Chapter 18. Audit Trail Analysis

In computer forensics, the computer is your crime scene. But unlike a human autopsy, computer pathologists often deal with live computers that give signs that something is amiss. This chapter deals with log analysis, which can be considered a branch of forensics (see Chapter 22). Since logs are so important, we have decided to cover them in a standalone chapter.

What are some examples of logfiles? We can classify logfiles by the device that produces them, since the device usually determines the type of information contained in the files. For example, host logfiles (produced by various flavors of Unix and Linux, Windows NT/2000/XP, VMS, etc.) are different from network appliance logs (produced by Cisco, Nortel, and Lucent routers, switches, and other network gear). Similarly, security appliance logs (such as from firewalls, intrusion detection systems, anti-DoS devices, intrusion “prevention” systems, etc.) are very different from both host and network logs. In fact, the security devices manifest an amazing diversity in what they can log and the format in which they do it. Ranging in function from simply recording IP addresses all the way to full network packet traffic capture, security devices usually produce an amazing wealth of interesting information, both relevant and totally irrelevant to the incident at hand. How do we find what is relevant for the crisis du jour? How can we learn about intrusions—past, and even future—from the logs? Is it realistic ...

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