├── README.md ├── ports_dictionary └── README.md ├── clean_wordlist ├── README.md └── clean_wordlist.sh ├── code_combine ├── README.md └── combine.py ├── dir_tree_generator ├── README.md └── dir_tree.py ├── burp └── chrome_intercept.json └── LICENSE /README.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | # SecUtils 2 | Random utilities from my security projects that might be useful to others 3 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /ports_dictionary/README.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | ## ports.json 2 | If you have a project that needs to label ports, this is a dictionary mapping every port to it's name and description 3 | 4 | ```python 5 | import json 6 | with open('ports.json', 'r') as portfile: 7 | ports = json.load(portfile) 8 | 9 | ports['22']['tcp']['name'] 10 | 'ssh' 11 | 12 | ports['22']['tcp']['desc'] 13 | 'The Secure Shell (SSH) Protocol' 14 | ``` 15 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /clean_wordlist/README.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | ## clean_wordlist.sh 2 | Runs a series of regexes against a wordlist to remove lines the following: 3 | 4 | - The following noisy characters: ! ( , % 5 | - More than 100 characters (these tend to be overly specific) 6 | - 4 or more consecutive digits (likely contains an id) 7 | - Where the last 3 or more characters are digits (likely an id) 8 | - 32 characters of just lowercase letters and numbers, likely to be an MD5 hash or similar 9 | - Number followed by 5 or more numbers and uppercase letters (almost always noisey id values) 10 | - More than 6 directories deep (these tend to be overly specific) 11 | - Containing UUIDs 12 | - Multiple numbers and letters mixed together (likley noise) 13 | - Ending in the following filetypes: png, jpg, jpeg, gif, svg, bmp, ttf, avif, wav, mp4, aac, ajax, css, all 14 | 15 | ### Usage: 16 | Specify your wordlist and the script will output you a new version with the suffix "_cleaned" 17 | ```sh 18 | ./clean_wordlist.sh 19 | ``` 20 | 21 | To view the changes you can do: 22 | ```sh 23 | diff original.txt_cleaned <(sort original.txt) | more 24 | ``` 25 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /clean_wordlist/clean_wordlist.sh: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | #! /bin/bash 2 | # To view the changes do: 3 | # diff original.txt_cleaned <(sort original.txt) | more 4 | 5 | regexes=( 6 | "[\!(,%]" # Ignore noisy characters 7 | ".{100,}" # Ignore lines with more than 100 characters (overly specific) 8 | "[0-9]{4,}" # Ignore lines with 4 or more consecutive digits (likely an id) 9 | "[0-9]{3,}$" # Ignore lines where the last 3 or more characters are digits (likely an id) 10 | "[a-z0-9]{32}" # Likely MD5 hash or similar 11 | "[0-9]+[A-Z0-9]{5,}" # Number followed by 5 or more numbers and uppercase letters (almost all noise) 12 | "\/.*\/.*\/.*\/.*\/.*\/.*\/" # Ignore lines more than 6 directories deep (overly specific) 13 | "\w{8}-\w{4}-\w{4}-\w{4}-\w{12}" # Ignore UUIDs 14 | "[0-9]+[a-zA-Z]+[0-9]+[a-zA-Z]+[0-9]+" # Ignore multiple numbers and letters mixed together (likley noise) 15 | "\.(png|jpg|jpeg|gif|svg|bmp|ttf|avif|wav|mp4|aac|ajax|css|all)$" # Ignore low value filetypes 16 | "^$" # Ignores blank lines 17 | ) 18 | 19 | wordlist=$1 20 | echo "[+] Cleaning ${wordlist}" 21 | original_size=$(cat ${wordlist} | wc -l) 22 | 23 | # Build command 24 | cmd="cat ${wordlist}" 25 | for regex in "${regexes[@]}"; do 26 | cmd="${cmd} | grep -vE '${regex}'" 27 | done 28 | 29 | # Add sort, uniq, and save to new file 30 | cmd="${cmd} | sort | uniq > ${wordlist}_cleaned" 31 | 32 | # Execute command 33 | eval $cmd 34 | 35 | # Calculate changes 36 | new_size=$(cat ${wordlist}_cleaned | wc -l) 37 | removed=$((original_size-new_size)) 38 | 39 | echo "[-] Removed ${removed} lines" 40 | echo "[+] Wordlist is now ${new_size} lines" 41 | echo "[+] Done" 42 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /code_combine/README.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | # Codebase Combiner 2 | 3 | A Python script that combines all files from a code repository into a single file, making it easier to share codebases with Large Language Models (LLMs). The script respects `.gitignore` patterns and allows for additional file/directory exclusions. 4 | 5 | ## Features 6 | 7 | - Combines all text files from a directory into a single file 8 | - Respects existing `.gitignore` patterns 9 | - Allows additional patterns to be skipped via command line 10 | - Adds clear file headers and separators for better readability 11 | - Handles both simple patterns and path-based patterns for exclusion 12 | - Automatically skips binary and non-UTF-8 files 13 | - Sorts files alphabetically for consistent output 14 | 15 | ## Installation 16 | 17 | No installation required beyond Python 3. Simply download the script and make it executable: 18 | 19 | ```bash 20 | chmod +x combine.py 21 | ``` 22 | 23 | ## Usage 24 | 25 | Basic usage: 26 | ```bash 27 | python3 combine.py 28 | ``` 29 | 30 | With additional skip patterns: 31 | ```bash 32 | python3 combine.py --skip "pattern1,pattern2" 33 | ``` 34 | 35 | ### Examples 36 | 37 | Combine all files from a project, excluding common build artifacts: 38 | ```bash 39 | python3 combine.py ~/Code/my-project output.txt --skip "poetry.lock,package-lock.json" 40 | ``` 41 | 42 | Skip specific directories and files: 43 | ```bash 44 | python3 combine.py ~/Code/my-project output.txt --skip "tests/,docs/,specific/file.py" 45 | ``` 46 | 47 | ### Skip Patterns 48 | 49 | The `--skip` (or `-s`) flag accepts a comma-separated list of patterns. These patterns can be: 50 | 51 | - Simple filenames: `"poetry.lock"` 52 | - Directory names (with trailing slash): `"tests/"` 53 | - Path-based patterns: `"src/components/test.js"` 54 | 55 | ## Output Format 56 | 57 | The script generates a single file with clear separators between files: 58 | 59 | ``` 60 | ================================================================================ 61 | File: src/main.py 62 | ================================================================================ 63 | 64 | [file contents here] 65 | 66 | 67 | ================================================================================ 68 | File: src/utils.py 69 | ================================================================================ 70 | 71 | [file contents here] 72 | ``` 73 | 74 | ## Default Exclusions 75 | 76 | The script automatically excludes: 77 | - All patterns from your project's `.gitignore` 78 | - The `.git` directory 79 | - The `.venv` directory 80 | - Binary files and files that can't be decoded as UTF-8 81 | 82 | ## Error Handling 83 | 84 | - Files that can't be read as UTF-8 text are skipped with a warning 85 | - Missing `.gitignore` file is handled gracefully 86 | - Invalid command-line arguments show a help message -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /dir_tree_generator/README.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | # Directory Tree Generator 2 | 3 | A Python tool for generating visual directory tree structures with flexible ignore patterns and depth control. Perfect for documentation, README files, or getting a quick overview of your project structure. 4 | 5 | ## Features 6 | 7 | - 📁 Generates a clear, hierarchical view of directory structures 8 | - 🚫 Smart directory ignoring with sensible defaults 9 | - 🔧 Configurable max depth 10 | - 📝 Output to file or stdout 11 | - ⚡ Fast and lightweight 12 | 13 | ## Installation 14 | 15 | 1. Save the script as `dir_tree.py` 16 | 2. Make it executable (optional): 17 | ```bash 18 | chmod +x dir_tree.py 19 | ``` 20 | 21 | ## Usage 22 | 23 | ### Basic Usage 24 | 25 | ```bash 26 | python dir_tree.py /path/to/your/project 27 | ``` 28 | 29 | This will generate a tree structure while automatically ignoring common directories like `.git`, `__pycache__`, etc. 30 | 31 | ### Command Line Options 32 | 33 | ```bash 34 | python dir_tree.py [OPTIONS] ROOT_DIR 35 | ``` 36 | 37 | #### Options 38 | 39 | - `--ignore-dirs [DIRS...]`: Additional directories to ignore (adds to defaults) 40 | - `--no-defaults`: Don't use the default ignore list 41 | - `--show-defaults`: Display the default ignored directories and exit 42 | - `--ignore-patterns [PATTERNS...]`: Ignore paths containing these patterns 43 | - `--max-depth N`: Limit the depth of the tree 44 | - `--output FILE`: Save the output to a file instead of printing to stdout 45 | 46 | ### Examples 47 | 48 | #### Show Default Ignored Directories 49 | ```bash 50 | python dir_tree.py . --show-defaults 51 | ``` 52 | 53 | #### Add More Directories to Ignore 54 | ```bash 55 | python dir_tree.py . --ignore-dirs build dist temp 56 | ``` 57 | 58 | #### Use Only Specific Ignore Directories (No Defaults) 59 | ```bash 60 | python dir_tree.py . --no-defaults --ignore-dirs build dist 61 | ``` 62 | 63 | #### Ignore Patterns 64 | ```bash 65 | python dir_tree.py . --ignore-patterns _test .bak 66 | ``` 67 | 68 | #### Limit Depth 69 | ```bash 70 | python dir_tree.py . --max-depth 3 71 | ``` 72 | 73 | #### Save to File 74 | ```bash 75 | python dir_tree.py . --output project_structure.txt 76 | ``` 77 | 78 | ## Default Ignored Directories 79 | 80 | The following directories are ignored by default: 81 | - `.git` 82 | - `__pycache__` 83 | - `node_modules` 84 | - `.pytest_cache` 85 | - `.venv` 86 | - `venv` 87 | 88 | You can override these defaults using the `--no-defaults` flag. 89 | 90 | ## Sample Output 91 | 92 | ``` 93 | my_project/ 94 | ├── src/ 95 | │ ├── main.py 96 | │ ├── config/ 97 | │ │ ├── __init__.py 98 | │ │ └── settings.py 99 | │ └── utils/ 100 | │ ├── __init__.py 101 | │ └── helpers.py 102 | ├── tests/ 103 | │ ├── __init__.py 104 | │ └── test_main.py 105 | ├── README.md 106 | └── requirements.txt 107 | ``` 108 | 109 | ## Advanced Usage 110 | 111 | ### Combining Multiple Options 112 | 113 | You can combine multiple options to get exactly the view you need: 114 | 115 | ```bash 116 | python dir_tree.py . \ 117 | --ignore-dirs temp build \ 118 | --ignore-patterns _backup \ 119 | --max-depth 3 \ 120 | --output project_docs.txt 121 | ``` 122 | 123 | ### Using in Documentation 124 | 125 | The tool is particularly useful for maintaining up-to-date project structure documentation. You might want to add it to your documentation build process: 126 | 127 | ```bash 128 | # Example documentation build script 129 | python dir_tree.py . --output docs/project_structure.md 130 | ``` 131 | 132 | ## Notes 133 | 134 | - The tool uses Unicode box-drawing characters for the tree structure 135 | - Directories are listed before files at each level 136 | - Entries are sorted alphabetically (case-insensitive) 137 | - Hidden files and directories are included unless explicitly ignored -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /dir_tree_generator/dir_tree.py: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | #!/usr/bin/env python3 2 | import os 3 | import argparse 4 | from typing import List, Set 5 | from pathlib import Path 6 | 7 | 8 | class DirectoryTreeGenerator: 9 | def __init__( 10 | self, 11 | root_dir: str, 12 | ignore_dirs: Set[str] = None, 13 | ignore_patterns: Set[str] = None, 14 | max_depth: int = None, 15 | ): 16 | self.root_dir = Path(root_dir) 17 | self.ignore_dirs = ignore_dirs or set() 18 | self.ignore_patterns = ignore_patterns or set() 19 | self.max_depth = max_depth 20 | self.tree_str = "" 21 | 22 | def should_ignore(self, path: Path) -> bool: 23 | """Check if a path should be ignored based on configured patterns.""" 24 | # Check if directory name is in ignore list 25 | if path.name in self.ignore_dirs: 26 | return True 27 | 28 | # Check if path matches any ignore pattern 29 | for pattern in self.ignore_patterns: 30 | if pattern in str(path): 31 | return True 32 | 33 | return False 34 | 35 | def generate_tree( 36 | self, directory: Path = None, prefix: str = "", depth: int = 0 37 | ) -> str: 38 | """Generate a tree representation of the directory structure.""" 39 | if directory is None: 40 | directory = self.root_dir 41 | self.tree_str = str(directory) + "/\n" 42 | 43 | if self.max_depth is not None and depth >= self.max_depth: 44 | return 45 | 46 | # Get and sort directory contents 47 | try: 48 | entries = sorted( 49 | directory.iterdir(), key=lambda x: (not x.is_dir(), x.name.lower()) 50 | ) 51 | except PermissionError: 52 | return 53 | 54 | # Process each entry 55 | for i, entry in enumerate(entries): 56 | is_last = i == len(entries) - 1 57 | 58 | if self.should_ignore(entry): 59 | continue 60 | 61 | # Create the proper prefix for this item 62 | current_prefix = "└── " if is_last else "├── " 63 | next_prefix = " " if is_last else "│ " 64 | 65 | # Add the entry to the tree 66 | self.tree_str += f"{prefix}{current_prefix}{entry.name}" 67 | if entry.is_dir(): 68 | self.tree_str += "/\n" 69 | self.generate_tree(entry, prefix + next_prefix, depth + 1) 70 | else: 71 | self.tree_str += "\n" 72 | 73 | return self.tree_str 74 | 75 | 76 | DEFAULT_IGNORE_DIRS = { 77 | ".git", 78 | "__pycache__", 79 | "node_modules", 80 | ".pytest_cache", 81 | ".venv", 82 | "venv", 83 | } 84 | 85 | 86 | def main(): 87 | parser = argparse.ArgumentParser( 88 | description="Generate a directory tree visualization" 89 | ) 90 | parser.add_argument("root_dir", help="Root directory to start from") 91 | parser.add_argument( 92 | "--ignore-dirs", 93 | nargs="*", 94 | default=[], 95 | help="Additional directories to ignore (adds to defaults)", 96 | ) 97 | parser.add_argument( 98 | "--no-defaults", action="store_true", help="Don't use default ignore list" 99 | ) 100 | parser.add_argument( 101 | "--show-defaults", 102 | action="store_true", 103 | help="Show default ignored directories and exit", 104 | ) 105 | parser.add_argument( 106 | "--ignore-patterns", 107 | nargs="*", 108 | default=[], 109 | help="Patterns to ignore (any path containing these strings will be ignored)", 110 | ) 111 | parser.add_argument("--max-depth", type=int, help="Maximum depth to traverse") 112 | parser.add_argument( 113 | "--output", help="Output file (if not specified, prints to stdout)" 114 | ) 115 | 116 | args = parser.parse_args() 117 | 118 | if args.show_defaults: 119 | print("Default ignored directories:", ", ".join(sorted(DEFAULT_IGNORE_DIRS))) 120 | return 121 | 122 | # Combine default and user-specified ignore dirs unless --no-defaults is used 123 | ignore_dirs = set(args.ignore_dirs) 124 | if not args.no_defaults: 125 | ignore_dirs.update(DEFAULT_IGNORE_DIRS) 126 | 127 | tree_gen = DirectoryTreeGenerator( 128 | args.root_dir, 129 | ignore_dirs=ignore_dirs, 130 | ignore_patterns=set(args.ignore_patterns), 131 | max_depth=args.max_depth, 132 | ) 133 | 134 | tree = tree_gen.generate_tree() 135 | 136 | if args.output: 137 | with open(args.output, "w") as f: 138 | f.write(tree) 139 | else: 140 | print(tree) 141 | 142 | 143 | if __name__ == "__main__": 144 | main() 145 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /burp/chrome_intercept.json: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | { 2 | "proxy":{ 3 | "intercept_client_requests":{ 4 | "automatically_fix_missing_or_superfluous_new_lines_at_end_of_request":false, 5 | "automatically_update_content_length_header_when_the_request_is_edited":true, 6 | "do_intercept":true, 7 | "rules":[ 8 | { 9 | "boolean_operator":"and", 10 | "enabled":true, 11 | "match_condition":"(^gif$|^jpg$|^png$|^css$|^js$|^ico$)", 12 | "match_relationship":"does_not_match", 13 | "match_type":"file_extension" 14 | }, 15 | { 16 | "boolean_operator":"or", 17 | "enabled":false, 18 | "match_relationship":"contains_parameters", 19 | "match_type":"request" 20 | }, 21 | { 22 | "boolean_operator":"or", 23 | "enabled":false, 24 | "match_condition":"(get|post)", 25 | "match_relationship":"does_not_match", 26 | "match_type":"http_method" 27 | }, 28 | { 29 | "boolean_operator":"and", 30 | "enabled":false, 31 | "match_relationship":"is_in_target_scope", 32 | "match_type":"url" 33 | }, 34 | { 35 | "boolean_operator":"and", 36 | "enabled":true, 37 | "match_condition":"^.*client.*\\.google\\.com$", 38 | "match_relationship":"does_not_match", 39 | "match_type":"domain_name" 40 | }, 41 | { 42 | "boolean_operator":"and", 43 | "enabled":true, 44 | "match_condition":"^gitcdn\\.xyz$", 45 | "match_relationship":"does_not_match", 46 | "match_type":"domain_name" 47 | }, 48 | { 49 | "boolean_operator":"and", 50 | "enabled":true, 51 | "match_condition":"^raw\\.githubusercontent\\.com$", 52 | "match_relationship":"does_not_match", 53 | "match_type":"domain_name" 54 | }, 55 | { 56 | "boolean_operator":"and", 57 | "enabled":true, 58 | "match_condition":"^fonts\\.gstatic\\.com$", 59 | "match_relationship":"does_not_match", 60 | "match_type":"domain_name" 61 | }, 62 | { 63 | "boolean_operator":"and", 64 | "enabled":true, 65 | "match_condition":"^lastpass\\.com$", 66 | "match_relationship":"does_not_match", 67 | "match_type":"domain_name" 68 | }, 69 | { 70 | "boolean_operator":"and", 71 | "enabled":true, 72 | "match_condition":"^loglogin\\.lastpass\\.com$", 73 | "match_relationship":"does_not_match", 74 | "match_type":"domain_name" 75 | }, 76 | { 77 | "boolean_operator":"and", 78 | "enabled":true, 79 | "match_condition":"^www\\.google\\.com$", 80 | "match_relationship":"does_not_match", 81 | "match_type":"domain_name" 82 | }, 83 | { 84 | "boolean_operator":"and", 85 | "enabled":true, 86 | "match_condition":"^.*\\.googleusercontent\\.com$", 87 | "match_relationship":"does_not_match", 88 | "match_type":"domain_name" 89 | }, 90 | { 91 | "boolean_operator":"and", 92 | "enabled":true, 93 | "match_condition":"^.*\\.gstatic\\.com$", 94 | "match_relationship":"does_not_match", 95 | "match_type":"domain_name" 96 | }, 97 | { 98 | "boolean_operator":"and", 99 | "enabled":true, 100 | "match_condition":"^mail\\.google\\.com$", 101 | "match_relationship":"does_not_match", 102 | "match_type":"domain_name" 103 | }, 104 | { 105 | "boolean_operator":"and", 106 | "enabled":true, 107 | "match_condition":"^.*\\.google\\.com$", 108 | "match_relationship":"does_not_match", 109 | "match_type":"domain_name" 110 | }, 111 | { 112 | "boolean_operator":"and", 113 | "enabled":true, 114 | "match_condition":"^.*\\.googleapis\\.com$", 115 | "match_relationship":"does_not_match", 116 | "match_type":"domain_name" 117 | } 118 | ] 119 | } 120 | } 121 | } -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /code_combine/combine.py: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | #!/usr/bin/env python3 2 | import os 3 | from pathlib import Path 4 | import fnmatch 5 | import argparse 6 | 7 | 8 | def parse_gitignore(gitignore_path): 9 | """Parse .gitignore file and return list of patterns.""" 10 | # Default patterns to always ignore 11 | patterns = [ 12 | ".git", # Match .git directory and all contents 13 | ".venv", # Match .venv directory and all contents 14 | ] 15 | 16 | if not os.path.exists(gitignore_path): 17 | print(f"No .gitignore found at {gitignore_path}") 18 | return patterns 19 | 20 | print(f"Reading .gitignore from {gitignore_path}") 21 | with open(gitignore_path, "r") as f: 22 | # Remove empty lines and comments, add to default patterns 23 | gitignore_patterns = [ 24 | line.strip() for line in f if line.strip() and not line.startswith("#") 25 | ] 26 | patterns.extend(gitignore_patterns) 27 | print(f"Added patterns from .gitignore: {gitignore_patterns}") 28 | 29 | return patterns 30 | 31 | 32 | def is_in_excluded_dir(path, excluded_dirs=None): 33 | """Check if path is within any excluded directory.""" 34 | if excluded_dirs is None: 35 | excluded_dirs = {".git", ".venv"} 36 | 37 | # Convert path to parts for checking 38 | parts = Path(path).parts 39 | 40 | # Check if any part of the path starts with an excluded directory name 41 | return any(part in excluded_dirs for part in parts) 42 | 43 | 44 | def should_ignore(path, start_path, ignore_patterns, additional_skip_patterns=None): 45 | """Check if path matches any gitignore pattern or additional skip patterns.""" 46 | # First check if path is in an excluded directory 47 | if is_in_excluded_dir(path): 48 | return True 49 | 50 | # Convert to string and get relative path from start_path 51 | path_str = str(path) 52 | try: 53 | relative_path = path.relative_to(start_path) 54 | relative_path_str = str(relative_path) 55 | except ValueError: 56 | # If path is not relative to start_path, use the full path 57 | relative_path_str = path_str 58 | 59 | filename = os.path.basename(path_str) 60 | 61 | # Helper function to check if a path matches a pattern 62 | def matches_pattern(path_to_check, pattern): 63 | path_str = str(path_to_check) 64 | # Handle directory patterns (ending with /) 65 | if pattern.endswith("/"): 66 | # Remove trailing slash for matching 67 | pattern = pattern[:-1] 68 | # For patterns with wildcards, use fnmatch 69 | if "*" in pattern or "?" in pattern: 70 | # Add /* to match directory contents 71 | return fnmatch.fnmatch(path_str, pattern) or fnmatch.fnmatch( 72 | path_str, pattern + "/*" 73 | ) 74 | # For literal patterns, use startswith 75 | return path_str.startswith(pattern) 76 | # Handle patterns with path separators 77 | elif "/" in pattern: 78 | return fnmatch.fnmatch(path_str, pattern) 79 | # Handle simple file patterns (match in any directory) 80 | else: 81 | return fnmatch.fnmatch(filename, pattern) 82 | 83 | # Check gitignore patterns 84 | for pattern in ignore_patterns: 85 | if matches_pattern(relative_path_str, pattern): 86 | return True 87 | 88 | # Check additional skip patterns 89 | if additional_skip_patterns: 90 | for pattern in additional_skip_patterns: 91 | if matches_pattern(relative_path_str, pattern): 92 | return True 93 | 94 | return False 95 | 96 | 97 | def concatenate_files(start_dir, output_file, additional_skip=None): 98 | """Concatenate all files with their paths, respecting .gitignore and additional skip patterns.""" 99 | start_path = Path(start_dir).resolve() 100 | gitignore_path = start_path / ".gitignore" 101 | ignore_patterns = parse_gitignore(gitignore_path) 102 | 103 | if additional_skip: 104 | print(f"Using additional skip patterns: {additional_skip}") 105 | 106 | print(f"Using ignore patterns: {ignore_patterns}") 107 | 108 | excluded_dirs = {".git", ".venv"} # Set of directories to completely exclude 109 | 110 | with open(output_file, "w") as outfile: 111 | for root, dirs, files in os.walk(start_path): 112 | root_path = Path(root) 113 | 114 | # Skip this directory entirely if it's in an excluded path 115 | if is_in_excluded_dir(root_path): 116 | dirs.clear() # Clear dirs list to prevent descending 117 | continue 118 | 119 | # Remove excluded directories from dirs list 120 | dirs[:] = [ 121 | d 122 | for d in dirs 123 | if not should_ignore( 124 | root_path / d, start_path, ignore_patterns, additional_skip 125 | ) 126 | ] 127 | 128 | for file in sorted(files): # Sort files for consistent output 129 | file_path = root_path / file 130 | 131 | # Skip .gitignore itself and ignored files 132 | if file == ".gitignore" or should_ignore( 133 | file_path, start_path, ignore_patterns, additional_skip 134 | ): 135 | continue 136 | 137 | # Get relative path from start directory 138 | relative_path = file_path.relative_to(start_path) 139 | print(f"Including file: {relative_path}") 140 | 141 | try: 142 | with open(file_path, "r") as infile: 143 | # Write a clear file header with separators 144 | outfile.write("\n") # Extra space before header 145 | outfile.write("=" * 80 + "\n") # Top separator 146 | outfile.write(f"File: {relative_path}\n") # Filename 147 | outfile.write("=" * 80 + "\n") # Bottom separator 148 | outfile.write("\n") # Space after header 149 | outfile.write(infile.read()) 150 | outfile.write("\n\n") # Extra space after content 151 | except (UnicodeDecodeError, IOError) as e: 152 | print(f"Warning: Could not read {file_path}: {e}") 153 | 154 | 155 | if __name__ == "__main__": 156 | parser = argparse.ArgumentParser( 157 | description="Concatenate code files while respecting .gitignore" 158 | ) 159 | parser.add_argument("directory", help="Source directory to process") 160 | parser.add_argument("output_file", help="Output file path") 161 | parser.add_argument( 162 | "--skip", "-s", help="Additional patterns to skip (comma-separated)", default="" 163 | ) 164 | 165 | args = parser.parse_args() 166 | 167 | # Convert skip patterns string to list, handling empty string case 168 | additional_skip = [p.strip() for p in args.skip.split(",")] if args.skip else None 169 | 170 | concatenate_files(args.directory, args.output_file, additional_skip) 171 | print(f"Files have been concatenated into {args.output_file}") 172 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /LICENSE: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 2 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 3 | 4 | Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 5 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies 6 | of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. 7 | 8 | Preamble 9 | 10 | The GNU General Public License is a free, copyleft license for 11 | software and other kinds of works. 12 | 13 | The licenses for most software and other practical works are designed 14 | to take away your freedom to share and change the works. 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Interpretation of Sections 15 and 16. 613 | 614 | If the disclaimer of warranty and limitation of liability provided 615 | above cannot be given local legal effect according to their terms, 616 | reviewing courts shall apply local law that most closely approximates 617 | an absolute waiver of all civil liability in connection with the 618 | Program, unless a warranty or assumption of liability accompanies a 619 | copy of the Program in return for a fee. 620 | 621 | END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS 622 | 623 | How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs 624 | 625 | If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest 626 | possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it 627 | free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms. 628 | 629 | To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest 630 | to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively 631 | state the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least 632 | the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found. 633 | 634 | 635 | Copyright (C) 636 | 637 | This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify 638 | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by 639 | the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or 640 | (at your option) any later version. 641 | 642 | This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 643 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 644 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 645 | GNU General Public License for more details. 646 | 647 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License 648 | along with this program. If not, see . 649 | 650 | Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail. 651 | 652 | If the program does terminal interaction, make it output a short 653 | notice like this when it starts in an interactive mode: 654 | 655 | Copyright (C) 656 | This program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'. 657 | This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it 658 | under certain conditions; type `show c' for details. 659 | 660 | The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate 661 | parts of the General Public License. Of course, your program's commands 662 | might be different; for a GUI interface, you would use an "about box". 663 | 664 | You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or school, 665 | if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if necessary. 666 | For more information on this, and how to apply and follow the GNU GPL, see 667 | . 668 | 669 | The GNU General Public License does not permit incorporating your program 670 | into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you 671 | may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with 672 | the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General 673 | Public License instead of this License. But first, please read 674 | . 675 | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------