getallurls (gau) fetches known URLs from AlienVault's Open Threat Exchange, the Wayback Machine, Common Crawl, and URLScan for any given domain. Inspired by Tomnomnom's waybackurls.
Examples:
$ printf example.com | gau
$ cat domains.txt | gau --threads 5
$ gau example.com google.com
$ gau --o example-urls.txt example.com
$ gau --blacklist png,jpg,gif example.com
To display the help for the tool use the -h
flag:
$ gau -h
Flag | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
--blacklist |
list of extensions to skip | gau --blacklist ttf,woff,svg,png |
--fc |
list of status codes to filter | gau --fc 404,302 |
--from |
fetch urls from date (format: YYYYMM) | gau --from 202101 |
--ft |
list of mime-types to filter | gau --ft text/plain |
--fp |
remove different parameters of the same endpoint | gau --fp |
--json |
output as json | gau --json |
--mc |
list of status codes to match | gau --mc 200,500 |
--mt |
list of mime-types to match | gau --mt text/html,application/json |
--o |
filename to write results to | gau --o out.txt |
--providers |
list of providers to use (wayback,commoncrawl,otx,urlscan) | gau --providers wayback |
--proxy |
http proxy to use (socks5:// or http:// | gau --proxy http://proxy.example.com:8080 |
--retries |
retries for HTTP client | gau --retries 10 |
--timeout |
timeout (in seconds) for HTTP client | gau --timeout 60 |
--subs |
include subdomains of target domain | gau example.com --subs |
--threads |
number of workers to spawn | gau example.com --threads |
--to |
fetch urls to date (format: YYYYMM) | gau example.com --to 202101 |
--verbose |
show verbose output | gau --verbose example.com |
--version |
show gau version | gau --version |
gau automatically looks for a configuration file at $HOME/.gau.toml
or%USERPROFILE%\.gau.toml
. You can specify options and they will be used for every subsequent run of gau. Any options provided via command line flags will override options set in the configuration file.
An example configuration file can be found here
$ go install github.com/lc/gau/v2/cmd/gau@latest
You can download the pre-built binaries from the releases page and then move them into your $PATH.
$ tar xvf gau_2.0.6_linux_amd64.tar.gz
$ mv gau /usr/bin/gau
You can run gau via docker like so:
docker run --rm sxcurity/gau:latest --help
You can also build a docker image with the following command
docker build -t gau .
and then run it
docker run gau example.com
Bear in mind that piping command (echo "example.com" | gau) will not work with the docker container
ohmyzsh's git plugin has an alias which maps gau
to the git add --update
command. This is problematic, causing a binary conflict between this tool "gau" and the zsh plugin alias "gau" (git add --update
). There is currently a few workarounds which can be found in this Github issue.