The term “open source” means, quite literally, that the source code to a piece of software is unlocked, open, and available to the general public. This allows developers all over the world to collaborate and improve or modify what they see fit. There are even open source alternatives to a variety of commercial products. As strong advocates of open source software, we encourage you to take advantage of tools that the community generates.
Hurricane Labs has a variety of software freely available for any and all. A good portion we use here on a day-to-day basis, because if you don’t trust your own programs…why should anyone else? Feel free to take a look and contact us if you have any questions.
checkossec
A Nagios check for connected/disconnected OSSEC agents.
edgepwutil
Edgepwutil exploits a weakness in Check Point Software’s Edge line of small appliances that allows for generation of their password hash or a full reversal of the supposed one-way hash.
hurricanenagios
This is a collection of Hurricane Labs’ Nagios plugins.
nagzilla
Nagzilla was designed to be a Jabber relay “bot” in that it sits quietly in a room until it gets a message to relay to either a chatroom or a person.
pywikid
An open source implementation of the WiKID one-time-password protocol in Python. It is compatible with the standard Java-based WiKID server, and should run on any platform that supports Python and OpenSSL (tested on Mac OS X, Ubuntu 8.10, and Slackware).
salvia
Salvia is a reactive (or interactive) Jabber bot designed to listen to one or more mutli-user chatrooms (although it can be used via private message as well). It will then respond to certain key phrases with output as determined by its set of plugins.
sddelta
sddelta shows the differences in the configuration of SmartDefense™ between two exports from a Check Point® NGX™ SmartCenter™.
sslsweep
sslsweep tests TCP services for the presence of SSL and reports things about the services found.

