mfazliazran / skipfish

Automatically exported from code.google.com/p/skipfish
Apache License 2.0
0 stars 0 forks source link

interim report writing #120

Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 8 years ago

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
Seeing as some scans can take a long time would it be possible to add the 
ability to write out the report either periodically or given a certain key 
press?

This would especially help when a scan is taking hours to complete.

Original issue reported on code.google.com by dni...@gmail.com on 7 Jun 2011 at 1:56

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
Not easily; you can monitor progress by examining the log file in debug builds, 
or checking crawl status by hitting 'space'. I'm thinking of how to make this 
better.

Original comment by lcam...@gmail.com on 7 Jun 2011 at 4:38

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
Definitely needed.

Original comment by p...@p1sec.com on 7 Feb 2012 at 10:02

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
+1

There's no reason why the program wouldn't be able to dump the data as it 
generates it. Don't confuse the presentation with this - given that data is the 
only variable, I truly hope that the presentation code (html, css, js) is the 
same - if/when this is the case, then even if the program is interrupted, some 
reporting should be available.

I'm sorry if it's not my place to suggest this, but I would:

1. Refactor the code to have presentation files always the same, and not even 
in the smallest detail relative to a scan session

2. Have data dumped to files as it's collected, even if this means gazillion 
little data files; the best would, of course, be one/few files with known 
names, so that presentation code can work (e.g. js alone cannot find out how 
many data files there may be)

3. Given that presentation is different from data files at this point, and if 
the current presentation model is to stay, then dump presentation files at the 
very beginning of scan session; that way, they'll always be there, versus the 
program not having a chance to create them if that task was left for the end

4. At this point, even if the process is killed, since some data would be 
collected, reports would be available. Also, this automatically brings another 
useful feature: report page can be refreshed as the scan is taking place, and 
new data would be presented immediately. That said, data files shouldn't be 
locked for read access while they are being written to.

I'm sure you can pull this, if you wanted.

Original comment by hlubo...@gmail.com on 4 Mar 2012 at 7:13

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
The "presentation files" (i.e., the viewer for raw data) are very much static 
HTML and JS, and they don't change across scans. I suggest having a look at the 
report structure :-)

There are reasons why the program can't dump the data right now (chiefly 
because there are important postprocessing steps that can't be carried out 
until reasonably complete). This can be changed, but isn't trivial. It's on our 
radar, and we know how to do it - it's just not the top priority right now.

Original comment by lcam...@gmail.com on 4 Mar 2012 at 7:17

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
Well, then it should be priority to you to add some way to interrupt the scan 
and have it exit gracefully. Ctrl+C doesn't function, and when scans that I 
attempted passed 1 hour, I started to have the feeling that it went too far. 
The only way I could interrupt it was to kill the process, but that doesn't 
create any files. So, in that case, I wasted an hour on nothing.

It is good that "presentation files" are the static. That makes it even easier 
to create them at the time the folder is created - even though that wouldn't 
make a difference before you find the time to refactor the process to dump data 
files as it goes. BTW, why is the output folder created up front, since the 
report is created at the end? All tells me that it'd be way better if you 
bumped this up the priority list. This process IS about reporting, isn't it? 
Nobody but you will be interested in staring at the progress numbers: first, 
it's boring, and it tells me very little except that the program is doing 
something. I'm taking from the perspective of the user who's interested in 
higher level process (report), versus bits and internals of what's creating it 
(again, the report).

Original comment by hlubo...@gmail.com on 4 Mar 2012 at 7:26

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
Ctrl-C works in all reasonable settings; if it doesn't work for you, that's 
probably a bug unrelated to skipfish (Cygwin is known for having some problems 
with Ctrl-C, and there are workarounds, but in a vast majority of cases, it 
works as-is).

You can certainly kill the process and have it write a report. Use killall -2 
skipfish.

> BTW, why is the output folder created up front, since the report is created 
at the end? 

So that if it can't be created, we exit immediately without wasting few hours 
only to realize we can't write the report at all.

Look, we know about this feature request, know how to implement it, and will 
probably do so. As noted, you can abort scans and see their output (in a couple 
of ways), so this is not an immediate priority, but it's certainly good to 
have. If it's a deal-breaker for you, then for time being, you may prefer to 
stick to other open-source or commercial tools (and watch this bug).

Original comment by lcam...@gmail.com on 4 Mar 2012 at 7:33

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
Ctrl-C has always worked for me. Usually scary moment when I press it after 
many hours of running but hasn't failed yet.

Would still like the feature but happy to wait till it can be done properly.

Original comment by ro...@digininja.org on 4 Mar 2012 at 9:45

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
Per 2.06b we have limited runtime reporting. You can run a scan like:

$ ./skipfish -o dir -vv http://www.example.org 2> runtime.log

And do:

$ tail -f runtime.log

Or alternatively, if you don't like the statistics screen, you can do:

$ ./skipfish -o dir -vv -u http://www.example.org

It's not the same as interim report writing but it should help.

Original comment by niels.he...@gmail.com on 13 May 2012 at 10:49