#java#digital_forensics#forensic#recovery
IPED is a free, open-source Java tool from Brazilian Federal Police for processing and analyzing digital evidence from crime scenes or corporate probes. It handles huge cases fast—up to 400GB/hour and 135 million items—with features like data carving, hashing, regex searches for wallets/emails, face/image matching, timelines, GPS maps, OCR, and browser history parsing. Runs on Windows/Linux from USB drives with an easy interface. You benefit by getting powerful, stable forensics without cost, saving time on large investigations.
https://github.com/sepinf-inc/IPED
https://github.com/aio-libs/aiohttp-mako
#mako template renderer for #aiohttp.web based on aiohttp_jinja2. Library has almost same api and support python 3.5 (PEP492) syntax. It is used in aiohttp_debugtoolbar.
#Mako is a #template library written in Python. It provides a familiar, non-XML syntax which compiles into Python modules for maximum performance. Mako's syntax and #API borrows from the best ideas of many others, including #Django and #Jinja2 templates, #Cheetah, #Myghty, and #Genshi. Conceptually, Mako is an embedded Python (i.e. Python Server Page) language, which refines the familiar ideas of componentized layout and inheritance to produce one of the most straightforward and flexible models available, while also maintaining close ties to Python calling and scoping semantics.
http://www.makotemplates.org/