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⚜️ ALL-IN-ONE HACKING TOOL FOR HACKERS ⚜️ | ⚜️ ADVANCED TOOLS AT ONE PLACE ⚜️

by VEGA - 08 May, 2021 - 09:54 AM
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#57
There are a couple of staple tools found in this repo, but when it comes to something like this I would advise one of the two options below.

1. If you're wanting to commit yourself to a framework of Linux based tools for exploitation, penetration testing, and so but you do not have the time or the knowledge to comprise an archive of your own tools selected by you for your own purposes, then the best option would more than likely to be running your system on Parrot OS. If you are comfortable with Kali then so be it. 

Parrot OS offers a release in which the system comes pre-installed with a plethora of tools pre-categorized and ready to boot for the task which one may encounter. It is also now the recommended operating system for general hacktivists and supported by HTB (HackTheBox). Parrot OS is derived from the Debian 10 Buster distribution, if anyone is wondering. Another decent alternative would be BlackArch. 

2. In the event you do have the knowledge and time to invest into compromising your own toolkit, which will be completely suited to your personal needs and ran from the distribution of your choice, this would be an ideal route to go, although it could be a bit cumbersome to really bring the entire project together in the end as compromising an entire suite of tools or a personal OP <x> framework can be quite time-consuming. 

--

I personally run Linux as my main operating system of choice, and currently use Parrot OS Security Edition (Built on top of Debian 10 Buster) as my main operating system. I have of course have made my own modifications here and there with the system, however, as it is a bit hard to not do so with how customizable Linux is. 

Image:
Show ContentSpoiler:

(Ps; If your doing work and need to increase your workflow's efficiency you should definitely try using a Tiling Window Manager such as i3wm, bwspm, etc.)

@_VEGA_ Still a lot of good applications in this thread's mentioned repo though, nice to have them archived in a collective repo.
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#60
(22 May, 2021 - 01:34 PM)Ping Wrote: Show More
There are a couple of staple tools found in this repo, but when it comes to something like this I would advise one of the two options below.

1. If you're wanting to commit yourself to a framework of Linux based tools for exploitation, penetration testing, and so but you do not have the time or the knowledge to comprise an archive of your own tools selected by you for your own purposes, then the best option would more than likely to be running your system on Parrot OS. If you are comfortable with Kali then so be it. 

Parrot OS offers a release in which the system comes pre-installed with a plethora of tools pre-categorized and ready to boot for the task which one may encounter. It is also now the recommended operating system for general hacktivists and supported by HTB (HackTheBox). Parrot OS is derived from the Debian 10 Buster distribution, if anyone is wondering. Another decent alternative would be BlackArch. 

2. In the event you do have the knowledge and time to invest into compromising your own toolkit, which will be completely suited to your personal needs and ran from the distribution of your choice, this would be an ideal route to go, although it could be a bit cumbersome to really bring the entire project together in the end as compromising an entire suite of tools or a personal OP <x> framework can be quite time-consuming. 

--

I personally run Linux as my main operating system of choice, and currently use Parrot OS Security Edition (Built on top of Debian 10 Buster) as my main operating system. I have of course have made my own modifications here and there with the system, however, as it is a bit hard to not do so with how customizable Linux is. 

Image:
Show ContentSpoiler:

(Ps; If your doing work and need to increase your workflow's efficiency you should definitely try using a Tiling Window Manager such as i3wm, bwspm, etc.)

@_VEGA_ Still a lot of good applications in this thread's mentioned repo though, nice to have them archived in a collective repo.

I agree with everything you say. LInux distribution is tough to tackle with but the versatility it provides is immense. The only constraint is when something happens, you are pretty much on your own . :)
learn it and there are whole lotta possibilities which you can explore. These tools are advanced and really you need some knowledge of the distro you are using as i mentioned in the post. 
Go with this guy, he is telling the truth :D
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#64
(22 May, 2021 - 05:18 PM)_VEGA_ Wrote: Show More
(22 May, 2021 - 01:34 PM)Ping Wrote: Show More
There are a couple of staple tools found in this repo, but when it comes to something like this I would advise one of the two options below.

1. If you're wanting to commit yourself to a framework of Linux based tools for exploitation, penetration testing, and so but you do not have the time or the knowledge to comprise an archive of your own tools selected by you for your own purposes, then the best option would more than likely to be running your system on Parrot OS. If you are comfortable with Kali then so be it. 

Parrot OS offers a release in which the system comes pre-installed with a plethora of tools pre-categorized and ready to boot for the task which one may encounter. It is also now the recommended operating system for general hacktivists and supported by HTB (HackTheBox). Parrot OS is derived from the Debian 10 Buster distribution, if anyone is wondering. Another decent alternative would be BlackArch. 

2. In the event you do have the knowledge and time to invest into compromising your own toolkit, which will be completely suited to your personal needs and ran from the distribution of your choice, this would be an ideal route to go, although it could be a bit cumbersome to really bring the entire project together in the end as compromising an entire suite of tools or a personal OP <x> framework can be quite time-consuming. 

--

I personally run Linux as my main operating system of choice, and currently use Parrot OS Security Edition (Built on top of Debian 10 Buster) as my main operating system. I have of course have made my own modifications here and there with the system, however, as it is a bit hard to not do so with how customizable Linux is. 

Image:
Show ContentSpoiler:

(Ps; If your doing work and need to increase your workflow's efficiency you should definitely try using a Tiling Window Manager such as i3wm, bwspm, etc.)

@_VEGA_ Still a lot of good applications in this thread's mentioned repo though, nice to have them archived in a collective repo.

I agree with everything you say. LInux distribution is tough to tackle with but the versatility it provides is immense. The only constraint is when something happens, you are pretty much on your own . :)
learn it and there are whole lotta possibilities which you can explore. These tools are advanced and really you need some knowledge of the distro you are using as i mentioned in the post. 
Go with this guy, he is telling the truth :D
I don't find any tools to be difficult past needing to remember their command flags, etc. most often than not you can acquire suffice information using one of these simple commands  (metasyntactic variables in place as foobar)
Code:
man foobar
Code:
foobar -h
Code:
foobar --help
will be enough to resolve an issue you run into with software related tasks specific to your application of choice. 

although bash scripting is very good to learn. 

I've built my own system in the past from kernel using pacstrap manually on arch where I spent hours simply just picking out what to compose the system of in terms of the desktop environment, window manager, login manager, gtk, drivers, core components of the system, etc, and partitioned the drive using a schema that allowed quick hot-swapping for operating systems over ext4 formatted drives so I could potentially just boot into another operating system and not have file path changes, etc for stored data, as the drive would contain the operating system on a partitioned volume to itself, and mount the home/applications directory to its own dedicated volume as well. so in the event of swapping distributions, the only change would be booting from another partition and mounting the home/applications folder.

I now simply just run parrotOS.What distribution are you using?
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