free-and-open-source

PurpleTeam at Alpha

Where has Kim been for the last couple of years? This post explains why he's been so quiet and what he has been working on.

Talk - Building PurpleTeam (a Security Regression Testing SaaS) - From PoC to Alpha

Developers / Engineers know that a build pipeline is an essential part of creating robust and reliable software, but what to put in it? This talk covers the creation of purpleteam from PoC to Alpha release, and why it’s an ideal fit for the security regression testing slot of your build pipeline.

Hugo with Staticman Commenting and Subscriptions

Adding Staticman commenting system to BinaryMist blog and Hugo Academic

BinaryMist Web Migration

In this post we discuss the move from the legacy BinaryMist blog on Wordpress.com, along with the BinaryMist website, to a single static site on the Hugo platform hosted on Github Pages.

Holistic Info-Sec for Web Developers

A three part book series focused on lifting the security knowledge of Software Developers, Engineers, and their teams, so that they can continuously deliver secure technical solutions on time and within budget, without nasty surprises. First book is complete, second book is content complete and currently in technical review.

Evaluation of dot Net Mocking libraries

Redirects to legacy blog post. I’ve recently undertaken another round of evaluating .NET mocking (fake/substitute/dummy/stub/ or what ever you want to call them now) libraries. Interestingly the landscape has changed quite a bit since last time I went through this exercise, which was about two years ago. The outcome of the previous investigation is at the bottom of this post.

Bare-metal Hypervisor Setup Evaluation

Redirects to legacy blog post. Recently I had the opportunity for work, to carry out some research on what’s in the market in regards to bare-metal hypervisors. The following is the result of an in depth research and deployment project of the following bare-metal hyper-visors. This will enable us to trial the hypervisors out for performance, ease of setup, ease of administration, and ease of use.

A few steps to secure a FreeNAS server

Redirects to legacy blog post. Change the default password in System|General|Password. Setup key pair authentication for SSH and secure FreeNAS.