gents](https://www.naxusai.com/)
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There is a **free package to review PRs**.
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### [**Semgrep**](https://github.com/returntocorp/semgrep)
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It's an **Open Source tool**.
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#### Supported Languages
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| Category | Languages |
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| ------------ | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| GA | C# · Go · Java · JavaScript · JSX · JSON · PHP · Python · Ruby · Scala · Terraform · TypeScript · TSX |
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| Beta | Kotlin · Rust |
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| Experimental | Bash · C · C++ · Clojure · Dart · Dockerfile · Elixir · HTML · Julia · Jsonnet · Lisp · |
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#### Quick Start
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{% code overflow="wrap" %}
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```bash
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# Install https://github.com/returntocorp/semgrep#option-1-getting-started-from-the-cli
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brew install semgrep
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# Go to your repo code and scan
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cd repo
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semgrep scan --config auto
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```
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{% endcode %}
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You can also use the [**semgrep VSCode Extension**](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=Semgrep.semgrep) to get the findings inside VSCode.
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### [**SonarQube**](https://www.sonarsource.com/products/sonarqube/downloads/)
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There is an installable **free version**.
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#### Quick Start
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{% code overflow="wrap" %}
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```bash
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# Run the paltform in docker
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docker run -d --name sonarqube -e SONAR_ES_BOOTSTRAP_CHECKS_DISABLE=true -p 9000:9000 sonarqube:latest
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# Install cli tool
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brew install sonar-scanner
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# Go to localhost:9000 and login with admin:admin or admin:sonar
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# Generate a local project and then a TOKEN for it
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# Using the token and from the folder with the repo, scan it
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cd path/to/repo
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sonar-scanner \
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-Dsonar.projectKey=<project-name> \
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-Dsonar.sources=. \
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-Dsonar.host.url=http://localhost:9000 \
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-Dsonar.token=<sonar_project_token>
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```
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{% endcode %}
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### CodeQL
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There is an **installable free version** but according to the license you can **only use free codeQL version in Open Source projects**.
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#### Install
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{% code overflow="wrap" %}
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```bash
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# Download your release from https://github.com/github/codeql-action/releases
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## Example
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wget https://github.com/github/codeql-action/releases/download/codeql-bundle-v2.14.3/codeql-bundle-osx64.tar.gz
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# Move it to the destination folder
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mkdir ~/codeql
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mv codeql-bundle* ~/codeql
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# Decompress it
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cd ~/codeql
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tar -xzvf codeql-bundle-*.tar.gz
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rm codeql-bundle-*.tar.gz
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# Add to path
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echo 'export PATH="$PATH:/Users/username/codeql/codeql"' >> ~/.zshrc
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# Check it's correctly installed
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## Open a new terminal
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codeql resolve qlpacks #Get paths to QL packs
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```
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{% endcode %}
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#### Quick Start - Prepare the database
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{% hint style="success" %}
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The first thing you need to do is to **prepare the database** (create the code tree) so later the queries are run over it.
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{% endhint %}
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* You can allow codeql to automatically identify the language of the repo and create the database
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{% code overflow="wrap" %}
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```bash
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codeql database create <database> --language <language>
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# Example
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codeql database create /path/repo/codeql_db --source-root /path/repo
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## DB will be created in /path/repo/codeql_db
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```
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{% endcode %}
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{% hint style="danger" %}
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This **will usually trigger and error** saying that more than one language was specified (or automatically detected). **Check the next options** to fix this!
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{% endhint %}
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* You can do this **manually indicating** the **repo** and the **language** ([list of languages](https://docs.github.com/en/code-security/codeql-cli/getting-started-with-the-codeql-cli/preparing-your-code-for-codeql-analysis#running-codeql-database-create))
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{% code overflow="wrap" %}
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```bash
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codeql database create <database> --language <language> --source-root </path/to/repo>
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# Example
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codeql database create /path/repo/codeql_db --language javascript --source-root /path/repo
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## DB will be created in /path/repo/codeql_db
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```
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{% endcode %}
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* If your repo is using **more than 1 language**, you can also create **1 DB per language** indicating each language.
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{% code overflow="wrap" %}
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```bash
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export GITHUB_TOKEN=ghp_32849y23hij4...
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codeql database create <database> --source-root /path/to/repo --db-cluster --language "javascript,python"
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# Example
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export GITHUB_TOKEN=ghp_32849y23hij4...
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codeql database create /path/repo/codeql_db --source-root /path/to/repo --db-cluster --language "javascript,python"
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## DBs will be created in /path/repo/codeql_db/*
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```
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{% endcode %}
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* You can also allow `codeql` to **identify all the languages** for you and create a DB per language. You need to give it a **GITHUB\_TOKEN**.
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{% code overflow="wrap" %}
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```bash
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export GITHUB_TOKEN=ghp_32849y23hij4...
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codeql database create <database> --db-cluster --source-root </path/to/repo>
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# Example
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export GITHUB_TOKEN=ghp_32849y23hij4...
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codeql database create /tmp/codeql_db --db-cluster --source-root /path/repo
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## DBs will be created in /path/repo/codeql_db/*
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```
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{% endcode %}
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#### Quick Start - Analyze the code
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{% hint style="success" %}
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Now it's finally time to analyze the code
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{% endhint %}
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Remember that if you used several languages, **a DB per language** would have been crated in the path you specified.
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{% code overflow="wrap" %}
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```bash
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# Default analysis
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codeql database analyze <database> --format=<format> --output=</out/file/path>
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# Example
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codeql database analyze /tmp/codeql_db/javascript --format=sarif-latest --output=/tmp/graphql_results.sarif
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# Specify QL pack to use in the analysis
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codeql database analyze <database> \
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<qls pack> --sarif-category=<language> \
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--sarif-add-baseline-file-info \ --format=<format> \
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--output=/out/file/path>
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# Example
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codeql database analyze /tmp/codeql_db \
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javascript-security-extended --sarif-category=javascript \
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--sarif-add-baseline-file-info --format=sarif-latest \
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--output=/tmp/sec-extended.sarif
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```
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{% endcode %}
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#### Quick Start - Scripted
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{% code overflow="wrap" %}
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```bash
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export GITHUB_TOKEN=ghp_32849y23hij4...
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export REPO_PATH=/path/to/repo
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export OUTPUT_DIR_PATH="$REPO_PATH/codeql_results"
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mkdir -p "$OUTPUT_DIR_PATH"
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export FINAL_MSG="Results available in: "
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echo "Creating DB"
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codeql database create "$REPO_PATH/codeql_db" --db-cluster --source-root "$REPO_PATH"
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for db in `ls "$REPO_PATH/codeql_db"`; do
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echo "Analyzing $db"
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codeql database analyze "$REPO_PATH/codeql_db/$db" --format=sarif-latest --output="${OUTPUT_DIR_PATH}/$db).sarif"
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FINAL_MSG="$FINAL_MSG ${OUTPUT_DIR_PATH}/$db.sarif ,"
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echo ""
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done
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echo $FINAL_MSG
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```
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{% endcode %}
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You can visualize the findings in [**https://microsoft.github.io/sarif-web-component/**](https://microsoft.github.io/sarif-web-component/) or using VSCode extension [**SARIF viewer**](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=MS-SarifVSCode.sarif-viewer).
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You can also use the [**VSCode extension**](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=GitHub.vscode-codeql) to get the findings inside VSCode. You will still need to create a database manually, but then you can select any files and click on `Right Click` -> `CodeQL: Run Queries in Selected Files`
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### [**Snyk**](https://snyk.io/product/snyk-code/)
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There is an **installable free version**.
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#### Quick Start
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```bash
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# Install
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sudo npm install -g snyk
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# Authenticate (you can use a free account)
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snyk auth
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# Test for open source vulns & license issues
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snyk test [--all-projects]
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# Test for code vulnerabilities
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## This will upload your code and you need to enable this option in: Settings > Snyk Code
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snyk test code
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# Test for vulns in images
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snyk container test [image]
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# Test for IaC vulns
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snyk iac test
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```
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You can also use the [**snyk VSCode Extension**](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=snyk-security.snyk-vulnerability-scanner) to get findings inside VSCode.
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### [Insider](https://github.com/insidersec/insider)
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It's **Open Source**, but looks **unmaintained**.
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#### Supported Languages
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Java (Maven and Android), Kotlin (Android), Swift (iOS), .NET Full Framework, C#, and Javascript (Node.js).
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#### Quick Start
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```bash
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# Check the correct release for your environment
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$ wget https://github.com/insidersec/insider/releases/download/2.1.0/insider_2.1.0_linux_x86_64.tar.gz
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$ tar -xf insider_2.1.0_linux_x86_64.tar.gz
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$ chmod +x insider
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$ ./insider --tech javascript --target <projectfolder>
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```
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### [**DeepSource**](https://deepsource.com/pricing) 
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Free for **public repos**.
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## NodeJS
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* **`yarn`**
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```bash
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# Install
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brew install yarn
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# Run
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cd /path/to/repo
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yarn audit
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npm audit
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```
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* **`pnpm`**
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```bash
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# Install
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npm install -g pnpm
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# Run
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cd /path/to/repo
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pnpm audit
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```
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* [**nodejsscan**](https://github.com/ajinabraham/nodejsscan)**:** Static security code scanner (SAST) for Node.js applications powered by [libsast](https://github.com/ajinabraham/libsast) and [semgrep](https://github.com/returntocorp/semgrep).
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```bash
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# Install & run
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docker run -it -p 9090:9090 opensecurity/nodejsscan:latest
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# Got to localhost:9090
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# Upload a zip file with the code
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```
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* [**RetireJS**](https://github.com/RetireJS/retire.js)**:** The goal of Retire.js is to help you detect the use of JS-library versions with known vulnerabilities.
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```bash
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# Install
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npm install -g retire
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# Run
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cd /path/to/repo
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retire --colors
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```
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## Electron
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* [**electronegativity**](https://github.com/doyensec/electronegativity)**:** It's a tool to identify misconfigurations and security anti-patterns in Electron-based applications.
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## Python
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* [**Bandit**](https://github.com/PyCQA/bandit)**:** Bandit is a tool designed to find common security issues in Python code. To do this Bandit processes each file, builds an AST from it, and runs appropriate plugins against the AST nodes. Once Bandit has finished scanning all the files it generates a report.
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```bash
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# Install
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pip3 install bandit
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# Run
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bandit -r <path to folder>
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```
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* [**safety**](https://github.com/pyupio/safety): Safety checks Python dependencies for known security vulnerabilities and suggests the proper remediations for vulnerabilities detected. Safety can be run on developer machines, in CI/CD pipelines and on production systems.
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```bash
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# Install
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pip install safety
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# Run
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safety check
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```
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* [~~**Pyt**~~](https://github.com/python-security/pyt): Unmaintained.
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## .NET
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```bash
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# dnSpy
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https://github.com/0xd4d/dnSpy
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# .NET compilation
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C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework64\v4.0.30319\csc.exe test.cs
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```
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## RUST
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```bash
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# Install
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cargo install cargo-audit
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# Run
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cargo audit
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#Update the Advisory Database
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cargo audit fetch
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```
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## Java
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```bash
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# JD-Gui
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https://github.com/java-decompiler/jd-gui
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# Java compilation step-by-step
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javac -source 1.8 -target 1.8 test.java
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mkdir META-INF
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echo "Main-Class: test" > META-INF/MANIFEST.MF
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jar cmvf META-INF/MANIFEST.MF test.jar test.class
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```
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| Task | Command |
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| --------------- | --------------------------------------------------------- |
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| Execute Jar | java -jar \[jar] |
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| Unzip Jar | unzip -d \[output directory] \[jar] |
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| Create Jar | jar -cmf META-INF/MANIFEST.MF \[output jar] \* |
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| Base64 SHA256 | sha256sum \[file] \| cut -d' ' -f1 \| xxd -r -p \| base64 |
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| Remove Signing | rm META-INF/_.SF META-INF/_.RSA META-INF/\*.DSA |
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| Delete from Jar | zip -d \[jar] \[file to remove] |
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| Decompile class | procyon -o . \[path to class] |
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| Decompile Jar | procyon -jar \[jar] -o \[output directory] |
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| Compile class | javac \[path to .java file] |
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## Go
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```bash
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https://github.com/securego/gosec
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```
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## PHP
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[Psalm](https://phpmagazine.net/2018/12/find-errors-in-your-php-applications-with-psalm.html) and [PHPStan](https://phpmagazine.net/2020/09/phpstan-pro-edition-launched.html).
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### Wordpress Plugins
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[https://www.pluginvulnerabilities.com/plugin-security-checker/](https://www.pluginvulnerabilities.com/plugin-security-checker/)
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## Solidity
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* [https://www.npmjs.com/package/solium](https://www.npmjs.com/package/solium)
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## JavaScript
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### Discovery
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1. Burp:
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* Spider and discover content
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* Sitemap > filter
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* Sitemap > right-click domain > Engagement tools > Find scripts
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2. [WaybackURLs](https://github.com/tomnomnom/waybackurls):
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* `waybackurls <domain> |grep -i "\.js" |sort -u`
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### Static Analysis
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#### Unminimize/Beautify/Prettify
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* [https://prettier.io/playground/](https://prettier.io/playground/)
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* [https://beautifier.io/](https://beautifier.io/)
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* See some of the tools mentioned in 'Deobfuscate/Unpack' below as well.
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#### Deobfuscate/Unpack
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**Note**: It may not be possible to fully deobfuscate.
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1. Find and use .map files:
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* If the .map files are exposed, they can be used to easily deobfuscate.
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* Commonly, foo.js.map maps to foo.js. Manually look for them.
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* Use [JS Miner](https://github.com/PortSwigger/js-miner) to look for them.
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* Ensure active scan is conducted.
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* Read '[Tips/Notes](https://github.com/minamo7sen/burp-JS-Miner/wiki#tips--notes)'
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* If found, use [Maximize](https://www.npmjs.com/package/maximize) to deobfuscate.
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2. Without .map files, try JSnice:
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* References: [http://jsnice.org/](http://jsnice.org/) & [https://www.npmjs.com/package/jsnice](https://www.npmjs.com/package/jsnice)
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* Tips:
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* If using jsnice.org, click on the options button next to the "Nicify JavaScript" button, and de-select "Infer types" to reduce cluttering the code with comments.
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* Ensure you do not leave any empty lines before the script, as it may affect the deobfuscation process and give inaccurate results.
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4. For some more modern alternatives to JSNice, you might like to look at the following:
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* [https://github.com/pionxzh/wakaru](https://github.com/pionxzh/wakaru)
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* > Javascript decompiler, unpacker and unminify toolkit
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> Wakaru is the Javascript decompiler for modern frontend. It brings back the original code from a bundled and transpiled source.
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* [https://github.com/j4k0xb/webcrack](https://github.com/j4k0xb/webcrack)
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* > Deobfuscate obfuscator.io, unminify and unpack bundled javascript
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* [https://github.com/jehna/humanify](https://github.com/jehna/humanify)
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* > Un-minify Javascript code using ChatGPT
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> This tool uses large language modeles (like ChatGPT & llama2) and other tools to un-minify Javascript code. Note that LLMs don't perform any structural changes – they only provide hints to rename variables and functions. The heavy lifting is done by Babel on AST level to ensure code stays 1-1 equivalent.
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* [https://thejunkland.com/blog/using-llms-to-reverse-javascript-minification.html](https://thejunkland.com/blog/using-llms-to-reverse-javascript-minification.html)
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* > Using LLMs to reverse JavaScript variable name minification
|
||
3. Use `console.log()`;
|
||
* Find the return value at the end and change it to `console.log(<packerReturnVariable>);` so the deobfuscated js is printed instead of being executing.
|
||
* Then, paste the modified (and still obfuscated) js into [https://jsconsole.com/](https://jsconsole.com/) to see the deobfuscated js logged to the console.
|
||
* Finally, paste the deobfuscated output into [https://prettier.io/playground/](https://prettier.io/playground/) to beautify it for analysis.
|
||
* **Note**: If you are still seeing packed (but different) js, it may be recursively packed. Repeat the process.
|
||
|
||
#### References
|
||
|
||
* [YouTube: DAST - Javascript Dynamic Analysis](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_v8r_t4v6hQ)
|
||
* [https://blog.nvisium.com/angular-for-pentesters-part-1](https://web.archive.org/web/20221226054137/https://blog.nvisium.com/angular-for-pentesters-part-1)
|
||
* [https://blog.nvisium.com/angular-for-pentesters-part-2](https://web.archive.org/web/20230204012439/https://blog.nvisium.com/angular-for-pentesters-part-2)
|
||
* [devalias](https://twitter.com/_devalias)'s [GitHub Gists](https://gist.github.com/0xdevalias):
|
||
* [Deobfuscating / Unminifying Obfuscated Web App Code](https://gist.github.com/0xdevalias/d8b743efb82c0e9406fc69da0d6c6581#deobfuscating--unminifying-obfuscated-web-app-code)
|
||
* [Reverse Engineering Webpack Apps](https://gist.github.com/0xdevalias/8c621c5d09d780b1d321bfdb86d67cdd#reverse-engineering-webpack-apps)
|
||
* [etc](https://gist.github.com/search?q=user:0xdevalias+javascript)
|
||
|
||
#### Tools
|
||
|
||
* [https://portswigger.net/burp/documentation/desktop/tools/dom-invader](https://portswigger.net/burp/documentation/desktop/tools/dom-invader)
|
||
|
||
#### Less Used References
|
||
|
||
* [https://cyberchef.org/](https://cyberchef.org/)
|
||
* [https://olajs.com/javascript-prettifier](https://olajs.com/javascript-prettifier)
|
||
* [https://jshint.com/](https://jshint.com/)
|
||
* [https://github.com/jshint/jshint/](https://github.com/jshint/jshint/)
|
||
|
||
<details>
|
||
|
||
<summary><strong>Learn AWS hacking from zero to hero with</strong> <a href="https://training.hacktricks.xyz/courses/arte"><strong>htARTE (HackTricks AWS Red Team Expert)</strong></a><strong>!</strong></summary>
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||
|
||
</details>
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