Friday, September 14, 2012

Week 1 of the Month of Volatility Plugins posted!

 I'm going to borrow from Andrew's blog here to let you know about our Month of Volatility Plugins:

I was writing to announce that week 1 of the month of Volatility plugins is finished, and we now have five in-depth blog posts covering Windows and Linux internals and rootkit detection. These have all been posted to the new Volatility Labs blog.

Post 1: Logon Sessions, Processes, and Images

This Windows focused post covers linking processes to their logon session, detecting hidden processes using session structures, and determining the loaded the drivers mapped into each session.

http://volatility-labs.blogspot.com/2012/09/movp-11-logon-sessions-processes-and.html

Post 2: Window Stations and Clipboard Malware

This Windows focused post covers enumerating and analyzing window stations and clipboard monitoring malware.

http://volatility-labs.blogspot.com/2012/09/movp-12-window-stations-and-clipboard.html

Post 3: Desktops, Heaps, and Ransomware

This Windows focused post covers finding rogue desktops used to hide applications and created by ransomware, linking threads to desktops, analyzing the desktop heap for memory corruptions, and profiling heap allocations to locate USER objects.

http://volatility-labs.blogspot.com/2012/09/movp-13-desktops-heaps-and-ransomware.html

Post 4: Average Coder Rootkit, Bash History, and Elevated Processes

This Linux focused post covers analyzing the Average Coder rootkit, recovering .bash_history from memory, even when faced with anti-forensics, and finding elevated processes.

http://volatility-labs.blogspot.com/2012/09/movp-14-average-coder-rootkit-bash.html

Post 5: KBeast Rootkit, Detecting Hidden Modules, and sysfs

This Linux focused post covers analyzing the KBeast rootkit, finding modules unlinked from the module list, and the forensic values of sysfs.

http://volatility-labs.blogspot.com/2012/09/movp-15-kbeast-rootkit-detecting-hidden.html


If you have any questions or comments on the posts, please leave a comment on the respective post on the Volatility Labs blog.

Future Volatility posts will appear on our official blog (http://volatility-labs.blogspot.com/).  Also you might want to follow our project on twitter: @Volatility for updates and news.  See you at OMFW!

No comments: