You can get support for kb here
Author: gnc [email protected]
Copyright: © 2020, gnc
Date: 2020-09-22
Version: 0.1.3
kb is a text-oriented minimalist command line knowledge base manager. kb can be considered a quick note collection and access tool oriented toward software developers, penetration testers, hackers, students or whoever has to collect and organize notes in a clean way. Although kb is mainly targeted on text-based note collection, it supports non-text files as well (e.g., images, pdf, videos and others).
The project was born from the frustration of trying to find a good way to quickly access my notes, procedures, cheatsheets and lists (e.g., payloads) but at the same time, keeping them organized. This is particularly useful for any kind of student. I use it in the context of penetration testing to organize pentesting procedures, cheatsheets, payloads, guides and notes.
I found myself too frequently spending time trying to search for that particular payload list quickly, or spending too much time trying to find a specific guide/cheatsheet for a needed tool. kb tries to solve this problem by providing you a quick and intuitive way to access knowledge.
In few words kb allows a user to quickly and efficiently:
- collect items containing notes,guides,procedures,cheatsheets into an organized knowledge base;
- filter the knowledge base on different metadata: title, category, tags and others;
- visualize items within the knowledge base with (or without) syntax highlighting;
- grep through the knowledge base using regexes;
- import/export an entire knowledge base;
Basically, kb provides a clean text-based way to organize your knowledge.
To install the most recent stable version of kb just type:
pip install -U kb-manager
If you want to install the bleeding-edge version of kb (that may have some bugs) you should do:
git clone https://github.com/gnebbia/kb
cd kb
pip install -r requirements.txt
python setup.py install
# or with pip
pip install -U git+https://github.com/gnebbia/kb
Tip for GNU/Linux and MacOS users: For a better user experience, also set the following kb bash aliases:
cat <<EOF > ~/.kb_alias
alias kbl="kb list"
alias kbe="kb edit --id"
alias kba="kb add"
alias kbv="kb view --id"
alias kbd="kb delete --id"
alias kbg="kb grep"
alias kbt="kb list --tags"
EOF
echo "source ~/.kb_alias" >> ~/.bashrc
source ~/.kb_alias
Please remember to upgrade kb frequently by doing:
pip install -U kb-manager
To install using homebrew, use:
brew tap gnebbia/kb https://github.com/gnebbia/kb.git
brew install gnebbia/kb/kb
To upgrade with homebrew:
brew update
brew upgrade gnebbia/kb/kb
Windows users should keep in mind these things:
- DO NOT USE notepad as %EDITOR%, kb is not compatible with notepad, a reasonable alternative is notepad++;
- %EDITOR% variable should ALWAYS be enclosed within double quotes;
EDITOR=C:\Program Files\Editor\my cool editor.exe -> WRONG!
EDITOR="C:\Program Files\Editor\my cool editor.exe" -> OK!
A docker setup has been included to help with development.
To install and start the project with docker:
docker-compose up -d
docker-compose exec kb bash
The container has the aliases included in its .bashrc
so you can use
kb in the running container as you would if you installed it on the
host directly. The ./docker/data
directory on the host is bound to
/data
in the container, which is the image's working directly also.
To interact with the container, place (or symlink) the files on your host
into the ./docker/data
directory, which can then be seen and used in
the /data
directory in the container.
A quick demo of a typical scenario using kb:
A quick demo with kb aliases enabled:
A quick demo for non-text documents:
kb list
# or if aliases are used:
kbl
kb list zip
# or if aliases are used:
kbl zip
kb list --category cheatsheet
# or
kb list -c cheatsheet
# or if aliases are used:
kbl -c cheatsheet
kb list --tags "web;pentest"
# or if aliases are used:
kbl --tags "web;pentest"
kb list -v
# or if aliases are used:
kbl -v
kb add ~/Notes/cheatsheets/pytest
# or if aliases are used:
kba ~/Notes/cheatsheets/pytest
kb add ~/ssh_tunnels --title pentest_ssh --category "procedure" \
--tags "pentest;network" --author "gnc" --status "draft"
kb add ~/Notes/cheatsheets/general/* --category "cheatsheet"
kb add --title "ftp" --category "notes" --tags "protocol;network"
# a text editor ($EDITOR) will be launched for editing
kb delete --id 2
# or if aliases are used:
kbd 2
kb delete --id 2 3 4
# or if aliases are used:
kbd 2 3 4
kb delete --title zap --category cheatsheet
kb view --id 3
# or
kb view -i 3
# or if aliases are used:
kbv 3
kb view --title "gobuster"
# or
kb view -t "gobuster"
kb view -t dirb -n
kb view -i 2 -e
# or if aliases are used:
kbv 2 -e
Editing artifacts involves opening a text editor. Hence, binary files cannot be edited by kb.
The editor can be set by the "EDITOR" environment variable.
kb edit --id 13
# or if aliases are used:
kbe 13
kb edit --title "git" --category "cheatsheet"
# or
kb edit -t "git" -c "cheatsheet"
kb grep "[bg]zip"
# or if aliases are used:
kbg "[bg]zip"
kb grep -i "[BG]ZIP"
kb grep -v "[bg]zip"
kb export
This will generate a .kb.tar.gz archive that can be later be imported by kb.
kb import archive.kb.tar.gz
NOTE: Importing a knowledge base erases all the previous data. Basically it erases everything and imports the knowledge base.
kb erase
If you want to upgrade kb to the most recent stable release do:
pip install -U kb-manager
If instead you want to update kb to the most recent release (that may be bugged), do:
git clone https://github.com/gnebbia/kb
cd kb
pip install --upgrade .
I am an independent developer working on kb in my free time, if you like kb and would like to say thank you, buy me a beer!
Copyright 2020 Giuseppe Nebbione.
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.