FREE Subscription to Dr. Dobb’s Digest: Same Great Content, New Digital Edition
Site Archive (Complete)
Email
Print
Reprint

add to:
Del.icio.us
Digg
Google
Furl
Slashdot
Y! MyWeb
Blink
December 01, 2000

File Recovery Techniques

(Page 6 of 9)
Dec00: Case Study: rootkit

Case Study: rootkit

To find out how robust deleted file information can be, I set up a disposable RedHat 5.2 Linux machine and downloaded Version 4 of the Linux rootkit source distribution. The rootkit software produces a network password sniffer program and replaces over a dozen system utilities with modified versions that either reveal intruder activity or provide intruder backdoors. I compiled, installed, and removed the rootkit software, just like an intruder.

Then I did just about the worst possible thing. I downloaded the Coroner's Toolkit source distribution, unpacked it in the same directory as used by the "intruder," compiled it, and ran the software. (To avoid data destruction as described here, we intend to make ready-to-run CD-ROM images available.)

Using the Coroner's Toolkit in this manner, I knowingly destroyed large amounts of information by overwriting deleted files and obliterating file access time information for compiler-related files and for other files.

Even after all that destruction, the Coroner's Toolkit still found useful information. Access time patterns of deleted files revealed that at least 460 files and directories were created and deleted within a relatively short amount of time. At least 300 of those files had practically identical last modification times on November 23, 1998, the apparent time when Linux rootkit Version 4 was prepared for distribution.

The signatures from deleted file attributes were so strong because intruder software suffers from bloat just like any other software. Linux rootkit Version 4 has a rather large footprint of approximately 780 files and directories, including compiler output files. A footprint that large is hard to overlook, even in deleted file access time patterns.

-- W.V.

Previous Page | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 Next Page
TOP 5 ARTICLES
No Top Articles.
DR. DOBB'S CAREER CENTER
Ready to take that job and shove it? open | close
Search jobs on Dr. Dobb's TechCareers
Function:

Keyword(s):

State:  
  • Post Your Resume
  • Employers Area
  • News & Features
  • Blogs & Forums
  • Career Resources

    Browse By:
    Location | Employer | City
  • Most Recent Posts:
    MEDIA CENTER  more
    NetSeminar
    Modernize your Development by Moving Build and Code Quality Upstream
    Moderated by Jon Erickson, Editor-in-Chief of Dr. Dobb's, this interactive panel discussion brings industry experts Anders Wallgren, CTO of Electric Cloud and Gwyn Fisher, CTO of Klocwork together for a candid discussion of the cost savings, productivity and quality benefits that can be achieved by stabilizing builds and code quality as early in the development cycle as possible.

    The reality of today's development environment - geographically distributed teams, the use of Agile development practices, increasing application complexity, etc. - is straining the viability of the traditional coding, build and release process. To stay ahead of the curve, development teams are modernizing their approach to dealing with these issues, and as a result are achieving new levels of development productivity. Register for the webcast.
    Date: Wednesday, July 15, 2009
    Time: 11 am PT/2 pm ET
    Modernize your Development by Moving Build and Code Quality Upstream
    Moderated by Jon Erickson, Editor-in-Chief of Dr. Dobb's, this interactive panel discussion brings industry experts Anders Wallgren, CTO of Electric Cloud and Gwyn Fisher, CTO of Klocwork together for a candid discussion of the cost savings, productivity and quality benefits that can be achieved by stabilizing builds and code quality as early in the development cycle as possible.

    The reality of today's development environment - geographically distributed teams, the use of Agile development practices, increasing application complexity, etc. - is straining the viability of the traditional coding, build and release process. To stay ahead of the curve, development teams are modernizing their approach to dealing with these issues, and as a result are achieving new levels of development productivity. Register for the webcast.
    Date: Wednesday, July 15, 2009
    Time: 11 am PT/2 pm ET
                                   
    INFO-LINK

    Resource Links: