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The easiest way to identify anything
pip3 install pywhat && pywhat --help
Imagine this: You come across some mysterious text π§ββοΈ 0x52908400098527886E0F7030069857D2E4169EE7
or dQw4w9WgXcQ
and you wonder what it is. What do you do?
Well, with what
all you have to do is ask what "0x52908400098527886E0F7030069857D2E4169EE7"
and what
will tell you!
what
's job is to identify what something is. Whether it be a file or text! Or even the hex of a file! What about text within files? We have that too! what
is recursive, it will identify everything in text and more!
$ pip3 install pywhat
or
# installs optional dependencies that may improve the speed
$ pip3 install pywhat[optimize]
$ brew install pywhat
Or for our MacPorts fans:
$ sudo port install pywhat
You come across a new piece of malware called WantToCry. You think back to Wannacry and remember it was stopped because a researcher found a kill-switch in the code.
When a domain, hardcoded into Wannacry, was registered the virus would stop.
You use What
to identify all the domains in the malware, and use a domain registrar API to register all the domains.
Say you have a .pcap
file from a network attack. What
can identify this and quickly find you:
- All URLs
- Emails
- Phone numbers
- Credit card numbers
- Cryptocurrency addresses
- Social Security Numbers
- and much more.
With what
, you can identify the important things in the pcap in seconds, not minutes.
You can use PyWhat to scan for things that'll make you money via bug bounties like:
- API Keys
- Webhooks
- Credentials
- and more
Run PyWhat with:
pywhat --include "Bug Bounty" TEXT
To do this.
Here are some examples π
- Download all GitHub repositories of an organisation
- Search for anything that you can submit as a bounty, like API keys
# Download all repositories
GHUSER=CHANGEME; curl "https://api.github.com/users/$GHUSER/repos?per_page=1000" | grep -o 'git@[^"]*' | xargs -L1 git clone
# Will print when it finds things.
# Loops over all files in current directory.
find . -type f -execdir pywhat --include 'Bug Bounty' {} \;
# Recursively download all web pages of a site
wget -r -np -k https://skerritt.blog
# Will print when it finds things.
# Loops over all files in current directory.
find . -type f -execdir pywhat --include 'Bug Bounty' {} \;
PS: We support more filters than just bug bounties! Run pywhat --tags
Anytime you have a file and you want to find structured data in it that's useful, What
is for you.
Or if you come across some piece of text and you don't know what it is, What
will tell you.
File Opening You can pass in a file path by what 'this/is/a/file/path'
. What
is smart enough to figure out it's a file!
What about a whole directory? What
can handle that too! It will recursively search for files and output everything you need!
Sometimes, you only care about seeing things which are related to AWS. Or bug bounties, or cryptocurrencies!
You can filter output by using what --rarity 0.2:0.8 --include Identifiers,URL https://skerritt.blog
. Use what --help
to get more information.
To see all filters, run pywhat --tags
! You can also combine them, for example to see all cryptocurrency wallets minus Ripple you can do:
pywhat --include "Cryptocurrency Wallet" --exclude "Ripple Wallet" 1KFHE7w8BhaENAswwryaoccDb6qcT6DbYY
Sorting You can sort the output by using what -k rarity --reverse TEXT
. Use what --help
to get more information.
Exporting You can export to json using what --json
and results can be sent directly to a file using what --json > file.json
.
Boundaryless mode What
has a special mode to match identifiable information within strings. By default, it is enabled in CLI but disabled in API. Use what --help
or refer to API Documentation for more information.
PyWhat has an API! Click here https://github.com/bee-san/pyWhat/wiki/API to read about it.
what
not only thrives on contributors, but can't exist without them! If you want to add a new regex to check for things, you can read our documentation here
We ask contributors to join the Discord for quicker discussions, but it's not needed:
We would like to thank Dora for their work on a bug bounty specific regex database which we have used.