head	1.2;
access;
symbols
	RELEASE_8_3_0:1.2
	RELEASE_9_0_0:1.2
	RELEASE_7_4_0:1.1
	RELEASE_8_2_0:1.1
	RELEASE_6_EOL:1.1
	RELEASE_8_1_0:1.1
	RELEASE_7_3_0:1.1
	RELEASE_8_0_0:1.1
	RELEASE_7_2_0:1.1
	RELEASE_7_1_0:1.1
	RELEASE_6_4_0:1.1
	RELEASE_5_EOL:1.1
	RELEASE_7_0_0:1.1
	RELEASE_6_3_0:1.1;
locks; strict;
comment	@# @;


1.2
date	2011.07.03.14.03.49;	author ohauer;	state Exp;
branches;
next	1.1;

1.1
date	2007.10.04.13.21.39;	author rafan;	state Exp;
branches;
next	;


desc
@@


1.2
log
@-remove MD5
@
text
@SHA256 (wapiti-1.1.6.tar.gz) = cb9fb6b969d01e84e953235f7e7554fee62916aaf3215a1abd4455a0efecbaed
SIZE (wapiti-1.1.6.tar.gz) = 51200
@


1.1
log
@Wapiti allows you to audit the security of your web applications.
It performs "black-box" scans, i.e. it does not study the source code of
the application but will scans the webpages of the deployed webapp,
looking for scripts and forms where it can inject data.
Once it gets this list, Wapiti acts like a fuzzer, injecting payloads to
see if a script is vulnerable.

WWW: http://wapiti.sourceforge.net/

PR:		ports/116873
Submitted by:	Philippe Audeoud <jadawin at tuxaco.net>
@
text
@a0 1
MD5 (wapiti-1.1.6.tar.gz) = 8b6067b64c16b575da43aa2dbfaeea23
@

