NAME¶
md5deep - Compute and compare MD5 message digests
sha1deep - Compute and compare SHA-1 message digests
sha256deep - Compute and compare SHA-256 message digests
tigerdeep - Compute and compare Tiger message digests
whirlpooldeep - Compute and compare Whirlpool message digests
SYNOPSIS¶
md5deep -v | -V | -h
md5deep [-m|-M|-x|-X <file>] [-a|-A <hash>] [-f <file>]
[-p <size>] [-i <size>] [-tnwzresS0lbkqZud] [-F <bum>] [-o
<fbcplsde>] [-j <num>] [[
FILES]
DESCRIPTION¶
Computes the hashes, or message digest, for any number of files while optionally
recursively digging through the directory structure. Can also take a list of
known hashes and display the filenames of input files whose hashes either do
or do not match any of the known hashes. Errors are reported to standard
error. If no FILES are specified, reads from standard input.
- -p <size>
- Piecewise mode. Breaks files into chunks before hashing.
Chunks may be specified using IEC multipliers b, k, m, g, t, p, or e.
(Never let it be said that the author didn't plan ahead!) This mode cannot
be used with the -z mode.
- -i|-I <size>
- Size threshold mode. Only hash files smaller than the given
the threshold. In -i mode, simply omits those files larger than the
threshold. In -I mode, displays all files, but uses asterisks for the
hashes of files larger than the threshold. Sizes may be specified using
IEC multipliers b, k, m, g, t, p, or e.
- -r
- Enables recursive mode. All subdirectories are traversed.
Please note that recursive mode cannot be used to examine all files of a
given file extension. For example, calling md5deep -r *.txt will examine
all files in directories that end in .txt.
- -e
- Displays a progress indicator and estimate of time
remaining for each file being processed. Time estimates for files larger
than 4GB are not available on Windows. This mode may not be used with th
-p mode.
- -m <file>
- Enables matching mode. The file given should be a list of
known hashes. The input files are examined one at a time, and only those
files that match the list of known hashes are output. This flag may be
used more than once to add multiple sets of known hashes. Acceptable
formats for lists of known hashes are plain (such as those generated by
md5deep or md5sum), Hashkeeper files, iLook, and the National Software
Reference Library (NSRL) as produced by the National Institute for
Standards in Technology.
If standard input is used with the -m flag, displays
"stdin" if the input matches one of the hashes in the list of
known hashes. If the hash does not match, the program displays no output.
This flag may not be used in conjunction with the -x, -X, or -A
flags. See the section "UNICODE SUPPORT" below.
- -x <file>
- Same as the -m flag above, but does negative matching. That
is, only those files NOT in the list of known hashes are displayed.
This flag may not be used in conjunction with the -m, -M, or -a
flags. See the section "UNICODE SUPPORT" below.
- -M and -X <file>
- Same as -m and -x above, but displays the hash for each
file that does (or does not) match the list of known hashes.
- -a <hash>
- Adds a single hash to the list of known hashes used for
matching mode, and if not already enabled, enables matching mode. Adding
single hashes cannot, by itself, be used to print the hashes of matching
files like the -M flag does. When used in conjunction with the -w flag,
the filename displayed is just the hash submitted on the command line.
This flag may not be used in conjunction with the -x, -X, or -A
flags.
- -A <hash>
- Same as -a above, but does negative matching. This flag may
not be used in conjunction with the -m, -M, or -A flags.
- -f <file>
- Takes a list of files to be hashed from the specified file.
Each line is assumed to be a filename. This flag can only be used once per
invocation. If it's used a second time, the second instance will clobber
the first.
Note that you can still use other flags, such as the -m or -x modes, and
submit additional FILES on the command line.
- -w
- During any of the matching modes (-m,-M,-x,or -X), displays
the filename of the known hash that matched the input file. See the
section "UNICODE SUPPORT" below.
- -t
- Display a timestamp in GMT with each result. On Windows
this timestamp will be the file's creation time. On all other systems it
should be the file's change time.
- -n
- During any of the matching modes (-m,-M,-x,or -X), displays
only the filenames of any known hashes that were not matched by any of the
input files.
- -s
- Enables silent mode. All error messages are supressed.
- -S
- Like silent mode, but still displays warnings on improperly
formatted hashes in the list of known hashes.
- -z
- Enables file size mode. Prepends the hash with a ten digit
representation of the size of each file processed. If the file size is
greater than 9999999999 bytes (about 9.3GB) the program displays
9999999999 for the size.
- -q
- Quiet mode. File names are omitted from the output.
- -Z
- Produces output in Triage format. Each line contans the
file's size, a tab, a hash of the first 512 bytes, a tab, the hash of the
complete file, a tab, and the file name. These values are intended in
increasing order of specificity. That is, two files with different sizes
cannot possibly match. This is a fast comparison and should be done first.
Next, two files with different partial hashes cannot possibly match. This
is often faster than hashing the whole file. Finally, if those two pieces
align, then it's worth reading and hashing the entire file.
- -0
- Uses a NULL character (/0) to terminate each line instead
of a newline. Useful for processing filenames with strange characters.
- -l
- Enables relative file paths. Instead of printing the
absolute path for each file, displays the relative file path as indicated
on the command line. This flag may not be used in conjunction with the -b
flag.
- -b
- Enables bare mode. Strips any leading directory information
from displayed filenames. This flag may not be used in conjunction with
the -l flag.
- -k
- Enables asterisk mode. An asterisk is inserted in lieu of a
second space between the filename and the hash, just like md5sum in its
binary (-b) mode.
- -c
- Enables comma separated values output, or CSV mode. This
mode has the side effect of removing the 10 digit size limitation from -z
mode. Also note that asterisks from -k mode are not displayed when in CSV
mode.
- -o <bcpflsd>
- Enables expert mode. Allows the user specify which (and
only which) types of files are processed. Directory processing is still
controlled with the -r flag. The expert mode options allowed are:
f - Regular files
b - Block Devices
c - Character Devices
p - Named Pipes
l - Symbolic Links
s - Sockets
d - Solaris Doors
e - Windows PE executables
- -jnn
- Controls multi-threading. By default the program will
create one producer thread to scan the file system and one hashing thread
per CPU core. Multi-threading causes output filenames to be in
non-deterministic order, as files that take longer to hash will be delayed
while they are hashed. If a deterministic order is required, specify
-j0 to disable multi-threading
- -d
- Output in Digital Forensics XML (DFXML) format.
- -u
- Quote Unicode output. For example, the snowman is shown as
U+C426.
- -F<bum>
- Specifies the input mode that is used to read files. The
default is -Fb (buffered I/O) which reads files with fopen().
Specifying -Fu will use unbuffered I/O and read the file with
open(). Specifying -Fm will use memory-mapped I/O which will be
faster on some platforms, but which (currently) will not work with files
that produce I/O errors.
- -h
- Show a help screen and exit.
- -v
- Show the version number and exit.
- -V
- Show copyright information and exit.
UNICODE SUPPORT¶
As of version 3.0 the program supports Unicode characters in filenames on
Microsoft Windows systems for filenames specified on the command line with
globbing (e.g. *), for files specified with the
-f of files to hash,
and for files read from directories using the
-r option.
By default all program input and output should be in UTF-8. The program
automatically converts this to UTF-16 for opening files).
On Unix/Linux/MacOS, you should use a terminal emulator that supports UTF-8 and
UTF-8 characters in filenames will be properly displayed.
On Windows, please note that the onsole is not capiable of displaying Unicode
characters. You must either redirect output to a file and open the file with
Wordpad (which can display Unicode), or you must specify the
-u option
to quote Unicode using standard
U+XXXX notation.
Currently the file name of a file containing known hashes may not be specified
as a unicode filename, but you can specify the name using tab completition or
an asterisk (e.g. md5deep -m *.txt where there is only one file with a .txt
extension).
RETURN VALUE¶
Returns a bit-wise value based on the success of the operation and the status of
any matching operations.
- 0
- Success. Note that the program considers itself successful
even when it encounters read errors, permission denied errors, or finds
directories when not in recursive mode.
- 1
- Unused hashes. Under any of the matching modes, returns
this value if one or more of the known hashes was not matched by any of
the input files.
- 2
- Unmatched inputs. Under any of the matching modes, returns
this value if one or more of the input values did not match any of the
known hashes.
- 64
- User error, such as trying to do both positive and negative
matching at the same time.
- 128
- Internal error, such as memory corruption or uncaught
cycle. All internal errors should be reported to the developer! See the
section "Reporting Bugs" below.
AUTHOR¶
md5deep was written by Jesse Kornblum, research@jessekornblum.com and Simson
Garfinkel.
KNOWN ISSUES¶
Using the -r flag cannot be used to recursively process all files of a given
extension in a directory. This is a feature, not a bug. If you need to do
this, use the
find(1) command.
REPORTING BUGS¶
We take all bug reports
very seriously. Any bug that jeopardizes the
forensic integrity of this program could have serious consequenses on people's
lives. When submitting a bug report, please include a description of the
problem, how you found it, and your contact information.
Send bug reports to the author at the address above.
COPYRIGHT¶
This program is a work of the US Government. In accordance with 17 USC 105,
copyright protection is not available for any work of the US Government. This
program is PUBLIC DOMAIN. Portions of this program contain code that is
licensed under the terms of the General Public License (GPL). Those portions
retain their original copyright and license. See the file COPYING for more
details.
There is NO warranty for this program; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS
FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
SEE ALSO¶
More information and installation instructions can be found in the README file.
Current versions of both documents can be found on the project homepage:
http://md5deep.sourceforge.net/
The MD5 specification, RFC 1321, is available at
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1321.txt
The SHA-1 specification, RFC 3174, is available at
http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc3174.html
The SHA-256 specification, FIPS 180-2, is available at
http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/fips/fips180-2/fips180-2.pdf
The Tiger specification is available at
http://www.cs.technion.ac.il/~biham/Reports/Tiger/
The Whirlpool specification is available at
http://planeta.terra.com.br/informatica/paulobarreto/WhirlpoolPage.html