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A package with multiple little scripts that I keep re-using

Project description

MrLou Modules

Overview

The MrLou_modules is a collection of Python package that I keep re-using and thought would be good to share them

Contributing

If you would like to contribute to this project, please fork the repository and submit a pull request with your changes. Ensure that your code follows the existing style and includes appropriate tests.

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License. See the LICENSE file for details.

Installation

You can install the package from PyPI using pip:

pip install MrLou_modules

Random_Message

Overview

The Random_Message in MrLou_modules is a Python package that provides a collection of random messages, including fun facts and jokes. This package is designed to be easy to use and integrate into your Python projects to add a touch of randomness and fun. I'm using it in script that takes a bit long to complete so printing out those messages keep me awake

Usage

To use the package in your Python script, follow these steps:

  1. Import the necessary function:
from MrLou_modules.Random_Message.random_message import get_random_message
  1. Get a random message:
message = get_random_message()
print(message)

The get_random_message function will alternately return a joke or a fun fact each time it is called.

Example

Here’s a simple example of how to use MrLou_modules:

from MrLou_modules.Random_Message.random_message import get_random_message

# Print a random message
print(get_random_message())

Functions

  • get_random_message(): Returns a random message, alternating between jokes and fun facts.

Modules

  • fun_facts.py: Contains a list of interesting and random fun facts. Example facts include:

  • jokes.py: Contains a list of light-hearted programming jokes. Example jokes include:

  • random_message.py: Provides the get_random_message function that alternates between fun facts and jokes.

Cyberark

The cyberark_api is a collection of one API for now :-) The variables.py contain all the configuration values such as URIs, certificate paths, and usernames the cyberark_api.py has one class with a function get_credentials that you can use to pull credential stored in Cyberark

Example

Here’s a simple example of how to use MrLou_modules:

create a variables.py with your variables by adjusting the <>:

for example, AppID = "" to AppID = "MyAppIDexample" ca_cert = r'C:\path\to\Trusted_Root_Certificates.pem' to ca_cert = r'C:\cert\cyberark\Trusted_Root_Certificates.pem'

# variables.py

# CyberArk API configurations

URI = "https://<IIS_Server_Ip>/AIMWebService/api/Accounts"
AppID = "<AppID>"
Safe = "<Safe>"
Folder = "<Folder>"
Username = "<Username>"
Object = f"<Object>{Username}"


ca_cert = r'C:\path\to\Trusted_Root_Certificates.pem'
client_cert = r'C:\path\to\_unencrypted_device.crt'
client_key = r'C:\path\to\_unencrypted_key.pem'

The main script is

import variables
from MrLou_modules.Cyberark.cyberark_api import CyberArkAPI

cyberark_api = CyberArkAPI(variables)
credentials = cyberark_api.get_credentials()

if credentials:
    print(f"Username: {credentials['Username']}")
    print(f"Password: {credentials['Password']}")
    print(f"Password Change In Process: {credentials['PasswordChangeInProcess']}")

Certificate_Utils

This guide explains how to use the cert_utils.py module, which provides tools for working with certificates and private/public keys. It includes functions to extract certificate details, decrypt private keys, verify certificates, and more.

Functions Overview

  1. extract_common_name(subject)

    • Extracts the Common Name (CN) from a certificate subject.
    • Input: A certificate subject (x509.Name object).
    • Output: The Common Name (CN) as a string, or None if not found.
  2. extract_san_extension(certificate)

    • Extracts the Subject Alternative Names (SAN) from a certificate.
    • Input: A certificate (x509.Certificate object).
    • Output: A list of SAN names as strings or None if not available.
  3. decrypt_and_save_private_key(file_path, passphrase, output_path)

    • Decrypts an encrypted private key and saves it as an unencrypted PEM file.
    • Input:
      • file_path: Path to the encrypted private key file.
      • passphrase: The passphrase to decrypt the key.
      • output_path: Path to save the unencrypted private key.
    • Output: Saves the unencrypted private key to the specified output path. Prints success or failure messages.
  4. process_certificate(input_data, passphrase=None)

    • Reads and processes a certificate or key from a file path or a PEM-encoded string.
    • Input:
      • input_data: A file path or a PEM-encoded string.
      • passphrase: Optional passphrase to decrypt private keys.
    • Output: Depending on the content (certificate, public/private key), returns key or certificate details (e.g., validity, public key) or prints an error if invalid.
  5. find_cert_and_key_files(base_path)

    • Searches the given directory (base_path) for certificate and key files.
    • Input: The base directory path to search.
    • Output: A tuple with paths to the certificate and key files.
  6. process_certificate_and_key(cert_file_path, key_file_path, passphrase=None)

    • Verifies whether the private key matches the certificate.
    • Input:
      • cert_file_path: Path to the certificate file.
      • key_file_path: Path to the private key file.
      • passphrase: Optional passphrase to decrypt the private key.
    • Output: Prints whether the private key matches the certificate.
  7. get_public_key_from_private_key(private_key)

    • Extracts the public key from a private key.
    • Input: A private key (cryptography key object).
    • Output: The public key associated with the private key.
  8. compare_public_keys(cert_public_key, key_private_key)

    • Compares the public key from a certificate with the public key derived from a private key.
    • Input:
      • cert_public_key: Public key from the certificate.
      • key_private_key: Private key to derive the public key from.
    • Output: Returns True if the public keys match, otherwise False.

Example Usage

Extract Common Name and SAN from a Certificate

from cryptography import x509
from MrLou_modules.Certificate_Utils.cert_utils import extract_common_name, extract_san_extension

# Load certificate
with open('certificate.pem', 'rb') as cert_file:
    cert_data = cert_file.read()
    cert = x509.load_pem_x509_certificate(cert_data)

# Extract CN and SAN
common_name = extract_common_name(cert.subject)
san_names = extract_san_extension(cert)

print(f"Common Name: {common_name}")
print(f"Subject Alternative Names: {san_names}")

Decrypt and Save a Private Key

from MrLou_modules.Certificate_Utils.cert_utils import decrypt_and_save_private_key

decrypt_and_save_private_key('encrypted_key.pem', b'passphrase', 'decrypted_key.pem')

Process Certificate or Key

from MrLou_modules.Certificate_Utils.cert_utils import process_certificate

cert_details = process_certificate('certificate.pem')
print(cert_details)

# Or process a PEM-encoded string
pem_string = """-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
...
-----END CERTIFICATE-----"""
cert_details = process_certificate(pem_string)
print(cert_details)

Verify Certificate and Private Key Match

from MrLou_modules.Certificate_Utils.cert_utils import process_certificate_and_key

process_certificate_and_key('certificate.pem', 'private_key.pem')

Find Certificate and Key Files

from MrLou_modules.Certificate_Utils.cert_utils import find_cert_and_key_files

cert_path, key_path = find_cert_and_key_files('/path/to/certs')
print(f"Cert path: {cert_path}, Key path: {key_path}")

Error Handling

The module prints errors when processing fails, such as:

  • Invalid certificate/key formats.
  • Mismatched certificate and private key.
  • Incorrect passphrase for encrypted keys.

Ping Sweep

This script will ping each ip of a given subnet or multiple subnets

import it and run it

from MrLou_modules.Ping_Sweep import ping_sweep

ping_sweep

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