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Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Forensic FOSS: 4n6k_volatility_installer.sh - Install Volatility For Linux Automatically

Introducing FORENSIC FOSS! These posts will consist of open source software for use in everyday forensic investigations.

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[UPDATE #01 11/12/2015]: Volatility 2.5 was released recently. A standalone Linux executable is included with the 2.5 release. This installer is for Volatility 2.4. If you want to work with source code and get an idea of the dependencies needed by Volatility, review this installer's code. Otherwise, I'd recommend using the official Linux standalone executable. If you really want a working 2.5 installer update, see the fork of this project by @wzod).
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What Is It?
4n6k_volatility_installer.sh is a bash script that installs Volatility 2.4 (and all dependencies) for Ubuntu Linux with one command.

Why Do I Need It?
Compiling source on Linux can be a pain. Dependency hunting wastes time and drives people away from considering Linux builds of cross-platform software. With this script, you can (1) skip all of the dependency frustration, (2) get right into using the newest version of Volatility, and (3) leverage the arguably more powerful and versatile *nix shell. No longer do you have to worry about whether or not you "have everything."

What's Required?
An internet connection and an APT-based Linux distribution [for the time being]. This script has been tested on stock Ubuntu 12.04 and Ubuntu 14.04. Some testing has been done to support SIFT Workstation 3.0.

What Does It Do?
Specifically, 4n6k_volatility_installer.sh does the following:
  • Downloads, verifies, extracts, and installs source archives for everything you will need to complete a full installation of Volatility 2.4:
    • Volatility 2.4
    • diStorm3
    • Yara (+ magic module) + Yara-Python
    • PyCrypto
    • Python Imaging Library + Library Fixes
    • OpenPyxl
    • IPython
    • pytz
  •  Adds "vol.py" to your system PATH so that you can run Volatility from any location.
  • Checks to see if you are using SIFT 3.0 and applies some fixes. 

How Do I Use It?
Volatility will be installed to the directory you specify.
  • From a terminal, run: 
    • sudo bash 4n6k_volatility_installer.sh /home/dan
In the above example, the following directories will be created:
  • /home/dan/volatility_setup 
    • Contains dependency source code and the install_log.txt file.
  • /home/dan/volatility_2.4
    • Contains the Volatility 2.4 install.
You must enter a full path for your install directory.

Where Can I Download It?
You can find the full script at the bottom of this page.

Bottom Line?
Don't be afraid of the terminal. Read the source for this script and understand how it works. Automation is acceptable only after you understand what is happening behind the scenes.

I'm open to making this script better. If you see a problem with the code or can suggest improvements, let me know and I'll see what I can do.

Thanks to the Volatility team for writing an amazing tool. Go to http://www.volatilityfoundation.org for more info. Thanks to @The_IMOL, Joachim Metz, @dunit50, and @iMHLv2 for feedback.

#!/bin/bash

# 4n6k_volatility_installer.sh
# v1.1.0 (8/28/2014)
# Installs Volatility for Ubuntu Linux with one command.
# Run this script from the directory in which you'd like to install Volatility.
# Tested on stock Ubuntu 12.04 + 14.04 + SIFT 3
# More at http://www.4n6k.com + http://www.volatilityfoundation.org

# Copyright (C) 2014 4n6k (4n6k.dan@gmail.com)
# 
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
# modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
# as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
# of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
# 
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
# 
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
# Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA  02110-1301, USA.

# Define constants
PROGNAME="${0}"
INSTALL_DIR="${1}"
SETUP_DIR="${INSTALL_DIR}"/"volatility_setup"
LOGFILE="${SETUP_DIR}"/"install_vol.log"
ARCHIVES=('distorm3.zip' 'pycrypto-2.6.1.tar.gz' 'ipython-2.1.0.tar.gz' \
          '2.0.5.tar.gz' 'setuptools-5.7.tar.gz' 'Imaging-1.1.7.tar.gz' \
          'v3.1.0.tar.gz' 'volatility-2.4.tar.gz'                       )
HASHES=('2cd594169fc96b4442056b7494c09153' '55a61a054aa66812daf5161a0d5d7eda' \
        '785c7b6364c6a0dd34aa4ea970cf83b9' '05df2ec474a40afd5f84dff94392e36f' \
        '81f980854a239d60d074d6ba052e21ed' 'fc14a54e1ce02a0225be8854bfba478e' \
        '1d4bb952a4f72cd985a2e59e5306f277' '4f9ad730fb2174c90182cc29cb249d20' )

# Program usage dialog
usage() {
  echo -e "\nHere is an example of how you should run this script:"
  echo -e "  > sudo bash ${PROGNAME} /home/4n6k"
  echo -e "Result: Volatility will be installed to /home/4n6k/volatility_2.4"
  echo -e "***NOTE*** Be sure to use a FULL PATH for the install directory.\n"
}

# Usage check; determine if usage should be printed
chk_usage() {
  if [[ "${INSTALL_DIR}" =~ ^(((-{1,2})([Hh]$|[Hh][Ee][Ll][Pp]$))|$) ]]; then
    usage ; exit 1
  elif ! [[ "${INSTALL_DIR}" =~ ^/.*+$ ]]; then
    usage ; exit 1
  else
    :
  fi
}

# Status header for script progress
status() {
  echo ""
  phantom "===================================================================="
  phantom "#  ${*}"
  phantom "===================================================================="
  echo ""
}

# Setup for initial installation environment
setup() {
  if [[ -d "${SETUP_DIR}" ]]; then
    echo "" ; touch "${LOGFILE}"
    phantom "Setup directory already exists. Skipping..."
  else
    mkdir -p "${SETUP_DIR}" ; touch "${LOGFILE}"
    echo "/usr/local/lib" >> /etc/ld.so.conf.d/volatility.conf
  fi
  cd "${SETUP_DIR}"
}

# Download Volatility and its dependencies
download() {
  if [[ -a "${ARCHIVES[7]}" && $(md5sum "${ARCHIVES[7]}" | cut -d' ' -f1) \
    == "${HASHES[7]}" ]]; then
      phantom "Files already downloaded. Skipping..."
  else
    phantom "This will take a while. Tailing install_vol.log for progress..."
    tail_log
    wget -o "${LOGFILE}" \
      "https://distorm.googlecode.com/files/distorm3.zip" \
      "https://ftp.dlitz.net/pub/dlitz/crypto/pycrypto/pycrypto-2.6.1.tar.gz" \
      "https://github.com/plusvic/yara/archive/v3.1.0.tar.gz" \
      "http://effbot.org/downloads/Imaging-1.1.7.tar.gz" \
      "https://pypi.python.org/packages/source/s/setuptools/setuptools-5.7.tar.gz" \
      "https://bitbucket.org/openpyxl/openpyxl/get/2.0.5.tar.gz" \
      "https://github.com/ipython/ipython/releases/download/rel-2.1.0/ipython-2.1.0.tar.gz" \
      "http://downloads.volatilityfoundation.org/releases/2.4/volatility-2.4.tar.gz"
    kill_tail
  fi
}

# Verify md5 hashes of the downloaded archives
verify() {
  local index=0
  for hard_md5 in "${HASHES[@]}"; do
    local archive ; archive="${ARCHIVES[$index]}"
    local archive_md5 ; archive_md5=$(md5sum "${archive}" | cut -d' ' -f1)
    if [[ "$hard_md5" == "$archive_md5" ]]; then
      phantom "= Hash MATCH for ${archive}."
      let "index++"
    else
      phantom "= Hash MISMATCH for ${archive}. Exiting..."
      exit 0
    fi
  done
}

# Extract the downloaded archives
extract() {
  for archive in "${ARCHIVES[@]}"; do
    local ext ; ext=$(echo "${archive}" | sed 's|.*\.||')
    if [[ "${ext}" =~ ^(tgz|gz)$ ]]; then
      tar -xvf "${archive}"
    elif [[ "${ext}" == "zip" ]]; then
      unzip "${archive}"
    else
      :
    fi
  done
} >>"${LOGFILE}"

# Install Volatility and its dependencies
install() {
  # Python
    aptget_install
  # distorm3
    cd distorm3 && py_install
  # pycrypto
    cd pycrypto-2.6.1 && py_install
  # yara + yara-python
    cd yara-3.1.0 && chmod +x bootstrap.sh && ./bootstrap.sh && \
      ./configure --enable-magic ; make ; make install
    cd yara-python && py_install && ldconfig && cd "${SETUP_DIR}"
  # OpenPyxl
    cd setuptools-5.7 && python ez_setup.py && cd "${SETUP_DIR}"
    cd openpyxl-openpyxl-2ed17dbd3445 && py_install
  # Python Imaging Library
    ln -s -f /lib/$(uname -i)-linux-gnu/libz.so.1 /usr/lib/
    ln -s -f /usr/lib/$(uname -i)-linux-gnu/libfreetype.so.6 /usr/lib/
    ln -s -f /usr/lib/$(uname -i)-linux-gnu/libjpeg.so.8 /usr/lib/
  # pytz
    easy_install --upgrade pytz
  # iPython
    cd ipython-2.1.0 && py_install
  # SIFT 3.0 check + fix
    sift_fix
  # Volatility
    mv -f volatility-2.4 .. ; cd ../volatility-2.4 && chmod +x vol.py
    ln -f -s "${PWD}"/vol.py /usr/local/bin/vol.py
    kill_tail
} &>>"${LOGFILE}"

# Shorthand for make/install routine
make_install() {
  ./configure; make; make install; cd ..
}

# Shorthand for build/install Python routine
py_install() {
  python setup.py build install; cd ..
}

# Log script progress graphically
tail_log() {
  if [[ -d /usr/bin/X11 ]]; then
    xterm -e "tail -F ${LOGFILE} | sed "/kill_tail/q" && pkill -P $$ tail;" &
  else
  phantom "No GUI detected. Still running; not showing progress..."
  fi
}

# Kill the graphical script progress window
kill_tail() {
  echo -e "kill_tail" >> "${LOGFILE}"
}

# Install required packages from APT
aptget_install() {
  apt-get update
  apt-get install \
    build-essential libreadline-gplv2-dev libjpeg8-dev zlib1g zlib1g-dev \
    libgdbm-dev libc6-dev libbz2-dev libfreetype6-dev libtool automake \
    python-dev libjansson-dev libmagic-dev -y --force-yes
}

# Shorthand for done message
done_msg() {
  phantom "Done."
}

# Check for SIFT 3.0 and fix
sift_fix() {
  if [[ -d /usr/share/sift ]]; then
    apt-get install libxml2 libxml2-dev libxslt1.1 libxslt1-dev -y --force-yes
    pip install lxml --upgrade
  else
    :
  fi
}

# Text echo enhancement
phantom() {
  msg="${1}"
    if [[ "${msg}" =~ ^=.*+$ ]]; then 
      speed=".01" 
    else 
      speed=".03"
    fi
  let lnmsg=$(expr length "${msg}")-1
  for (( i=0; i <= "${lnmsg}"; i++ )); do
    echo -n "${msg:$i:1}" | tee -a "${LOGFILE}"
    sleep "${speed}"
  done ; echo ""
}

# Main program execution flow
main() {
  chk_usage
  setup
  status "Downloading Volatility 2.4 and dependency source code..."
    download && done_msg
  status "Verifying archive hash values..."
    verify && done_msg
  status "Extracting archives..."
    extract && done_msg
  status "Installing Volatility and dependencies..."
    phantom "This will take a while. Tailing install_vol.log for progress..."
      tail_log
      install ; done_msg
  status "Finished. You can now run "vol.py" from anywhere."
  phantom "Volatility location: ${PWD}"
  phantom "Dependency location: ${SETUP_DIR}"
  echo ""
}

main "$@"

8 comments:

Joachim Metz said...

FYI technically the script it is not FOSS since you did not give it a FOSS license.

Michael Hale Ligh said...

Nice job Dan! I'm sure this will really come in handy for a lot of people. We considered releasing pre-compiled Linux binaries of Volatility 2.4 (similar to the Windows and Mac standalone versions) but didn't get a chance to thoroughly test them. If you're interested in building or testing such a thing, let me know. I'll also run your script on some of my Linux machines and let you know how it goes.

Anonymous said...

@Joachim: You're right. The original repo had a GPLv2 license. When I re-created it, I forgot to add the license again. I'll find a way to add it.

@MHL: Thanks. I think that would be useful. I thought about making this work across different distros, but didn't want to pre-compile something, as it might be frowned upon by those who want to know exactly what's in the binary. I took this route so that people could look at the source and verify what was being downloaded and where it was coming from. That said, this only works on APT-based machines, as I wasn't sure which distros were worth covering. I know Ubuntu is often the distro of choice, so I decided to focus on that.

If you do decide to go the pre-compiled route, I could help test it.

Joachim Metz said...

Just add the GPLv2 license file to the repo and the source header
http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.html
http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.html

So a couple of issue you want to be wary of:
* check for the existence of any of the tools your script relies on, e.g. wget, apt-get
* Instead of: echo "/usr/local/lib" >> /etc/ld.so.conf, use /etc/ld.so.conf.d/volatility (or equiv)

Anonymous said...

@Joachim: Thanks for the pointers. I'll go ahead with those suggestions. It's extremely valuable to receive feedback from people who have been down this road many times before. There are some assumptions made in regard to what is already installed on the target machine, but I see the value in doing those checks. If there are any other best practices I am missing, please let me know.

Anonymous said...

nice tool bro - came in handy today...btw - welcome aboard - do u have a passport?

Anonymous said...

Thank's :)

Anonymous said...

Thanks :)
This was very helpful!

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