VM Forensic Tools Remain MIA
By Edward L. Haletky
,
CIO
, 07/28/2008
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Computer forensics is an increasingly important field not only for investigating intrusions, hacks and data theft, but also
to help analyze the security of a physical or virtual machine that has not yet been compromised.
Unfortunately, there is as great a dearth of forensic tools within the virtual environment as there are in other areas of
virtual-server security.
Yes a Virtual Machine Disk File (VMDK) can be used by most if not all the forensics tools available from FTK, EnCase, Penguin SleuthKit, WinHex, etc.
Weak forensic capabilities are becoming more of a pressing issue, however. Forensics can be broken up into two parts, one
is acquisition, and the other is analysis. Some Forensics companies have tools that work within physical or virtual hosts
to do on the fly analysis of data and usage. Those will still work within the virtual environment.
My concern is with the acquisition of data once it is determined that further investigation is required. How do you currently
acquire a VMDK currently residing upon the Virtual Machine File System (VMFS)? If the VMDK resides on Windows or Linux file
systems or is shared via NFS the acquisition is easier as those are well understood file systems.
On the other hand a VMFS is not well understood, largely because VMware has not yet released its format like as it has for the VMDK.
Do you acquire the entire VMFS just to get one VMDK?
Do you acquire the single VMDK, if so, how can you do this in a forensically sound method?
How do you handle the large data stores used by virtual infrastructures? What if the VM spans multiple data stores and includes
Raw Disk Maps (direct LUN attachments), uses iSCSI Initiators, USB over IP, or NPIV SAN attachments?
If you do acquire the VMFS, how can you do it in a 100-percent read-only mode with no running VMs upon it? How can you ensure
the VMFS or VMDK is not changing during acquisition?
Assuming all these questions are answered, now we begin the analysis. Assuming you are starting from a VMFS, how would you
find the VMDK you want when the format is not known? Do we have to resort to trial and error?
Is it even possible for data to be hidden on a VMFS? If they are an administrator, of course it is. Thankfully a VM cannot
hide data on a VMFS, only within the bounds of the VMDK.
There is a need for better tools and information from VMware to make forensic acquisition and analysis a reality within the
virtual infrastructure.
There also needs to be proper processes and procedures in place that are acceptable by the forensic community.
So far neither the vendors nor the community has stepped in to fill the gap.
Virtualization expert Edward L. Haletky is the author of "VMWare ESX Server in the Enterprise: Planning and Securing Virtualization
Servers," Pearson Education (2008.) He recently left Hewlett-Packard, where he worked in the Virtualization, Linux, and High-Performance Technical Computing teams. Haletky owns AstroArch Consulting,
providing virtualization, security, and network consulting and development. Haletky is also a champion and moderator for the
VMware discussion forums, providing answers to security and configuration questions.
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