Sha256: 57a0c76014d406bddc9751ecba46d1de74e7855bfff5b990b4df7611bd624fe7
Contents?: true
Size: 1.42 KB
Versions: 9
Compression:
Stored size: 1.42 KB
Contents
$:.push File.expand_path('../lib', __FILE__) require 'dradis/plugins/wpscan/version' version = Dradis::Plugins::Wpscan::VERSION::STRING # Describe your gem and declare its dependencies: Gem::Specification.new do |spec| spec.platform = Gem::Platform::RUBY spec.name = 'dradis-wpscan' spec.version = version spec.summary = 'WPScan add-on for the Dradis Framework.' spec.description = 'This add-on allows you to upload and parse output produced from the WPScan WordPress security scanner into Dradis.' spec.license = 'GPL-2' spec.authors = ['Christian Mehlmauer', 'Daniel Martin', 'Erwan', 'Ryan Dewhurst'] spec.email = ['etd@nomejortu.com'] spec.homepage = 'http://dradisframework.org' spec.files = `git ls-files`.split($\) spec.executables = spec.files.grep(%r{^bin/}).map{ |f| File.basename(f) } spec.test_files = spec.files.grep(%r{^(test|spec|features)/}) # By not including Rails as a dependency, we can use the gem with different # versions of Rails (a sure recipe for disaster, I'm sure), which is needed # until we bump Dradis Pro to 4.1. # s.add_dependency 'rails', '~> 4.1.1' spec.add_dependency 'dradis-plugins', '~> 4.0' spec.add_dependency 'multi_json' spec.add_development_dependency 'bundler' spec.add_development_dependency 'rake', '~> 12.3.3' spec.add_development_dependency 'rspec-rails' spec.add_development_dependency 'combustion', '~> 0.5.2' end
Version data entries
9 entries across 9 versions & 1 rubygems