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  1. Become a Linux Command Line Expert – From Beginner to Advanced Techniques What you’ll learn How to install Ubuntu Linux on VirtualBox on Windows Basic Linux commands such as “ls”, “cd”, “mkdir”, “rmdir”, “touch”, “cat”, “rm”, “cp”, and “mv” Advanced topics like file permissions, user and group management, network troubleshooting, network utilities, secure file transfer, and system monitoring Network utilities such as “ifconfig”, “ip”, “whois”, “nslookup”, and “wget.” Secure file transfer with “ssh” and “scp.” System monitoring tools like “uptime”, “ps”, “top”, and “kill.” How to use the “nl”, “chage”, and “passwd” commands Requirements A basic understanding of computer concepts A willingness to learn Description Welcome to “Linux Tutorial – Master The Command Line”! This course will teach you the fundamental skills required to navigate and work with the Linux command line. We will start by installing Ubuntu Linux on VirtualBox in Windows and then proceed to cover a variety of basic Linux commands, including the “ls” command for listing directory contents, the “cd” command for changing directories, the “mkdir” command for creating manuals, the “rmdir” command for deleting directories, the “touch” command for creating files, the “cat” command for displaying file contents, the “rm” command for deleting files, the “cp” command for copying files, and the “mv” command for moving files. We will also delve into more advanced topics such as file permissions, user and group management with the “chmod”, “useradd”, and “groupadd” commands, the “head” and “tail” commands for viewing the beginning and end of a file, the “chown” and “chgrp” commands for changing file ownership and group membership, and the “ping”, “traceroute”, and “mtr” commands for network troubleshooting. Additionally, we will cover essential network utilities such as “ifconfig”, “ip”, “whois”, “nslookup”, and “wget”, as well as a secure file transfer with “ssh” and “scp”. We will also discuss system monitoring tools like “uptime”, “ps”, “top”, and “kill” and explore the “nl”, “chage”, and “passwd” commands. By the end of this course, you will have a solid foundation in the Linux command line and be well-prepared to take on more advanced tasks and challenges. So, enrol now and let’s get started! Who this course is for: Beginners who are new to the Linux command line Experienced users looking to expand their skills IT professionals looking to add Linux command line proficiency to their toolkit Anyone who wants to become proficient in using the Linux command line [Hidden Content] [hide][Hidden Content]]
  2. Description This is a command line tutorial conducted in the OS X command line. Because of OSX’s unix heritage, much of the info here is also useful in other unix inspired systems, like the Linux command line. What is OS X command Line ? The command line is the ultimate seat of power on your computer. Using the command line, you can perform amazing feats of wizardry and speed, taming your computer and getting it to do precisely what you want. The command line is a text interface for your computer. Its a programe that takes in commands, which it passes on to the computer’s operating system to run. From the command line you can navigate through file and folders on your computer, just as you would with finder on MAC OS or windows explorer on windows. The difference is that command line is fully text-based. The advantage of using the command line is its power. you can run programs, write scripts to automate common task and combine simple commnads to handle difficlut tasks – making it an important programming tool. In this course you’ll learn the essential tools for feeling comfortable and getting stuff done. > how to open the terminal and configure and customize a session. > how to compare Finder actions with commands, add functions to the system, and get system information. > how to manage the system, find, identify, and manage data, and use Directory services. > how to manage profiles and keychains, install packages, and process media with commands unique to Apple. > learn about the Apple System Log. A programmer who doesn’t know the command line is like a writer who can’t use a pen. Knowing the command line is essential for really applying almost any programming language today. Sign up for the course and give it a shot. A full refund awaits you if you don’t feel more confident and powerful inside of that Terminal window. Who this course is for: Users that are already familiar with Mac OS X Anyone wanting to take their Mac understanding to the next level Requirements A Mac Computer Basic computer skills is needed [Hidden Content] [hide][Hidden Content]]
  3. Description Linux is a powerful and widely used operating system, it is free and open source software. It can run on wide range of hardware platforms like desktops, servers, mobile devices and even supercomputers. Most of the top companies in the world use Linux servers. Linux is growing very rapidly and demand for Linux talent is on the rise. So acquiring Linux skills can help you land a job and get ahead in your career. This tutorial is designed for computer users who have limited or no previous knowledge of Linux. If you are complete beginner in Linux or have never worked on command line, then this course is for you. In this course you’ll learn Linux from scratch. Learn to Program Using Any Shell What you learn in this course can be applied to any shell, however the focus is on the bash shell and you’ll learn some really advanced bash features. Again, whether you’re using bash, bourne (sh), KornShell (ksh), C shell (csh), Z shell (zsh), or even the tcsh shell, you’ll be able to put what you learn in this course to good use. Perfect for Linux, Unix, Mac and More! Also, you’ll be able to use these scripts on any Linux environment including Ubuntu, Debian, Linux Mint, RedHat, Fedora, OpenSUSE, Slackware, Kali Linux and more. You’re scripts will even run on other operating systems such as Apple’s Mac OS X, Oracle’s Solaris, IBM’s AIX, HP’s HP-UX, FreeBSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD. (Sorry, this course is NOT for Windows scripting or powershell scripting.) Become an effective Linux user and advance your Career. Learning the Linux Command Line will take you FAR! Learn to appreciate the power of the Linux command line. Understand the structure of the Linux File System. Learn how to utilize Linux man pages and help tools. Realize the differences between soft and hard links. Learn how to navigate your Linux File System using few simple commands! Learn how to create, modify and process files. Learn how to create your own Linux commands. Who this course is for: Anyone interested in shell scripting or shell programming. Anyone who wants to get started with Linux. Existing Linux users or learners who wants to be effective at using the Linux command Line. Aspiring Linux system administrators. Requirements No experience required [Hidden Content] [hide][Hidden Content]]
  4. The Linux Command Line Bootcamp Beginner To Power User Level Up Your Skills And Take Control Of Your Machine, w/ Dozens of Commands, Projects, and Challenges! What you'll learn Master the Command Line and Dozens of Commands! Stop Relying On The Limited Graphical User Interface Write Your Own Commands From Scratch Automate Tasks and Schedule Jobs Using Cron Control Your Computer Completely From The Command Line! Master The Quirks Of File Permissions Learn Powerful Keyboard Shortcuts To Improve Your Efficiency Construct Powerful Command Pipelines Course content 21 sections • 165 lectures • 15h 44m total length Requirements No Prior Experience Required All You Need is a Windows, Linux, or Mac Computer Description Welcome to The Linux Command Line Bootcamp, a brand new course that aims to turn you into a command line power user! This course will teach you dozens and dozens of powerful commands (see the long list at the bottom), but more importantly it gives you the tools the continue to learn new commands and take full control of your machine. The skills you learn in this course will make you a stronger web developer, data scientist, machine learning engineer, game dev, or plain old computer user! You will feel POWERFUL!! Hi there, my name is Colt Steele. I've spent years leading in-person software engineering bootcamps and have helped thousands of students change careers. Online I've taught over a million students and have hundreds of thousands of 5 star ratings and reviews. This is an interactive course full of exercises and fun challenges that force you to practice the skills you are learning. You'll encounter some of the same assignments and projects that my in-person bootcamp students experience. Learning command after command can be a dreadfully boring experience, but I've tried my best to make this course as exciting and interesting as possible :) You may roll your eyes at my jokes, but you won't be bored! ============Curriculum: The Short Version============ This course covers a TON. Here's a short summary of the key points. Scroll down for a more in-depth explanation. Learn dozens and dozens of powerful commands (see the long list below) Understand the big picture: how ALL commands fit together Build complex data pipelines by stringing multiple commands together Master command-line navigation and Linux folder structure Create, delete, move, copy, and rename files and folders Decipher and manipulate Unix file permissions Use powerful searching commands like find, locate, and grep Master redirection of standard input, standard output, and standard error Write your own custom commands from scratch! Customize the shell: write your own helpful aliases, tweak the prompt, etc. Master Bash expansions and substitutions Automate tedious tasks using cron and cronjobs Edit files directly from the command-line using nano Master keyboard shortcuts to increase your command-line efficiency ============Curriculum: The Long Version============ The course starts with a deep dive into confusing technical terms like terminal, shell, kernel, Unix, Unix-Like, GNU, Linux, and Bash. It's important to understand the context and the WHY's around the command line and its history that still impacts our machines today. Then we shift our focus to the general patterns and structure that all commands follow including options and arguments. This blueprint we define will inform every single other topic we cover throughout the rest of the course. You'll also learn HOW to learn more about specific commands using the man, help, which, and type commands. Next, we cover the super-important Linux folder structure and learn essential commands for navigating our machines including ls, pwd, and cd. You'll be an expert navigator in no time! From there we learn to create new files and folders right from the command line using the commands touch, mkdir, and file. Next, we dive deep into a special text-editor built right into the command line called Nano. You'll learn to open and edit files using Nano, master various Nano shortcuts, and even learn how to configure nano's global settings. The next section covers the powerful commands rm, mv, and cp. You'll learn how to remove individual files and entire directories, move and rename files, and copy files and folders right from the command line. These are some of the most useful commands you can know! Then we take a quick break to focus on useful keyboard shortcuts you can use to improve your terminal efficiency, before diving into the history command and history expansion. The next section covers tons of commands that have to do with manipulating file contents, including less, cat, tac, rev, head, tail, wc, and sort. Then we cover the three standard streams: standard input, standard output, and standard error. You'll learn to redirect all three streams and take full control over your data. Next we move to my favorite topic: piping! In this section you'll learn how to construct complex and powerful pipelines by stringing together multiple individual commands. You'll also learn about the tr command and the tee command along the way. From there we learn to "speak" the language of the shell using Expansion and Substitution. You'll learn the ins and outs of pathname expansion using wildcard characters, tilde expansion, and the super powerful curly brace expansion. We also cover arithmetic expansion, command substitution, and single and double quoting. Next up we learn about two commands that help us find files on our machine: locate and find. We pay special attention to the find command and its many fancy options and use-cases. You'll learn how to find files by name, size, timestamps, and more. You'll also learn how to bulk-edit files using find's exec option and the xargs command. We then shift our focus to the grep command. You'll learn how to use grep to recursively search the contents of files and match complex files using regular expressions. Next, we spend some time discussing the details of file permissions. You'll learn how to read file attributes and understand read, write, and execute permissions. In the next section, we learn how to alter permissions using commands including chmod, chown, sudo, and su. In the next section, we learn how to customize our shell experience. You'll learn to write your own custom aliases, work with shell variables, and even create your own fancy prompt. Then we learn how to create our own complex commands from scratch and the basics of bash scripting! By the end you'll be writing and running your own programs. Finally, we learn about the mysterious cron daemon. You'll learn the odd-looking cron syntax to set up your own automated and scheduled cronjobs. ============THE END============ Whether you have some experience with basic commands or you're a complete beginner, this course will help take your skills to the next level. Learning the command-line is one of the rare skills that transcends the typical divisions between web development, data science, machine learning, or any other tech disciplines. If you work with a computer daily, you will benefit from mastering the command-line. The commands you learn in the course will change the way you interact with your machine, giving you all new workflows and strategies and POWER over your computer! More importantly, you'll leave this course prepared to conquer ALL the commands that are waiting for you out in the real world and on the job. =============================== Here's an incomplete list of the commands covered in the course: date cal ncal echo man help which type ls cd pwd touch mkdir nano rm rmdir mv cp cat less tac rev head tail wc sort tr tee locate du find grep xargs chmod sudo su chown addgroup adduser export source crontab tar Who this course is for: Anyone interested in becoming a command line power user! Computer users who want complete control over their machine Anyone interested in web development, data science, or a career that involves code! Students with some prior command line experience who want to gain complete mastery [Hidden Content] [hide][Hidden Content]]
  5. Description Understanding CMD With the command shell, you can have direct interaction with the operating system. Think command prompt as an interpreter that accepts the commands or the User’s inputs and translate them into machine language. These commands are predefined and perform a specific task. These commands can be clubbed together as well to perform a series of task. Also, these commands need not be entered manually and can be written in a batch file to automate some of the manual tasks like taking a scheduled server backup, deleting junk files and so on. These commands are very handy at the time of network troubleshooting or for a day to day work. These commands can be called from many programming languages such as Java, which allows the programmer to perform task directly via the command prompt, which would otherwise take several code lines to be written essentially to perform the same task. To run the command prompt in the administration mode, type cmd in the search bar present in the taskbar, then right-click on cmd. You will see an option Run as administration click ok and then command prompt will open in the admin mode. A batch file is a script file in DOS, OS/2 and Microsoft Windows. It consists of a series of commands to be executed by the command-line interpreter, stored in a plain text file(.txt file). A batch file may contain any command the interpreter accepts interactively and use constructs that enable conditional branching and looping within the batch file, such as IF, FOR, and GOTO labels. The term “batch” is from batch processing, meaning “non-interactive execution”, though a batch file may not process a batch of multiple data. How to access CMD? To access the command prompt irrespective of what version you are using, follow the below steps. One of the quickest ways to access the command prompt is to make use of Run Window. To open the run window, press the Windows key + R on your keyboard. Once you do, that run window will open and then write cmd and press enter. As soon as you press the ok command prompt window will get open up. To run the command prompt in the administration mode, type cmd in the search bar present in the taskbar, then right-click on cmd. You will see an option Run as administration click ok and then command prompt will open in the admin mode. Conclusion We have seen some useful windows command that comes in handy when working on a remote desktop or a server. These commands can be grouped together to perform a series of tasks sequentially to automate some of the redundant tasks. Windows command can be used to interact with the Network File System (NFS), remote desktop services, windows server, and external and internal peripherals. So what you are waiting for when Udemy has backed you with a 30days return policy also. And you are gonna get a certificate after completion of the course too. Requirments You should Have a Laptop or Desktop You also Should Need Windows & or Higher If you Have A desktop You need A wifi Adapter Who this course is for: It is for all Levels Beginner Intermediate Expert Requirements Need to windows 7 or higher A normal PC. If you have laptop you can learn more If you Have a Normal Pc you need Bluetooth adapter and WIFI Adapter [Hidden Content] [hide][Hidden Content]]
  6. hi all i want to know a command to edit wordlist to shrink size in hard disk space i use some of command to remove duplicate words and enhance word with min and max Length but still need more way to edit it what i want a command to use More than one word on the same line to use it in hashcat to crack with dictionary attack
  7. Kubesploit Kubesploit is a cross-platform post-exploitation HTTP/2 Command & Control server and agent dedicated for containerized environments written in Golang and built on top of the Merlin project by Russel Van Tuyl (@Ne0nd0g). Our Motivation While researching Docker and Kubernetes, we noticed that most of the tools available today are aimed at passive scanning for vulnerabilities in the cluster, and there is a lack of more complex attack vector coverage. They might allow you to see the problem but not exploit it. It is important to run the exploit to simulate a real-world attack that will be used to determine corporate resilience across the network. When running an exploit, it will practice the organization’s cyber event management, which doesn’t happen when scanning for cluster issues. It can help the organization learn how to operate when real attacks happen, see if its other detection system works as expected and what changes should be made. We wanted to create an offensive tool that will meet these requirements. What’s New As the C&C and the agent infrastructure were done already by Merlin, we integrated the Go interpreter (“Yaegi”) to be able to run Golang code from the server to the agent. It allowed us to write our modules in Golang, provide more flexibility on the modules, and dynamically load new modules. It is an ongoing project, and we are planning to add more modules related to Docker and Kubernetes in the future. The currently available modules are: Container breakout using mounting Container breakout using docker.sock Container breakout using CVE-2019-5736 exploit Scan for Kubernetes cluster known CVEs Port scanning with focus on Kubernetes services Kubernetes service scan from within the container Light kubeletctl containing the following options: Scan for containers with RCE Scan for Pods and containers Scan for tokens from all available containers Run command with multiple options [hide][Hidden Content]]
  8. What you'll learn you will understand the fundamentals of the Linux operating system and be able to apply that knowledge in a practical and useful manner Requirements Any Linux distribution installed on your computer ( even on a virtual machine) Description Become a real Linux user and advance your Career. Learning the Linux Command Line will take you FAR! Learn to appreciate the power of the Linux command line Understand the structure of the Linux File System. Knowledge of the Linux command line is critical for anyone who uses this open-source operating system. For many tasks, it's more efficient and flexible than a graphical environment. For administrators, it plays a vital role in configuring permissions and working with files. In this course discusses the basics of working with the Linux command line using the Bash shell, focusing on practical Linux commands with examples that help you navigate through the file and folder structure, edit text, and set permissions and also learn some of the common command-line tools, such as grep, awk, and sed, and command-line apps such as the nano and Vim text editors. The course wraps up with a look at how to install and update software with a package manager. The following topics are included. · What is the Linux command line? · Writing Linux commands at the prompt · Finding help for Linux commands · Copying, moving, and deleting files and folders · Configuring user roles and file permissions · Using pipes to connect commands · Searching and editing text · Finding system hardware and disk information · Installing and updating software Linux backup How to backup Linux using DD with hands On How to use Rsync with lot of examples. How to setup OWNCLOUD Introduction initial server setup for Centos 7 Install Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP (LAMP) stack On CentOS 7 Install and Configure ownCloud on CentOS 7 Who this course is for: anyone who wants to get started with Linux. existing Linux users or learners who wants to be effective at using the Linux command Line. windows or mac users who wants to migrate to Linux but are afraid to make the move ! aspiring Linux system administrators [Hidden Content] [Hidden Content]
  9. Bypass anti-virus software lateral movement command execution test tool(No need 445 Port) Introduction: The common WMIEXEC, PSEXEC tool execution command is to create a service or call Win32_Process.create, these methods have been intercepted by Anti-virus software 100%, so we created WMIHACKER (Bypass anti-virus software lateral movement command execution test tool(No need 445 Port)). Main functions: 1. Command execution 2. File upload 3. File download [hide][Hidden Content]]
  10. Commix (short for [comm]and njection e[x]ploiter) is an automated tool written by Anastasios Stasinopoulos (@ancst) that can be used from web developers, penetration testers or even security researchers in order to test web-based applications with the view to find bugs, errors or vulnerabilities related to command injection attacks. By using this tool, it is very easy to find and exploit a command injection vulnerability in a certain vulnerable parameter or HTTP header. Changelog Version 3.1 Fixed: Multiple bug-fixes regarding several reported unhandled exceptions. Added: A script “setup.py” has been added (i.e. easier installation). Revised: Improvement regarding checking if the provided value has boundaries (e.g. ‘param=/value/’). Revised: Improvement regarding dynamic code evaluation technique’s heurstic checks. Revised: Improvement regarding identifying the indicated web-page charset. Revised: Minor improvement regarding verbose mode (i.e. debug messages). Fixed: Bug-fix regarding Basic HTTP authentication. Revised: Minor improvement regarding redirection mechanism. Fixed: Bug-fix regarding defining wildcard character “*” in nested JSON objects. Revised: Minor improvement regarding Flatten_json (third party) module. Revised: Minor improvement regarding parsing nested JSON objects. Added: New tamper script “doublequotes.py” that adds double-quotes (“”) between the characters of the generated payloads (for *nix targets). Fixed: Bug-fix regarding parsing raw HTTP headers from a file (i.e. -r option). Revised: Improvements regarding data in the detailed message about occurred unhandled exception. Revised: Minor bug-fixes and improvements regarding HTTP authentication dictionary-based cracker. [hide][Hidden Content]]
  11. This Metasploit module exploits a remote command execution vulnerability in Nostromo versions 1.9.6 and below. This issue is caused by a directory traversal in the function http_verify in nostromo nhttpd allowing an attacker to achieve remote code execution via a crafted HTTP request. View the full article
  12. Moxa EDR-810 suffers from command injection and information disclosure vulnerabilities. View the full article
  13. ASUS RT-N10+ with firmware version 2.0.3.4 suffers from cross site request forgery and cross site scripting vulnerabilities that can assist with achieving command execution. View the full article
  14. Ajenti suffers from a remote command execution vulnerability. View the full article
  15. thesystem version 1.0 suffers from a command injection vulnerability. View the full article
  16. ACTi ACM-5611 video camera remote command execution exploit. View the full article
  17. ACTi ACD-2100 video encoder remote command execution exploit. View the full article
  18. Nmap NSE script that exploits a pre-authentication remote command execution vulnerability in vBulletin versions 5.x. View the full article
  19. ACTi ACM-3100 Camera remote command execution exploit. View the full article
  20. NPMJS gitlabhook version 0.0.17 suffers from a remote command execution vulnerability. View the full article
  21. Piwigo versions 2.9.5 and below suffer from cross site scripting, command execution, and remote SQL injection vulnerabilities. View the full article
  22. Black Vision Command line Remote Access tool targeting Windows Systems. Download Maxmind GeoIP2 Database from here ; LINK Extract the file under blackvision/ How to use Install required modules pip3 install -r requirements.txt Run server git clone [Hidden Content] cd blackvision python3 main.py Generate Agent cd blackvision python3 generate.py Change Host/Port Open settings.ini. And change host, port. Commands Command Purpose transfer Transfer a NON Binary file. bsendfile Transfer a Binary File. kill Kill the connection info View Information of client. msgbox Send Messageboxes. exec Execute a Command on the remote Machine(s). exec-file Execute a file on the remote Machine(s). wanip View WAN IP of Remote Machine(s). hostname View Hostname of Remote Machine(s). username View Username of Remote Machine(s). monitoroff Turn of monitor of Remote Machine(s). monitoron Turn monitor back on. cdopen Eject CDROM of Remote Machine(s). cdclose Close CDROM of Remote Machine(s). playaudio Play Audio stream on Remote Machine(s). send Send commands to 1 client. (NO broadcast) keydump DUMP Keystroke buffer (Not added yet) Termux Compatibilty This app is compatible with Termux. Run it the same way you run it in Terminal. TODO Rewrite Agent in C. Fix sending file to single client. (Fixed) Fix multiple clients information saving. (Fixed) Add keylogging. Fix that args[3] does not get sent. (Fixed) Fix Broken connection problems. Video Example: [Hidden Content] Download: [Hidden Content]
  23. Opencart version 2.3.0.2 pre-authentication remote command execution exploit. View the full article
  24. Enigma NMS version 65.0.0 suffers from a remote OS command injection vulnerability. View the full article
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