/cve

Gather and update all available and newest CVEs with their PoC.

MIT LicenseMIT

CVE PoC Tweet

Almost every publicly available CVE PoC.

How it works

Trickest Workflow Architecture

Trickest Workflow - PoC

TB; DZ (Too big; didn't zoom):

  • Collect CVE details from cvelist (Shout out to CVE Project!)
  • Split CVEs up by year.
  • Find PoCs for each CVE using 2 techniques:
    1. References

      • Gather each CVE's References.
      • Check if any of them points to a PoC using ffuf and a list of keywords

      Regex: (?i)[^a-z0-9]+(poc|proof of concept|proof[-_]of[-_]concept)[^a-z0-9]+

      (Thanks @joohoi!)

      Note: ffuf is awesome for more purposes than just content discovery.

    2. Github

      Search GitHub for repositories with find-gh-poc (release soon!) that mention the CVE ID.

  • Merge the fresh results into the repository without overwriting the data that was committed manually.
  • Filter false positives using blacklist.txt.
  • Merge all of the found PoCs.
  • Generate GitHub badges for each affected software version using shields.io.
  • Write everything into easy-to-read markdown files.

As described, almost everything in this repository is generated automatically. We carefully designed the workflow (and continue to develop it) to ensure the results are as accurate as possible.

Use cases

  • Browse around, find a nice PoC, and test away!
  • Watch the repository to receive notifications about new PoCs as soon as they go public.
  • Search for a specific product(s) (and possibly version) to find all public exploits related to it.
  • Monitor the atom feed for a specific product(s).

Contribution

All contribtutions/ideas/suggestions are welcome! Create a new ticket via GitHub issues or tweet at us @trick3st.

Build your own workflows

We believe in the value of tinkering; cookie-cutter solutions rarely cut it. Sign up for a demo on trickest.com to customize this workflow to your use case, get access to many more workflows, or build your own from scratch!