The objective of providing security testing toolkits is for project teams to understand what tools are available and apply the tools that they judge to be appropriate based on the business application scenario. There are many kinds of security testing tools. An organization may define one general testing toolkit for all projects, and also suggest other security testing tools based on those specific domains, such as automation, infrastructure, Docker, and BDD:
There are many kinds of Linux security distributions that have been installed and preconfigured with security tools. Kali, BlackArch, and PentestBox are the common Linux security distributions. PenetestBox is recommended because it doesn't need a Linux virtual machine environment to execute Linux utilities, and it can be executed natively on Windows. PenetestBox also includes many security...