A curated list of tools, add-ons, articles, and exploits built with the Scapy packet manipulation library.
Awesome Scapy is a curated directory of tools, exploits, and resources built using the Scapy packet manipulation library. It helps security researchers and network engineers discover practical applications of Scapy for network analysis, security testing, and protocol experimentation. The collection includes everything from Wi-Fi hacking tools to industrial control system exploits.
Network security professionals, penetration testers, and developers working with network protocols who want to leverage Scapy-based tools. It's particularly useful for those looking for ready-made solutions or inspiration for their own Scapy projects.
Unlike generic security tool lists, Awesome Scapy focuses specifically on projects built with Scapy, making it the definitive resource for discovering how this powerful library is used in real-world security applications. It saves time by curating the most relevant tools and examples in one place.
Great packages that use Scapy
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Organizes tools into clear categories like Wi-Fi, DDoS, and exploits, making it easy to find relevant Scapy applications without sifting through generic lists.
Features practical, widely-used tools such as wifiphisher for rogue access points and mitm6 for IPv6 attacks, highlighting Scapy's role in actual security testing.
Actively welcomes contributions, ensuring the list evolves with new projects and exploits, as seen in the inclusion of recent CVEs like CVE-2024-20674.
Includes tools for specialized protocols like IoT (CoAP, MQTT) and industrial systems, demonstrating Scapy's versatility beyond standard networking.
The list curates projects but doesn't verify their reliability, security, or maintenance status, forcing users to independently assess each tool's risks.
Excludes non-Scapy based alternatives, so it's not comprehensive for all network security tasks and may miss better-suited tools in other ecosystems.
As a community-maintained directory, some links or projects might be outdated or abandoned, requiring extra diligence from users to find current solutions.