The CveXplore package aims to provide an object related way to interact with the data collected or hosted by a cve-search instance. It provides an ambiguous way to interact with either the cve-search mongodb or the cve-search API.
From version 0.2.5 onwards CveXplore has the possibility to initialize and update the database without the need of any of the cve-search binaries and thus providing the same functionality as cve-search but without the GUI components.
A click command line functionality is being build but for now still in progress...
All the data provided by this interaction is converted into objects before being returned. And thus providing a way to interact with objects rather then with raw data.
As stated you will need to have one of two things; in order to fully use this package you need access to:
- MongoDB; either an empty or an already populated cve-search mongodb instance
OR
- A cve-search API instance (will be retired in the 0.4 release)
Both of them can be easily created on a physical machine or via a docker instance of cve-search; please check cve-search or CVE-Search-Docker for further details.
Package is hosted on pypi, so to install the minimal core just run:
pip install CveXplore
This command will install the core logic of CveXplore and, by default, installs the mongodb module also.
CveXplore is setup in a modular way and therefor has multiple modules which can be installed separately by specifying them as an extra requirement. To install the mysql module only, specify:
pip install CveXplore[mysql]
Or for multiple modules:
pip install CveXplore[mysql, redis]
Or simple install all modules:
pip install CveXplore[all]
Check github pages documentation.
Most of the following configuration including the configuration directory path can be altered using settings from environment variables.
CveXplore automatically creates a config folder in ~/.cvexplore
. CveXplore stores several configuration
files in here such as the .env
for general configuration and the .sources.ini
for data sources configuration.
CveXplore stores all logs in the ~/.cvexplore/log
folder:
update_populate.log
; logging produced during database updates and database initialization.
As of version 0.2.5 CveXplore can populate and update a local mongodb instance from either the command line:
$ cvexplore database initialize
$ cvexplore database update
Check the CLI Documentation for more information.
Or via the the CveXplore object:
>>> from CveXplore import CveXplore
>>> cvx = CveXplore()
>>> cvx.database.populate()
>>> cvx.database.update()
You can add your NIST API Key in the environment variable
NVD_NIST_API_KEY
(e.g., in the ~/.cvexplore/.env
file). You can populate CveXplore without an API key,
but it will limit the amount of parallel requests made to the NIST API.
For the NVD API, the update starts from the last modified document in the database. In case of missing CPEs or CVEs caused by failures during the regular updates you can manually update entries for 1–120 days. (If the period is longer than 120 days you would need to re-populate the entire database.) Example:
>>> cvx.database.update(manual_days=7)
CveXplore can be instantiated with different parameters, depending to which data source you're going to connect to. If no parameters are given it is assumed that you're going to connect to a mongodb database running on localhost with default port and security settings (Cve Search default parameters).
>>> from CveXplore import CveXplore
>>> cvx = CveXplore()
>>> cvx.version
'0.1.2'
To let CveXplore connect to an mongodb with specific parameters:
>>> from CveXplore import CveXplore
>>> cvx = CveXplore(datasource_type="mongodb", datasource_connection_details={"host": "mongodb:https://127.0.0.1:27017"})
>>> cvx.version
'0.1.2'
And to let CveXplore talk to an Cve Search API (only query POST endpoint needed):
>>> from CveXplore import CveXplore
>>> cvx = CveXplore(datasource_type="api", datasource_connection_details={"address": ("mylocal.cve-search.int", 443), "api_path": "api"})
>>> cvx.version
'0.1.2'
For More options please check the package documentation
CveXplore has a 'Python Click' (Documentation) command line interpreter available. Click provides an extensive help function to guide you through the different options; also check the full documentation for examples and usage instructions
$ cvexplore --help
Usage: cvexplore [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...
Options:
-v, --version Show the current version and exit
--help Show this message and exit.
Commands:
capec Query for capec specific data
cpe Query for cpe specific data
cve Query for cve specific data
cwe Query for cwe specific data
database Database update / populate commands
find Perform find queries on a single collection
stats Show datasource statistics
tasks Perform task related operations.