andreicscs

joined 2 hours ago
[–] andreicscs@lemmy.world 2 points 29 minutes ago

Thanks so much! I'd love to get your feedback if you end up deploying it. I've been staring at this codebase for so long that I'm sure I have some tunnel vision and might be blind to obvious issues. Let me know what you think!

[–] andreicscs@lemmy.world 3 points 33 minutes ago (2 children)

I appreciate the feedback and the 2p! I definitely don't take it personally. I completely understand the skepticism around AI in this community, which is why I don't hide it. At the end of the day, the core engine, the distroless container architecture, and the threat model were entirely engineered by me. HoneyWire is fully open-source and transparent, so anyone is welcome to audit the codebase. I also have several other public, non-AI projects on my GitHub if anyone wants to vet my background. But fair point I’ll make sure to be more upfront about using it as a scaffolding tool in future posts

[–] andreicscs@lemmy.world 4 points 39 minutes ago

No issue that's a completely fair question, yes AI was used as an accelerator for writing boilerplate code, scaffolding the initial UI layout, and helping me structure the documentation. However, the core security logic, container architecture, and threat model were entirely designed and verified by me. I have about 8-9 years of software development experience. While HoneyWire is my first major public release, it’s the culmination of years of building internal tools, network utilities, and lab environments.

Because security is the primary focus, I deliberately designed the architecture to minimize risks. I highly encourage you to review the source code on GitHub, I'd be happy to receive feedback about the architecture or any threat-modeling critiques!

[–] andreicscs@lemmy.world 6 points 47 minutes ago (4 children)

AI Disclosure: As a student and solo developer/maintainer, I used AI as a "junior dev" during project development to help accelerate boilerplate writing and documentation. All core architecture, system structure, and security logic were fully designed and implemented by me.

[–] andreicscs@lemmy.world 3 points 57 minutes ago (2 children)

That's exactly how it works. You deploy these low-interaction decoys (traps) across your internal network to act as tripwires. Since legitimate users have no reason to touch them, any interaction is a high-fidelity alert indicating a potential breach or lateral movement. Right now, you can spin up a few different types of traps, like a network scan detector that sits completely quietly and triggers an alert if it detects a port or network scan hitting that specific node, or a Web Router Login Page, that looks like a legacy admin interface and instantly alerts you if someone tries to brute-force or log in. The best part about HoneyWire's architecture is that developing new sensors is the easiest part, so the ecosystem is designed to be highly extensible as the community grows.

 

Hey folks,

Just open-sourced a project called HoneyWire, a distributed deception platform built as an alternative to commercial honeypots and traditional agent-heavy canary setups.

It allows you to turn any Linux asset into a network canary in about a minute. Instead of installing heavy background daemons, a transient CLI wrapper configures and launches lightweight, distroless decoy containers that check back into a centralized management dashboard.

If an attacker attempts lateral movement and touches one of these decoys, it triggers an instant alert to your SIEM or webhook notifications.

Project Links:

GitHub: https://github.com/andreicscs/HoneyWire

Site: https://honeywire.dev/

It's completely free, self-hostable, and transparent. Let me know if you have any questions about the detection mechanisms or the tech stack!

 

Hey everyone,

I wanted to run high-fidelity network canaries in my homelab, but I couldn't justify enterprise pricing, and I wasn't a fan of managing custom orchestration across all my VMs to make available oss solutions work.

So, I built HoneyWire. It’s a completely free, open-source distributed deception platform.

It uses a point-in-time CLI wizard to deploy hardened, distroless Docker traps. You run the command once, it spins up the decoy, registers it to your centralized Hub dashboard, and the setup agent completely exits. No persistent background daemons.

Features:

Zero-Agent: No ongoing background overhead on your hosts.

Centralized UI: View fleet health, uptime, and lateral movement alerts in dark mode.

Alerting: Built-in push notifications and SIEM forwarding.

Privacy: 100% free, open-source, and strictly zero telemetry.

GitHub Repo: https://github.com/andreicscs/HoneyWire Landing Page: https://honeywire.dev/

Would love to hear your thoughts on the architecture or any feedback if you test it out!