Developing StrongARM/Linux shellcode is a Phrack Magazine article that delves into the intricacies of creating shellcode for the StrongARM architecture on Linux systems, authored by funkysh.
FEATURES
EXPLORE BY TAGS
SIMILAR TOOLS
A comprehensive guide to developing an incident response capability through intelligence-based threat hunting, covering theoretical concepts and real-life scenarios.
A comprehensive guide to network security monitoring, teaching readers how to detect and respond to intrusions using open source software and vendor-neutral tools.
A comprehensive SQL injection cheat sheet covering various database management systems and techniques.
A condensed field guide for cyber security incident responders, covering incident response processes, attacker tactics, and practical techniques for handling incidents.
A curated collection of companies that have publicly disclosed adversary tactics, techniques, and procedures following security breaches.
Free and open-source cybersecurity training classes with multi-class learning paths for high-skill, high-pay job skills.
A comprehensive guide to incident response, providing effective techniques for responding to advanced attacks against local and remote network resources.
INE Security offers a range of cybersecurity certifications, including penetration testing, mobile and web application security, and incident response.
A comprehensive reference guide providing practical examples and commands for using Hashcat to crack various types of password hashes.
PINNED

Checkmarx SCA
A software composition analysis tool that identifies vulnerabilities, malicious code, and license risks in open source dependencies throughout the software development lifecycle.

Orca Security
A cloud-native application protection platform that provides agentless security monitoring, vulnerability management, and compliance capabilities across multi-cloud environments.

DryRun
A GitHub application that performs automated security code reviews by analyzing contextual security aspects of code changes during pull requests.