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Data Theft Repackaged: A Case Study in Malicious Wrapper Packages on npm
The Socket Research Team breaks down a malicious wrapper package that uses obfuscation to harvest credentials and exfiltrate sensitive data.
This is a fork of the ldif
module from
python-ldap with python3/unicode support.
One of its benefits is that it's a pure-python package (you don't
depend on the libldap2-dev
(or similar) package that needs to be
installed on your laptop / test machine / production server).
See the last entry in changelog for a more complete list of differences.
This package only support Python 3 (>= 3.7, actually).
Parse LDIF from a file (or BytesIO
):
from ldif import LDIFParser
from pprint import pprint
parser = LDIFParser(open("data.ldif", "rb"))
for dn, record in parser.parse():
print('got entry record: %s' % dn)
pprint(record)
Write LDIF to a file (or BytesIO
):
from ldif import LDIFWriter
writer = LDIFWriter(open("data.ldif", "wb"))
writer.unparse("mail=alice@example.com", {
"cn": ["Alice Alison"],
"mail": ["alice@example.com"],
"objectclass": ["top", "person"],
})
The stream object that is passed to parser or writer must be an ascii byte stream.
The spec allows to include arbitrary data in base64 encoding or via URL. There is no way of knowing the encoding of this data. To handle this, there are two modes:
By default, the LDIFParser
will try to interpret all values as UTF-8
and leave only the ones that fail to decode as bytes. But you can also
pass an encoding
of None
to the constructor, in which case the
parser will not try to do any conversion and return bytes directly.
See here
FAQs
generate and parse LDIF data (see RFC 2849).
We found that ldif demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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