CH 04

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Ch 4: Data Acquisition

Objectives List digital evidence storage formats Explain ways to determine the best acquisition method Describe contingency planning for data acquisitions Explain how to use acquisition tools Explain how to validate data acquisitions Describe RAID acquisition methods Explain how to use remote network acquisition tools List other forensic tools available for data acquisitions Understanding Storage Formats for Digital Evidence Understanding Storage Formats for Digital Evidence Two types of data acquisition Static acquisition Copying a hard drive from a powered-off system Used to be the standard Does not alter the data, so it's repeatable Live acquisition Copying data from a running computer Now the preferred type, because of hard disk encryption Cannot be repeated exactlyalters the data Also, collecting RAM data is becoming more important But RAM data has no timestamp, which makes it much harder to use Understanding Storage Formats for Digital Evidence Terms used for a file containing evidence data Bit-stream copy Bit-stream image Image Mirror Sector copy They all mean the same thing Understanding Storage Formats for Digital Evidence Three formats Raw format Proprietary formats Advanced Forensics Format (AFF) Raw Format This is what the Linux dd command makes Bit-by-bit copy of the drive to a file Advantages Fast data transfers Can ignore minor data read errors on source drive Most computer forensics tools can read raw format Disadvantages Requires as much storage as original disk or data Tools might not collect marginal (bad) sectors Low threshold of retry reads on weak media spots Commercial tools use more retries than free tools CNIT 121 Bowne Page 1 of 13

Ch 4: Data Acquisition
Validation check must be stored in a separate file Message Digest 5 ( MD5) Secure Hash Algorithm ( SHA-1 or newer) Cyclic Redundancy Check ( CRC-32) Proprietary Formats Features offered Option to compress or not compress image files Can split an image into smaller segmented files Such as to CDs or DVDs With data integrity checks in each segment Can integrate metadata into the image file Hash data Date & time of acquisition Investigator name, case name, comments, etc. Disadvantages Inability to share an image between different tools File size limitation for each segmented volume Typical segmented file size is 650 MB or 2 GB Expert Witness format is the unofficial standard Used by EnCase, FTK, X-Ways Forensics, and SMART Can produce compressed or uncompressed files File extensions .E01, .E02, .E03, Advanced Forensics Format Developed by Dr. Simson L. Garfinkel of Basis Technology Corporation Design goals Provide compressed or uncompressed image files No size restriction for disk-to-image files Provide space in the image file or segmented files for metadata Simple design with extensibility Open source for multiple platforms and OSs Internal consistency checks for self-authentication File extensions include .afd for segmented image files and .afm for AFF metadata AFF is open source Determining the Best Acquisition Method Determining the Best Acquisition Method Types of acquisitions Static acquisitions and live acquisitions Four methods Bit-stream disk-to-image file Bit-stream disk-to-disk Logical Sparse Bit-stream disk-to-image file Most common method Can make more than one copy Copies are bit-for-bit replications of the original drive CNIT 121 Bowne Page 2 of 13

Ch 4: Data Acquisition
Tools: ProDiscover, EnCase, FTK, SMART, Sleuth Kit, X-Ways, iLook

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Ch 4: Data Acquisition
Bit-stream disk-to-disk Used when disk-to-image copy is not possible Because of hardware or software errors or incompatibilities This problem is more common when acquiring older drives Adjusts target disks geometry (cylinder, head, and track configuration) to match the suspect's drive Tools: EnCase, SafeBack (MS-DOS), Snap Copy Logical Acquisition and Sparse Acquisition When your time is limited, and evidence disk is large Logical acquisition captures only specific files of interest to the case Such as Outlook .pst or .ost files Sparse acquisition collects only some of the data I am finding contradictory claims about thiswait until we have a real example for clarity Compressing Disk Images Lossless compression might compress a disk image by 50% or more But files that are already compressed, like ZIP files, wont compress much more Error in textbook: JPEGs use lossy compression and degrade image quality (p. 104) Use MD5 or SHA-1 hash to verify the image Tape Backup When working with large drives, an alternative is using tape backup systems No limit to size of data acquisition Just use many tapes But its slow Returning Evidence Drives In civil litigation, a discovery order may require you to return the original disk after imaging it If you cannot retain the disk, make sure you make the correct type of copy (logical or bitstream) Ask your client attorney or your supervisor what is requiredyou usually only have one chance Contingency Planning for Image Acquisitions Contingency Planning for Image Acquisitions Create a duplicate copy of your evidence image file Make at least two images of digital evidence Use different tools or techniques Copy host protected area of a disk drive as well Consider using a hardware acquisition tool that can access the drive at the BIOS level (link Ch 4c) Be prepared to deal with encrypted drives Whole disk encryption feature in Windows Vista Ultimate and Enterprise editions Encrypted Hard Drives Windows BitLocker TrueCrypt If the machine is on, a live acquisition will capture the decrypted hard drive Otherwise, you will need the key or passphrase The suspect may provide it There are some exotic attacks Cold Boot (link Ch 4e) Passware (Ch 4f) Electron microscope (Ch 4g) CNIT 121 Bowne Page 4 of 13

Ch 4: Data Acquisition
Using Acquisition Tools Acquisition tools for Windows Advantages Make acquiring evidence from a suspect drive more convenient Especially when used with hot-swappable devices Disadvantages Must protect acquired data with a well-tested write-blocking hardware device Tools cant acquire data from a disks host protected area Windows Write-Protection with USB Devices USB write-protection feature Blocks any writing to USB devices Target drive needs to be connected to an internal PATA (IDE), SATA, or SCSI controller Works in Windows XP SP2, Vista, and Win 7 Acquiring Data with a Linux Boot CD Linux can read hard drives that are mounted as read-only Windows OSs and newer Linux automatically mount and access a drive Windows will write to the Recycle Bin, and sometimes to the NTFS Journal, just from booting up with a hard drive connected Linux kernel 2.6 and later write metadata to the drive, such as mount point configurations for an ext2 or ext3 drive All these changes corrupt the evidence Forensic Linux Live CDs mount all drives read-only Which eliminates the need for a write-blocker Using Linux Live CD Distributions Forensic Linux Live CDs Contain additional utilities Forensic Linux Live CDs Configured not to mount, or to mount as read-only, any connected storage media Well-designed Linux Live CDs for computer forensics Helix Penguin Sleuth FCCU (French interface) Preparing a target drive for acquisition in Linux Modern linux distributions can use Microsoft FAT and NTFS partitions fdisk command lists, creates, deletes, and verifies partitions in Linux mkfs.msdos command formats a FAT file system from Linux Acquiring data with dd in Linux dd (data dump) command Can read and write from media device and data file Creates raw format file that most computer forensics analysis tools can read Acquiring data with dd in Linux Shortcomings of dd command Requires more advanced skills than average user Does not compress data dd command combined with the split command Segments output into separate volumes dd command is intended as a data management tool Not designed for forensics acquisitions CNIT 121 Bowne Page 5 of 13

Ch 4: Data Acquisition
Acquiring data with dcfldd in Linux dcfldd additional functions Specify hex patterns or text for clearing disk space Log errors to an output file for analysis and review Use several hashing options Refer to a status display indicating the progress of the acquisition in bytes Split data acquisitions into segmented volumes with numeric extensions Verify acquired data with original disk or media data Capturing an Image with ProDiscover Basic Connecting the suspects drive to your workstation Document the chain of evidence for the drive Remove the drive from the suspects computer Configure the suspect drives jumpers as needed Connect the suspect drive to a write-blocker device Create a storage folder on the target drive Using ProDiscovers Proprietary Acquisition Format Image file will be split into segments of 650MB Creates image files with an .eve extension, a log file (.log extension), and a special inventory file (.pds extension) Using ProDiscovers Raw Acquisition Format Select the UNIX style dd format in the Image Format list box Raw acquisition saves only the image data and hash value Capturing an Image with AccessData FTK Imager Included on AccessData Forensic Toolkit View evidence disks and disk-to-image files Makes disk-to-image copies of evidence drives At logical partition and physical drive level Can segment the image file Evidence drive must have a hardware write-blocking device Or the USB write-protection Registry feature enabled FTK Imager cant acquire drives host protected area (but ProDiscover can) Steps Boot to Windows Connect evidence disk to a write-blocker Connect target disk Start FTK Imager Create Disk Image Use Physical Drive option

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Ch 4: Data Acquisition
Validating Data Acquisitions Validating Data Acquisitions Most critical aspect of computer forensics Requires using a hashing algorithm utility Validation techniques CRC-32, MD5, and SHA-1 to SHA-512 MD5 has collisions, so it is not perfect, but its still widely used SHA-1 has some collisions but its better than MD5 A new hashing function will soon be chosen by NIST Linux Validation Methods Validating dd acquired data You can use md5sum or sha1sum utilities md5sum or sha1sum utilities should be run on all suspect disks and volumes or segmented volumes Validating dcfldd acquired data Use the hash option to designate a hashing algorithm of md5, sha1, sha256, sha384, or sha512 hashlog option outputs hash results to a text file that can be stored with the image files vf (verify file) option compares the image file to the original medium Windows Validation Methods Windows has no built-in hashing algorithm tools for computer forensics Third-party utilities can be used Commercial computer forensics programs also have built-in validation features Each program has its own validation technique Raw format image files dont contain metadata Separate manual validation is recommended for all raw acquisitions Performing RAID Data Acquisitions Performing RAID Data Acquisitions Size is the biggest concern Many RAID systems now have terabytes of data Understanding RAID Redundant array of independent (formerly inexpensive) disks (RAID) Computer configuration involving two or more disks Originally developed as a dataredundancy measure RAID 0 (Striped) Provides rapid access and increased storage CNIT 121 Bowne Page 7 of 13

Ch 4: Data Acquisition
Lack of redundancy

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Ch 4: Data Acquisition
RAID 1 (Mirrored) Designed for data recovery More expensive than RAID 0 RAID 2 Similar to RAID 1 Data is written to a disk on a bit level Has better data integrity checking than RAID 0 Slower than RAID 0 RAID 3 Uses data striping and dedicated parity RAID 4 Data is written in blocks RAID 5 Similar to RAIDs 0 and 3 Places parity recovery data on each disk RAID 6 Redundant parity on each disk RAID 10, or mirrored striping Also known as RAID 1+0 Combination of RAID 1 and RAID 0 Acquiring RAID Disks Concerns How much data storage is needed? What type of RAID is used? Do you have the right acquisition tool? Can the tool read a forensically copied RAID image? Can the tool read split data saves of each RAID disk? Older hardware-firmware RAID systems can be a challenge when youre making an image

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Ch 4: Data Acquisition
Vendors offering RAID acquisition functions Technologies Pathways ProDiscover Guidance Software EnCase X-Ways Forensics Runtime Software R-Tools Technologies Occasionally, a RAID system is too large for a static acquisition Retrieve only the data relevant to the investigation with the sparse or logical acquisition method Using Remote Network Acquisition Tools Using Remote Network Acquisition Tools You can remotely connect to a suspect computer via a network connection and copy data from it Remote acquisition tools vary in configurations and capabilities Drawbacks LANs data transfer speeds and routing table conflicts could cause problems Gaining the permissions needed to access more secure subnets Heavy traffic could cause delays and errors Remote access tool could be blocked by antivirus Remote Acquisition with ProDiscover Investigator Preview a suspects drive remotely while its in use Perform a live acquisition Also called a smear because data is being altered Encrypt the connection Copy the suspect computers RAM Use the optional stealth mode to hide the connection Remote Acquisition with ProDiscover Incident Response All the functions of ProDiscover Investigator plus Capture volatile system state information Analyze current running processes Locate unseen files and processes Remotely view and listen to IP ports Run hash comparisons to find Trojans and rootkits Create a hash inventory of all files remotely PDServer Remote Agent ProDiscover utility for remote access Needs to be loaded on the suspect computer PDServer installation modes Trusted CD Preinstallation Pushing out and running remotely PDServer can run in a stealth mode Can change process name to appear as OS function Remote Connection Security Features Password Protection Encrypted communications Secure Communication Protocol Write Protected Trusted Binaries CNIT 121 Bowne Page 10 of 13

Ch 4: Data Acquisition
Digital Signatures

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Ch 4: Data Acquisition
Remote Acquisition with EnCase Enterprise Remotely acquires media and RAM data Integration with intrusion detection system (IDS) tools Options to create an image of data from one or more systems Preview of systems A wide range of file system formats RAID support for both hardware and software Other Remote Acquisition Tools R-Tools R-Studio WetStone LiveWire F-Response Remote Acquisition with Runtime Software Compact Shareware Utilities DiskExplorer for FAT DiskExplorer for NTFS HDHOST (Remote access program) Features for acquisition Create a raw format image file Segment the raw format or compressed image Access network computers drives Using Other Forensics-Acquisition Tools Using Other Forensics-Acquisition Tools Tools SnapBack DatArrest SafeBack DIBS USA RAID ILook Investigator IXimager Vogon International SDi32 ASRData SMART Australian Department of Defence PyFlag SnapBack DatArrest Columbia Data Products Old MS-DOS tool Can make an image on three ways Disk to SCSI drive Disk to network drive Disk to disk Fits on a forensic boot floppy SnapCopy adjusts disk geometry

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Ch 4: Data Acquisition
NTI SafeBack Reliable MS-DOS tool Small enough to fit on a forensic boot floppy Performs an SHA-256 calculation per sector copied Creates a log file Functions Disk-to-image copy (image can be on tape) Disk-to-disk copy (adjusts target geometry) Parallel port laplink can be used Copies a partition to an image file Compresses image files DIBS USA RAID Rapid Action Imaging Device (RAID) Makes forensically sound disk copies Portable computer system designed to make disk-to-disk images Copied disk can then be attached to a write-blocker device ILook Investigator IXimager Iximager Runs from a bootable floppy or CD Designed to work only with ILook Investigator Can acquire single drives and RAID drives ASRData SMART Linux forensics analysis tool that can make image files of a suspect drive Capabilities Robust data reading of bad sectors on drives Mounting suspect drives in write-protected mode Mounting target drives in read/write mode Optional compression schemes Australian Department of Defence PyFlag PyFlag tool Intended as a network forensics analysis tool Can create proprietary format Expert Witness image files Uses sgzip and gzip in Linux
Last modified 9-23-10

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