Runs a bunch of tests and linters
A front-end library for the Robotical Code Assessment
Shared hooks and patches between Protect and Assess components
A transpilation tool mainly used for instrumentation
A collection of agent related CLI utilities
AWS SDK for JavaScript Securityhub Client for Node.js, Browser and React Native
A pure JavaScript implementation of a BPE tokenizer (Encoder/Decoder) for GPT-2 / GPT-3 / GPT-4 and other OpenAI models
Contrast Security's command line tool
Azure AI Projects client library.
AIR library
Shared React SDK for the Universal Suite — auth, entitlements, usage telemetry, changelog, org admin.
Yoast client-side content analysis
Strategic consultant for AI company lifecycle — diagnose, found, revive, reposition
Git trailer parsing, commit risk scoring, and PR validation
Capture and assert HTTP ajax calls in webdriver.io 🕸
The unified CLI for Agentic Readiness. Optimize codebases for AI agents like Cursor, Windsurf, and Claude. Detect semantic duplicates, analyze context fragmentation, and improve agentic leverage.
AWS SDK for JavaScript Auditmanager Client for Node.js, Browser and React Native
Harness-backed AI testing on top of Vitest.
Essential JS 2 Gantt Component
Platform-independent standalone Governance CLI that orchestrates Anarchitects Governance Core contracts outside Nx.
AI Assess Tech SDK for ethical AI assessment - Test AI systems across 4 dimensions: Lying, Cheating, Stealing, and Harm
Assess and Protect agents for Node.js
User-agent detection, bot classification, and compliance assessment
Essential JS 2 Gantt Component for Angular
Knows how to calculate the SkunkScore for a set of Ruby modules
gem-patching provides a mechanism for marking code blocks as a patch targeting specific versions of a gem and be notified when that gem is updated, so that developers can assess whether the patch continues to be necessary
View local project health: security dashboard with vulnerability analysis, gem impact assessment, code quality metrics, and project task tracking.
Tipster attempts to assess the risk of your most recent Git commit by applying various code heuristics that have indicated a high probability of introducing defects.
A comprehensive library for working with Merchant Category Codes (MCC), including validation, categorization, and risk assessment.
Following TDD practice, designed with few useful patterns, styled with rubocop style guide, documented with yard convention, lines of code analysis, 100% tests coverage and properly error handled rubygem project could be very useful to assess one's knowledge in build rubygems.
DocGuard helps maintain up-to-date project documentation by tracking files referenced in your docs, calculating file digests, and assessing whether code changes impact your documentation relevance. It provides CLI commands to assess documentation relevance and record the current documentation state, enabling automated enforcement and better documentation quality in Rails and Ruby projects.
Calculate optimal VCT finish coat counts for commercial floors. Assesses burnishing response (gloss units), repairability scores, and COF compliance against OSHA, NFPA 101, CSA B651, and Ontario Building Code thresholds.
Arachni is a feature-full, modular, high-performance Ruby framework aimed towards helping penetration testers and administrators evaluate the security of web applications. It is smart, it trains itself by monitoring and learning from the web application's behavior during the scan process and is able to perform meta-analysis using a number of factors in order to correctly assess the trustworthiness of results and intelligently identify (or avoid) false-positives. Unlike other scanners, it takes into account the dynamic nature of web applications, can detect changes caused while travelling through the paths of a web application’s cyclomatic complexity and is able to adjust itself accordingly. This way, attack/input vectors that would otherwise be undetectable by non-humans can be handled seamlessly. Moreover, due to its integrated browser environment, it can also audit and inspect client-side code, as well as support highly complicated web applications which make heavy use of technologies such as JavaScript, HTML5, DOM manipulation and AJAX. Finally, it is versatile enough to cover a great deal of use cases, ranging from a simple command line scanner utility, to a global high performance grid of scanners, to a Ruby library allowing for scripted audits, to a multi-user multi-scan web collaboration platform.
WWMD was originally intended to provide a console helper tool for conducting web application security assessments (which is something I find myself doing alot of). I've spent alot of time and had alot of success writing application specific fuzzers + scrapers to test with. WWMD provides a base of useful code to help you work with web sites both in IRB and by writing scripts that can be as generic or as application specific as you choose. There's alot of helpful stuff crammed in here and its usage has evolved alot. It's not intended to replace, remove or be better than any of the tools you currently use. In fact, WWMD works best *with* the tools you currently use to get stuff done. You get convenience methods for getting, scraping, spidering, decoding, decrypting and munging user inputs, pages and web applications. It doesn't try to be smart. That's up to you. What's here is the basic framework for getting started. There's a raft of cookbook scripts and examples that are coming soon so make sure you check the wiki regularly.
WWMD was originally intended to provide a console helper tool for conducting web application security assessments (which is something I find myself doing alot of). I've spent alot of time and had alot of success writing application specific fuzzers + scrapers to test with. WWMD provides a base of useful code to help you work with web sites both in IRB and by writing scripts that can be as generic or as application specific as you choose. There's alot of helpful stuff crammed in here and its usage has evolved alot. It's not intended to replace, remove or be better than any of the tools you currently use. In fact, WWMD works best *with* the tools you currently use to get stuff done. You get convenience methods for getting, scraping, spidering, decoding, decrypting and munging user inputs, pages and web applications. It doesn't try to be smart. That's up to you. What's here is the basic framework for getting started. There's a raft of cookbook scripts and examples that are coming soon so make sure you check the wiki regularly.
WWMD was originally intended to provide a console helper tool for conducting web application security assessments (which is something I find myself doing alot of). I've spent alot of time and had alot of success writing application specific fuzzers + scrapers to test with. WWMD provides a base of useful code to help you work with web sites both in IRB and by writing scripts that can be as generic or as application specific as you choose. There's alot of helpful stuff crammed in here and its usage has evolved alot. It's not intended to replace, remove or be better than any of the tools you currently use. In fact, WWMD works best *with* the tools you currently use to get stuff done. You get convenience methods for getting, scraping, spidering, decoding, decrypting and munging user inputs, pages and web applications. It doesn't try to be smart. That's up to you. What's here is the basic framework for getting started. There's a raft of cookbook scripts and examples that are coming soon so make sure you check the wiki regularly.
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