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  • Created about 9 years ago
  • Updated over 1 year ago

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Repository Details

Code Review Audit Script Scanner

CRASS

The "code review audit script scanner" (CRASS) started as a source code grep-er with a set of selected high-potential strings that may result in (security) problems. By now it is searching for strings that are interesting for analysts. Simplicity is the key: You don't need anything than a couple of standard *nix command line tools (especially grep), while the project still serves as a "what can go wrong" collection of things we see over the years.

Use cases

I know it is not a real static analysis tool and it's not in any way a replacement for all the tools out there, but it is kind of language independent. It's also not only for source code. It should be helpful in all cases where you have too much data to look through manually during a security review: You customer sent you a zip file with "the new release"/"the code"/"the stuff the developer gave me". Or you achieved to gain access to a server, looted a lot of files and want to look for further problems and sensitive information. You harvested/looted data off a server/client/share/...

It should usually be used when you don't know where to start or when it's just way too much to go through manually.

Where to start

If you've never used CRASS before you should try grep-it.sh (currently the main focus of the project). Customize the OPTIONS section of the file. Most things should be fine for a first run though. Afterwards try main.sh.

Contents of the project

By now the tool is also able to analyze directories full of unknown things a bit smarter:

  • A script to unpack and make things bigger (bloat-it.sh: unpack zips, decompile jars, etc.)
  • A script to clean and make things smaller (clean-it.sh: depending on the use case we want to remove .svn, .git folders, etc.)
  • A script to get an overview about existing files (find-it.sh: using the "file" command)
  • A script to compare two versions (diff-it.sh: using the "diff" command)
  • A script to visualize the contents (visualize-it.sh: maybe show file entropy or such things)
  • A script to extract interesting information (extract-it.sh: mainly meta data, for example exif information from pictures)
  • A script to find interesting things for security people (grep-it.sh: using the gnu version of "grep"):

Some characteristics:

  • The scripts can be run independently (it is important to keep it this way). main.sh is showing what the idea of using them all together is.
  • Tested under MAC OSX (with gnu-grep aka ggrep from mac ports), but got good feedback from Linux users too. You should customize the defined variables on the first few line in each script.

Contributions

Are very welcome, either as issue reports or as pull requests. I know the user experience with everything except grep-it.sh is not perfect, hope to find time to change that. What would be helpful too is if you can let me know if one of the regex in grep-it.sh was helpful for a certain purpose, so we can improve the comments.