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Columbus Project is an API first [subdomain]( “subdomain” ) [discovery]( “discovery” ) service, blazingly fast [subdomain enumeration]( “subdomain enumeration” ) service with advanced features.
_Columbus returned 638 [subdomains]( “subdomains” ) of tesla.com in 0.231 sec._
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## Usage
By default Columbus returns only the subdomains in a JSON string array:
curl ‘https://columbus.elmasy.com/lookup/github.com’
But we think of the bash lovers, so if you don’t want to mess with JSON and a newline separated list is your wish, then include the `Accept: text/plain` header.
DOMAIN=”github.com”
curl -s -H “Accept: text/plain” “https://columbus.elmasy.com/lookup/$DOMAIN” |
while read SUB
do
if [[ “$SUB” == “” ]]
then
HOST=”$DOMAIN”
else
HOST=”${SUB}.${DOMAIN}”
fi
echo “$HOST”
done
**For more, check the [features]( “features” ) or the [API documentation]( “API documentation” ).**
## Entries
Currently, entries are got from [Certificate Transparency]( “Certificate Transparency” ).
## Command Line
Usage of columbus-server:
-check
Check for updates.
-config string
Path to the config file.
-version
Print version informations.
`-check`: Check the lates version on GitHub. Prints `up-to-date` and returns `0` if no update required. Prints the latest tag (eg.: `v0.9.1`) and returns `1` if new release available. In case of error, prints the error message and returns `2`.
## Build
git clone https://github.com/elmasy-com/columbus-server
make build
## Install
Create a new user:
adduser –system –no-create-home –disabled-login columbus-server
Create a new group:
addgroup –system columbus
Add the new user to the new group:
usermod -aG columbus columbus-server
Copy the binary to `/usr/bin/columbus-server`.
Make it executable:
chmod +x /usr/bin/columbus-server
Create a directory:
mkdir /etc/columbus
Copy the config file to `/etc/columbus/server.conf`.
Set the permission to 0600.
chmod -R 0600 /etc/columbus
Set the owner of the config file:
chown -R columbus-server:columbus /etc/columbus
Install the service file (eg.: `/etc/systemd/system/columbus-server.service`).
cp columbus-server.service /etc/systemd/system/
Reload systemd:
systemctl daemon-reload
Start columbus:
systemctl start columbus-server
If you want to columbus start automatically:
systemctl enable columbus-server
**[Download Columbus-Server]( “Download Columbus-Server” )**Read More

