UNHIDE(8) | System Manager's Manual | UNHIDE(8) |
unhide — forensic tool to find hidden processes
unhide [OPTIONS] TEST_LIST
unhide-posix proc | sys
unhide is a forensic tool to find processes hidden by rootkits, Linux kernel modules or by other techniques. It detects hidden processes using six techniques.
Options are only available for unhide-linux not for unhide-posix.
The checks to do consist of one or more of the following tests.
The standard tests are the aggregation of one or more elementary test(s).
Standard tests :
The brute technique consists of bruteforcing the all
process IDs.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The proc technique consists of comparing /proc with the output of /bin/ps.
The procall technique combinates proc and procfs tests.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The procfs technique consists of comparing information
gathered from /bin/ps with information gathered by walking in the procfs.
With -m option, this test makes more checks, see checkchdir
test.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The quick technique combines the proc, procfs and sys
techniques in a quick way. It's about 20 times faster but may give more
false positives.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The reverse technique consists of verifying that all
threads seen by ps are also seen in procfs and by system calls. It is
intended to verify that a rootkit has not killed a security tool (IDS or
other) and make ps showing a fake process instead.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The sys technique consists of comparing information gathered from /bin/ps with information gathered from system calls.
Elementary tests :
The checkbrute technique consists of bruteforcing the all
process IDs.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The checkchdir technique consists of comparing information
gathered from /bin/ps with information gathered by making chdir() in the
procfs.
With the -m option, it also verify that the thread appears in its
"leader process" threads list.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The checkgetaffinity technique consists of comparing
information gathered from /bin/ps with the result of call to the
sched_getaffinity() system function.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The checkgetparam technique consists of comparing
information gathered from /bin/ps with the result of call to the
sched_getparam() system function.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The checkgetpgid technique consists of comparing
information gathered from /bin/ps with the result of call to the getpgid()
system function.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The checkgetprio technique consists of comparing
information gathered from /bin/ps with the result of call to the
getpriority() system function.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The checkRRgetinterval technique consists of comparing
information gathered from /bin/ps with the result of call to the
sched_rr_get_interval() system function.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The checkgetsched technique consists of comparing
information gathered from /bin/ps with the result of call to the
sched_getscheduler() system function.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The checkgetsid technique consists of comparing information
gathered from /bin/ps with the result of call to the getsid() system
function.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The checkkill technique consists of comparing information
gathered from /bin/ps with the result of call to the kill() system function.
Note : no process is really killed by this test.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The checknoprocps technique consists of comparing the
result of the call to each of the system functions. No comparison is done
against /proc or the output of ps.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The checkopendir technique consists of comparing
information gathered from /bin/ps with information gathered by making
opendir() in the procfs.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The checkproc technique consists of comparing /proc with
the output of /bin/ps.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The checkquick technique combines the proc, procfs and sys
techniques in a quick way. It's about 20 times faster but may give more
false positives.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The checkreaddir technique consists of comparing
information gathered from /bin/ps with information gathered by making
readdir() in /proc and /proc/pid/task.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The checkreverse technique consists of verifying that all
threads seen by ps are also seen in procfs and by system calls. It is
intended to verify that a rootkit has not killed a security tool (IDS or
other) and make ps showing a fake process instead.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The checksysinfo technique consists of comparing the number
of process seen by /bin/ps with information obtained from sysinfo() system
call.
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
The checksysinfo2 technique is an alternate version of
checksysinfo test. It might (or not) work better on kernel patched for RT,
preempt or latency and with kernel that don't use the standard scheduler.
It's also invoked by standard tests when using the -r option
This technique is only available with version unhide-linux.
Report unhide bugs on the bug tracker on GitHub
(https://github.com/YJesus/Unhide/issues)
With recent versions of Linux kernel (> 2.6.33), the sysinfo test may
report false positives. It may be due to optimization in the scheduler, the
use of cgroup or even the use of systemd. The use of the PREEMPT-RT patch
amplifies the occurrence of the problem. This is currently under
investigation.
unhide-tcp (8).
This manual page was written by Francois Marier
(francois@debian.org) and Patrick Gouin (patrickg.github@free.fr).
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under
the terms of the GNU General Public License, Version 3 or any later version
published by the Free Software Foundation.
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.
June 2022 | Administration commands |