Manisso / fsociety

fsociety Hacking Tools Pack – A Penetration Testing Framework
MIT License
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error line 1194 #235

Open Sammiemacha opened 6 days ago

Sammiemacha commented 6 days ago

─$ fsociety
File "/home/sammie/.fsociety/fsociety.py", line 1194 print "-------------------------" ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ SyntaxError: Missing parentheses in call to 'print'. Did you mean print(...)?

┌──(sammie㉿kali)-[~] └─$ fsociety File "/home/sammie/.fsociety/fsociety.py", line 1194 print "-------------------------" ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ SyntaxError: Missing parentheses in call to 'print'. Did you mean print(...)?

┌──(sammie㉿kali)-[~] └─$ sudo fsociety [sudo] password for sammie: File "/home/sammie/.fsociety/fsociety.py", line 1194 print "-------------------------" ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ SyntaxError: Missing parentheses in call to 'print'. Did you mean print(...)?

┌──(sammie㉿kali)-[~] └─$

CRO-THEHACKER commented 6 days ago

This repo is EOL, I’d check out the new one. Fsociety new

Sammiemacha commented 5 days ago

The repo doesn't run on kali. >> "─(sammie㉿kali)-[~] └─$ sudo pip install fsociety

[sudo] password for sammie: error: externally-managed-environment

× This environment is externally managed ╰─> To install Python packages system-wide, try apt install python3-xyz, where xyz is the package you are trying to install.

If you wish to install a non-Kali-packaged Python package,
create a virtual environment using python3 -m venv path/to/venv.
Then use path/to/venv/bin/python and path/to/venv/bin/pip. Make
sure you have pypy3-venv installed.

If you wish to install a non-Kali-packaged Python application,
it may be easiest to use pipx install xyz, which will manage a
virtual environment for you. Make sure you have pipx installed.

For more information, refer to the following:
* https://www.kali.org/blog/python-externally-managed/
* /usr/share/doc/python3.12/README.venv

note: If you believe this is a mistake, please contact your Python installation or OS distribution provider. You can override this, at the risk of breaking your Python installation or OS, by passing --break-system-packages. hint: See PEP 668 for the detailed specification. <<".