Some HTTP parameter names are more commonly associated with one functionality than the others. For example, the parameter ?url=
usually contains URLs as the value and hence often falls victim to file inclusion, open redirect and SSRF attacks. Parth can go through your burp history, a list of URLs or it's own discovered URLs to find such parameter names and the risks commonly associated with them. Parth is designed to aid web security testing by helping in prioritization of components for testing.
Installation: pip3 install parth
This option works for all 3 supported import types: Burp Suite history, newline delimited text file or a HTTP request text file.
parth -i example.history
cat urls | parth
An exclusive option --pipe
is available when importing targets from stdin. It can be used to output URLs vulnerable to a specific vulnerabily.
cat urls | parth --pipe xss
Supported Issues: lfi, ssrf, sqli, xss, open_redirect, rce
This option will make use of CommonCrawl, Open Threat Exchange and Waybackmachine to find URLs of the target domain.
parth -t example.com
Same parameter names across all URLs are ignored.
parth -ut example.com
This option will write all the parameter names found in a file with name params-{target}.txt
for later use.
parth -pt example.com
The following command will save the result as a JSON object in the specified file.
parth -t example.com -o example.json
The database of parameter names and the risks associated with them is mainly created from the public work of various people of the community such as @Jhaddix.