DumpsterDiver
DumpsterDiver is a tool designed to search through large volumes of data to identify sensitive information including API keys, passwords, hardcoded credentials, and other secrets. It’s useful for security audits, compliance scanning, and identifying exposed credentials in code repositories and data dumps.
Installation
Install from GitHub
git clone https://github.com/maximumG/DumpsterDiver.git
cd DumpsterDiver
python3 -m pip install -r requirements.txt
Using pip
pip3 install dumpster-diver
Docker Installation
docker build -t dumpsterdiver .
docker run -v /path/to/scan:/data dumpsterdiver /data
System Requirements
# Python 3.6 or higher
python3 --version
# Install dependencies
pip3 install pyyaml requests
Basic Usage
Scan a Directory
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /path/to/directory
Scan a Single File
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /path/to/file.txt
Scan Git Repository
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /path/to/repo -r
Use Custom Rules File
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /path/to/scan -c custom_rules.yaml
Command-Line Options
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
-p, --path | Path to file or directory to scan |
-r, --recursive | Recursively scan subdirectories |
-c, --config | Use custom configuration/rules file |
-o, --output | Output file for results |
-j, --json | Output results in JSON format |
-s, --sensitive | Show sensitive content in results |
--verbose | Enable verbose output |
--ignore | Ignore specific patterns |
-e, --entropy | Calculate entropy for detection |
Practical Examples
Scan Project Directory for Secrets
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /home/user/projects -r
Scan and Save Results to File
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /var/www/html -o findings.txt
Scan with JSON Output for Processing
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /app/source -j -o results.json
Scan Git History for Exposed Secrets
git clone https://github.com/user/repo.git
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p repo -r --git-history
Verbose Scanning with Details
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /code -r --verbose
Scan with Custom Rules
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /project -c my_rules.yaml -r
Detection Patterns
DumpsterDiver detects common secret patterns:
| Secret Type | Pattern | Example |
|---|---|---|
| AWS Keys | AKIA[0-9A-Z]{16} | AKIA2EXAMPLE123456 |
| API Keys | api[_-]?key | api_key=abc123xyz |
| Passwords | password\s*= | password = “secret123” |
| Tokens | token|auth | auth_token: xyz789 |
| SSH Keys | BEGIN RSA | -----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY----- |
| Slack Tokens | xox[baprs] | xoxb-1234567890-abcdefghij |
| GitHub Tokens | ghp_[A-Za-z0-9_]{36,255} | ghp_example123token |
| Database URLs | (mysql|postgres):\/\/ | mysql://user:pass@host |
Custom Rules Configuration
Create Custom Rules File
# custom_rules.yaml
rules:
- name: "Custom API Key Pattern"
pattern: "custom_api_[a-zA-Z0-9]{32}"
entropy: 4.0
type: "credentials"
- name: "Internal Secret"
pattern: "INTERNAL_SECRET_[A-Z0-9]{16}"
entropy: 3.5
type: "secret"
- name: "Database Connection"
pattern: "DB_PASSWORD=.*"
entropy: 3.0
type: "database"
Run with Custom Rules
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /app -c custom_rules.yaml -r
Advanced Techniques
Entropy-Based Detection
# Detect suspicious strings with high entropy
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /code -e --entropy-threshold 4.5
Scan Multiple Directories
# Create scan script
#!/bin/bash
for dir in /app /config /home/user; do
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p $dir -o result_$dir.txt
done
Git Repository Secret Hunting
# Clone and scan entire git history
git clone --mirror https://github.com/user/repo.git
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p repo.git -r --git-history
Filter Results by Confidence
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /source -j | jq '.results[] | select(.confidence > 0.8)'
Parallel Scanning
# Use GNU Parallel for faster scanning
parallel python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p {} ::: /path1 /path2 /path3
Output Analysis
Parse JSON Results
# Extract only high-confidence findings
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /app -j -o findings.json
cat findings.json | jq '.[] | select(.confidence >= 0.9)'
Generate Report
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /app -o results.txt
cat results.txt | grep -E "^(File|Match|Pattern)" > report.txt
Count Findings by Type
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /code -j -o findings.json
jq '.[] | .type' findings.json | sort | uniq -c
Integration with CI/CD
GitHub Actions Integration
name: Secret Detection
on: [push, pull_request]
jobs:
secrets:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Run DumpsterDiver
run: |
git clone https://github.com/maximumG/DumpsterDiver.git
cd DumpsterDiver
python3 -m pip install -r requirements.txt
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p .. -j -o findings.json
- name: Check findings
run: |
if [ -s findings.json ]; then
cat findings.json
exit 1
fi
GitLab CI Integration
secret_scan:
image: python:3.9
script:
- git clone https://github.com/maximumG/DumpsterDiver.git
- cd DumpsterDiver
- pip install -r requirements.txt
- python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p .. -j -o findings.json
- "[ ! -s findings.json ] || (cat findings.json && exit 1)"
Troubleshooting
Module Not Found
# Install missing dependencies
pip3 install pyyaml requests regex
# Verify installation
python3 -c "import DumpsterDiver"
Permission Denied on Files
# Run with appropriate permissions
sudo python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /restricted/path -r
Out of Memory on Large Directories
# Scan specific subdirectories instead
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /large/path/subdir1 -r
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /large/path/subdir2 -r
No Results Found
# Verify patterns are correct
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /path --verbose
# Check if directory contains actual secrets
grep -r "password\|api_key\|token" /path | head
Security Best Practices
Handle Findings Responsibly
# Store results securely
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /app -o findings.txt
chmod 600 findings.txt
# Encrypt sensitive report
gpg -c findings.txt
Remediate Exposed Secrets
# After finding exposed credentials:
# 1. Rotate all exposed secrets immediately
# 2. Scan git history for exposure timeline
# 3. Update secrets management practices
# 4. Re-scan to verify remediation
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /app -r
Regular Scanning Schedule
# Add to crontab for regular scanning
0 2 * * * /usr/bin/python3 /opt/DumpsterDiver/DumpsterDiver.py -p /app -r -o /var/log/dumpster_$(date +%Y%m%d).txt
Comparison with Similar Tools
| Tool | Focus | Method |
|---|---|---|
| DumpsterDiver | Large data volumes | Pattern + entropy |
| TruffleHog | Git history | Entropy + regex |
| GitGuardian | Git monitoring | API patterns |
| SAST Tools | Code analysis | Static analysis |
| git-secrets | Git hooks | Pattern matching |
Common Secret Patterns to Monitor
Environment Variables
# Scan for unprotected env vars
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /app -c patterns/env_vars.yaml
Configuration Files
# Focus on config file patterns
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /etc --include="*.conf" --include="*.yaml"
Backup Files
# Check backup directories
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /backups -r
Log Files
# Scan logs for leaked credentials
python3 DumpsterDiver.py -p /var/log -r --include="*.log"
Summary
DumpsterDiver is an essential tool for identifying exposed secrets and sensitive data in code repositories, configuration files, and data dumps. Its flexible pattern matching and entropy-based detection help organizations find credentials that may have been accidentally committed or exposed. Regular scanning as part of security audits and CI/CD pipelines helps maintain strong credential hygiene.