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MACTIME(1) General Commands Manual MACTIME(1)

NAME

mactime - Create an ASCII time line of file activity

SYNOPSIS

mactime [-b body ] [-g group file ] [-p password file ] [-i (day|hour) index file ] [-dhmVy] [-z TIME_ZONE ] [DATE_RANGE]

DESCRIPTION

mactime creates an ASCII time line of file activity based on the body file specified by '-b' or from STDIN. The time line is written to STDOUT. The body file must be in the time machine format that is created by 'ils -m', 'fls -m', or the mac-robber tool.

ARGUMENTS

Specify the location of a body file. This file must be generated by a tool such as 'fls -m' or 'ils -m'. The 'mac-robber' and 'grave-robber' tools can also be used to generate the file.
Specify the location of the group file. mactime will display the group name instead of the GID if this is given.
Specify the location of the passwd file. mactime will display the user name instead of the UID of this is given.
Specify the location of an index file to write to. The first argument specifies the granularity, either an hourly summary or daily. If the '-d' flag is given, then the summary will be separated by a ',' to import into a spread sheet.
Display timeline and index files in comma delimited format. This is used to import the data into a spread sheet for presentations or graphs.
Display header info about the session including time range, input source, and passwd or group files.
Display version to STDOUT.
The month is given as a number instead of name (does not work with -y).
The date is displayed in ISO8601 format.
The timezone from where the data was collected. The name of this argument is system dependent (examples include EST5EDT, GMT+1). Does not work with -y.
List valid timezones.
The range of dates to make the time line for. The standard format is yyyy-mm-dd for a starting date and no ending date. For an ending date, use yyyy-mm-dd..yyyy-mm-dd. Date can contain time, use format yyyy-mm-ddThh:mm:ss for starting and/or ending date.

LICENSE

The changes from mactime in TCT and mac-daddy are distributed under the Common Public License, found in the cpl1.0.txt file in the The Sleuth Kit licenses directory.

HISTORY

A version of mactime first appeared in The Coroner's Toolkit (TCT) (Dan Farmer) and later mac-daddy (Rob Lee).

AUTHOR

Brian Carrier <carrier at sleuthkit dot org>

Send documentation updates to <doc-updates at sleuthkit dot org>