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Script for automating Linux memory capture and analysis
This project forked from halpomeranz/lmg
Script for automating Linux memory capture and analysis
Linux Memory Grabber A script for dumping Linux memory and creating Volatility(TM) profiles. Hal Pomeranz ([email protected]), 2016-01-12 THANKS! ======= "If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants." ~ Issac Newton There are a lot of people who deserve thanks for making this simple little tool possible: -- Joe Sylve for his work on LiME -- The entire Volatility(TM) development team for their ongoing work. I'd like to particularly recognize Andrew Case who answered a number of pesky questions from me during development of my tool. -- David Anderson for his ongoing support of libdwarf and dwarfdump -- Matt Suiche from MoonSols. When I was putting my tool together, my design goal was "make it as easy to use as DumpIt" (if you need to capture Windows memory, I know of no easier to use tool). So thanks for the inspiration, Matt! -- People who have provided ideas and code to make the tool better: Julien -- Alternate output/build directories and case ID labels, abort if not running as root Jonathon Poling -- similar ideas to Julien's Jeff Bryner -- Creating volatilityrc files for each capture The community is better for all of these efforts. I have chosen to make my tool available under the Creative Commons "Attribution" License (CC BY), in order to make it as widely available as possible. ABOUT THE TOOL ============== To analyze Linux memory, you first need to be able to capture Linux memory. Joe Sylve's Linux Memory Extractor (LiME) is excellent for this, but you need to have a LiME module compiled for the kernel of the system where you want to grab RAM. Volatility(TM) is great at analyzing Linux memory images. But it needs a profile that matches the system where the memory was captured. Building a profile means compiling a C program on the appropriate system and using dwarfdump to get the addresses of important kernel data structures. You also need a copy of the System.map file from the /boot directory. Now if you happen to have a duplicate of your target system, you can build LiME and compile the Volatility(TM) profile on the clone and use them to capture and analyze memory from your target. But there are many situations where a duplicate of your target system is not available. So you may have to compile LiME and build your Volatility(TM) profile on your target machine. And this is not for the faint of heart. There are a number of steps, and some fairly low-level Linux commands involved. My goal was to create a package that could be installed (by an expert) on a thumb drive and distributed to agents in the field. The user of the thumb drive should be able to plug the thumb drive in, run a single command, and successfully acquire a memory image of the target machine and a working Volatility(TM) profile. The result is my lmg (Linux Memory Grabber) script. ON FORENSIC PURITY ================== If you're a stickler for forensic purity, this is probably not the tool for you. Let's discuss some of the ways in which my tool interacts with the target system: Removable Media -- The tool is designed to be run from a portable USB device such as a thumb drive. You are going to be plugging a writable device into your target system, where it could potentially be targeted by malicious users or malware on the system. The act of plugging the device into the system is going to change the state of the machine (e.g., create log entries, mtab entries, etc). If the device is not auto-mounted by the operating system, the user must manually mount the device via a root shell. Compilation -- lmg builds a LiME kernel module for the system. Creating a Volatility(TM) profile also involves compiling code on the target machine. So gcc will be executed, header files read, libraries linked, etc. lmg tries to minimize impact on the file system of the target machine by setting TMPDIR to a directory on the USB device lmg runs from. This means that intermediate files created by the compiler will be written to the thumb drive rather than the local file system of the target machine. Dependencies -- In order to compile kernel code on Linux, the target machine needs a working development environment with gcc, make, etc and all of the appropriate include files and shared libraries. And in particular, the kernel header files need to be present on the local machine. These dependencies may not exist on the target. In this case, the user is faced with the choice of installing the appropriate dependencies (if possible) or being unable to acquire memory from the target. Malware -- lmg uses /bin/bash, gcc, zip, and a host of other programs from the target machine. If the system has been compromised, the applications lmg uses may not be trustworthy. A more complete solution would be to create a secure execution environment for lmg on the portable USB device, but was beyond the scope of this initial proof of concept. Memory -- All of the commands being run will cause the memory of the target system to change. The act of capturing RAM will always create artifacts, but in this case there is extensive compilation, file system access, etc in addition to running a RAM dumper. All of that being said, lmg is a very convenient tool for allowing less-skilled agents to capture useful memory analysis data from target systems. Note that lmg will look for an already existing LiME module on the USB device that matches the kernel version and processor architecture of the target machine. If found, lmg will not bother to recompile. Similarly, you may choose to not have lmg create the Volatility(TM) profile for the target in order to minimize the impact on the target system. lmg uses relative path names when invoking programs like gcc and zip. So if you wish to run these programs from alternate media, simply update $PATH as appropriate before running lmg. USING LMG ========= First, prepare a thumb drive according to the instructions in the INSTALL document provided with lmg. When you wish to acquire RAM, plug the thumb drive into your target system. On most Linux systems, new USB devices will get automatically mounted under /media. Let's assume yours ends up under /media/LMG. Now, as root, run "/media/LMG/lmg". This is interactive mode and the user will be prompted for confirmation before lmg builds a LiME module for the system and/or creates a Volatility(TM) profile. If you don't want to be prompted, use "/media/LMG/lmg -y". Everything else is automated. After the script runs, you will have a new directory on the thumb drive named ".../capture/<hostname>-YYYY-MM-DD_hh.mm.ss" lmg supports a -c option for specifying a case ID directory name to be used instead of the default "<hostname>-YYYY-MM-DD_hh.mm.ss" directory. Whatever directory name is used, the directory will contain: <hostname>-YYYY-MM-DD_hh.mm.ss-memory.lime -- the RAM capture <hostname>-YYYY-MM-DD_hh.mm.ss-profile.zip -- Volatility(TM) profile <hostname>-YYYY-MM-DD_hh.mm.ss-bash -- copy of target's /bin/bash volatilityrc -- prototype Volatility config file The volatilityrc file defines the appropriate locations for the captured memory and plugin. See the USAGE EXAMPLE below for how to use this file. The copy of /bin/bash is helpful for determining the address of the shell history data structure in the memory of bash processes in the memory capture. See http://code.google.com/p/volatility/wiki/LinuxCommandReference23#linux_bash for further details on how to use this executable (or reference the USAGE EXAMPLE below). Note that there may be times when you do not wish to write data to the media that you are running lmg from-- for example if the lmg tools are on read-only media like a DVD-ROM. lmg supports a -d option to specify a different output directory. By default, all compilation will happen in the target directory, but the user may specify an alternate compilation directory with -B. USAGE EXAMPLE ============= Here is an example of using the lmg tool, which includes using Volatility(TM) directly off the thumb drive to analyze the captured image. On my test machine, the thumb drive was at /dev/sdb and it was not auto-mounted by my operating system. So I did everything manually. 1) Getting root and mounting the thumb drive -------------------------------------------- caribou$ sudo -s [sudo] password for hal: caribou# mkdir -p /mnt/usb caribou# mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/usb 2) Running lmg -------------- caribou# /mnt/usb/lmg -y make -C /lib/modules/3.13.0-37-generic/build M=/mnt/usb/lime/src modules make[1]: Entering directory `/usr/src/linux-headers-3.13.0-37-generic' CC [M] /mnt/usb/lime/src/tcp.o CC [M] /mnt/usb/lime/src/disk.o CC [M] /mnt/usb/lime/src/main.o LD [M] /mnt/usb/lime/src/lime.o Building modules, stage 2. MODPOST 1 modules CC /mnt/usb/lime/src/lime.mod.o LD [M] /mnt/usb/lime/src/lime.ko make[1]: Leaving directory `/usr/src/linux-headers-3.13.0-37-generic' strip --strip-unneeded lime.ko mv lime.ko lime-3.13.0-37-generic-x86_64.ko make tidy make[1]: Entering directory `/mnt/usb/lime/src' rm -f *.o *.mod.c Module.symvers Module.markers modules.order \.*.o.cmd \.*.ko.cmd \.*.o.d rm -rf \.tmp_versions make[1]: Leaving directory `/mnt/usb/lime/src' LiME module is /mnt/usb/lime/src/lime-3.13.0-37-generic-x86_64.ko Dumping memory in "lime" format to /mnt/usb/capture/caribou-2016-01-12_14.32.41 This could take a while...Done! Cleaning up...Done! Grabbing a copy of /bin/bash...Done! Writing volatilityrc to /mnt/usb/capture/caribou-2016-01-12_14.32.41...Done! make -C //lib/modules/3.13.0-37-generic/build M="/mnt/usb/volatility-2.4/tools/linux" clean make[1]: Entering directory `/usr/src/linux-headers-3.13.0-37-generic' make[1]: Leaving directory `/usr/src/linux-headers-3.13.0-37-generic' rm -f module.dwarf make -C //lib/modules/3.13.0-37-generic/build CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO=y M="/mnt/usb/volatility-2.4/tools/linux" modules make[1]: Entering directory `/usr/src/linux-headers-3.13.0-37-generic' CC [M] /mnt/usb/volatility-2.4/tools/linux/module.o CC /mnt/usb/volatility-2.4/tools/linux/module.mod.o LD [M] /mnt/usb/volatility-2.4/tools/linux/module.ko make[1]: Leaving directory `/usr/src/linux-headers-3.13.0-37-generic' dwarfdump -di module.ko > module.dwarf make -C //lib/modules/3.13.0-37-generic/build M="/mnt/usb/volatility-2.4/tools/linux" clean make[1]: Entering directory `/usr/src/linux-headers-3.13.0-37-generic' CLEAN /mnt/usb/volatility-2.4/tools/linux/.tmp_versions CLEAN /mnt/usb/volatility-2.4/tools/linux/Module.symvers make[1]: Leaving directory `/usr/src/linux-headers-3.13.0-37-generic' adding: module.dwarf (deflated 90%) adding: boot/System.map-3.13.0-37-generic (deflated 79%) 3) Running linux_banner plugin to test capture, leveraging the prototype volatilityrc ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- caribou# /mnt/usb/volatility-2.4/vol.py --conf-file=/mnt/usb/capture/caribou-2016-01-12_14.32.41/volatilityrc linux_banner Volatility Foundation Volatility Framework 2.4 Linux version 3.13.0-37-generic (buildd@kapok) (gcc version 4.8.2 (Ubuntu 4.8.2-19ubuntu1) ) #64-Ubuntu SMP Mon Sep 22 21:28:38 UTC 2014 (Ubuntu 3.13.0-37.64-generic 3.13.11.7) 4) Use the captured copy of /bin/bash to dump shell history with linux_bash --------------------------------------------------------------------------- caribou# gdb /mnt/usb/capture/caribou-2016-01-12_14.32.41/caribou-2016-01-12_14.32.41-bash GNU gdb (Ubuntu 7.7.1-0ubuntu5~14.04.2) 7.7.1 Copyright (C) 2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc. License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html> This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law. Type "show copying" and "show warranty" for details. This GDB was configured as "x86_64-linux-gnu". Type "show configuration" for configuration details. For bug reporting instructions, please see: <http://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/>. Find the GDB manual and other documentation resources online at: <http://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/documentation/>. For help, type "help". Type "apropos word" to search for commands related to "word"... Reading symbols from /mnt/usb/capture/caribou-2016-01-12_14.32.41/caribou-2016-01-12_14.32.41-bash...(no debugging symbols found)...done. (gdb) disassemble history_list Dump of assembler code for function history_list: 0x00000000004aedb0 <+0>: mov 0x24e861(%rip),%rax # 0x6fd618 0x00000000004aedb7 <+7>: retq End of assembler dump. (gdb) quit caribou# /mnt/usb/volatility-2.4/vol.py --conf-file=/mnt/usb/capture/caribou-2016-01-12_14.32.41/volatilityrc linux_bash -H 0x6fd618 | head Volatility Foundation Volatility Framework 2.4 Pid Name Command Time Command -------- -------------------- ------------------------------ ------- 4157 bash 2016-01-12 17:42:55 UTC+0000 cd vss 4157 bash 2016-01-12 17:42:55 UTC+0000 unzip Security_evtx.csv.zip [... more output not shown ...]
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