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Burp suite pro icon
Burp suite pro icon








For this example, you could use: java -jar ~/Downloads/burp/burpsuite_pro_v1.6.03.jar In the “Run Shell Script” window, you can add the command that you want the “Application” to run. Double-click on it, and you’ll see it add an entry to the main window, like this: However, for our purposes, select the “Utilities” section, and find “Run Shell Script”.

burp suite pro icon

Apple has some decent documentation on it as well, if you want to do something more basic. The screen should look like this:Īutomator will let you do a lot of things, but what we want is fairly minimal. It should open up prompting you to make a new Automator file, and you want to select an “Application”, so you can run it as if it were a true native application. I found a decent tool for this, from the VulnHub IRC channel, and a little Googling.įirst, open Automator, which comes with Mac OS X (found in Applications or with Command-Space). I wanted to give a more ’native’ feeling to launching Burp, while still being able to have the additional memory argument (-Xmx1024m for 1024MB memory).

burp suite pro icon

So first, to describe my configuration, I keep the Burp Suite jar files in my ‘~/Downloads/burp/’ folder, as shown here: I wanted a more ’native’ feeling to launching the Burp Suite, and this post should document the process I found that worked for me. In that situation, I had to look up the arguments on Google. The only exception was when I did need that extra memory. I personally just ran the burp jar file by double-clicking the jar file.

burp suite pro icon

I noticed that he opened a text file containing the command to run burp with extra memory, so he could remember the shell command easily. Recently, I on a Google Hangout with a coworker and saw him using the Burp Suite.










Burp suite pro icon