Awesome
ese-analyst
The tool ese2csv is intended to make analyzing and dumping any ese file simple. Its options are
C:\>ese2csv.exe --help
usage: ese2csv.exe [-h] [--make-plugin] [--pluggin CONFIG] [--outpath OUTPATH]
[--acquire-live] [--verbose] [--list-tables] [--recurse]
[--dump-tables [DUMPTABLES [DUMPTABLES ...]]]
[--plugin-args [PLUGINARGS [PLUGINARGS ...]]]
ese_file
Find and dump ESE databases.
positional arguments:
ese_file This required file name is an ese database
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--make-plugin, -m Produce an editable shell of a plugin for the
specified ese.
--pluggin CONFIG, -p CONFIG
Use a plugin that defines fields in the ese database.
--outpath OUTPATH, -o OUTPATH
The directory to which the CSV(s) will be written.
--acquire-live, -a Use FGET to extract locked file for processing.
--verbose, -v Generate Verbose output for debugging.
--list-tables, -l List all tables in the ese.
--recurse, -r Recurse subdirectories to find ese in path.
--dump-tables [DUMPTABLES [DUMPTABLES ...]], -d [DUMPTABLES [DUMPTABLES ...]]
Only dump tables listed here separated by spaces. End
this list with double dash if this is not followed by
additional optional arguments. --.
--plugin-args [PLUGINARGS [PLUGINARGS ...]]
Arguments passed to plugin. End arguments with double
dash if this is not followed by additional optional
arguments. --.
The idea of ese2csv is to allow you to dump the data from any ESE database that the libesedb engine can read. However, you can also create a "plugin" for the ese file with the -m option that allows you to use YAML to define the formats for fields, gives them friendly names and provides functions for processing the database. The tool is distributed with two plugin. The srudb_plugin.py can be used to dump the srum database. spartan_plugin.py is a beta of dumping Edge spartan files that took me 30 minutes to put together with the -m option! The tool supports wildcards and directory recursion so you can search your drive and let the tool extract what ever it can find. The tool assumes the plugins are in the same directory as the executable.
Two slightly confusing argument are -d and -p. Both of those can be followed by multiple parameters. For example, -d can be followed by multiple table names separated by spaces. ese2csv will dump each of those table names. -p can be followed by multiple plugin arguments. All of them will be passed on to the plugin for processing. So how does the ese2csv.exe command line know when your done with your list of table names or plugin arguments? With Python programs you end these list by providing another optional argument. If you use -p or -d as the last argument before the name of your ese file then you end the list with double dash (--).
Dump all the tables in the the specified srudb.dat file to csv_files (default). Acquire a copy of the locked srudb.dat file before use (-a). Ignored tables specified by the YAML and use Table, Field names specified in in the srudb_plugin.py (-p srudb_plugin). Also tell the plugin to live acquire the software registry hive (--plugin-args LIVE) . Output all of the CSV files to the root of the file system (-o c:)
C:>ese2csv.exe -p srudb_plugin -o c:\ -a --plugin-args LIVE -- C:\Windows\System32\sru\srudb.dat
Same as above but provide the name of the SOFTWARE registry hive to the plugin and write to the current directory.
C:>ese2csv.exe -p srudb_plugin -a --plugin-args C:\SOFTWARE -- C:\Windows\System32\sru\srudb.dat
List the tables (-l) in an ese database. File must not be locked by the OS. If it is use -a (acquire).
C:>ese2csv.exe -l C:\Windows\SoftwareDistribution\DataStore\DataStore.edb
C:\Windows\SoftwareDistribution\DataStore\DataStore.edb True
Table MSysObjects has 479 records
Table MSysObjectsShadow has 479 records
Table MSysObjids has 59 records
Table MSysLocales has 8 records
Table tbAUState has 0 records
Table tbCcrDownloadData has 0 records
Table tbComputerInfo has 0 records
Table tbDownloadJob has 0 records
Table tbEula has 0 records
Table tbFiles has 704 records
Table tbHistory has 71 records
Table tbServerConfig has 2 records
Table tbServerCookies has 27 records
Table tbServiceData has 3 records
Table tbScanTransInfo has 2 records
Table tbStoreVersion has 1 records
Table tbUpdateLocalizedProps has 950 records
Table tbUpdates has 2707 records
Table tbHiddenUpdates has 0 records
Table tbLocalUserIds has 1 records
Table tbTimers has 1 records
Table tbSLSData has 4 records
Table tbPerSrvUpdate9116a23d9de3a64d8a4bb43877bcb1b7 has 0 records
Table tbPerSrvUserUpdateData9116a23d9de3a64d8a4bb43877bcb1b7 has 0 records
Table tbPerSrvUpdateb4f4829443e3b643b1709a65bc822c77 has 1964 records
Table tbPerSrvUserUpdateDatab4f4829443e3b643b1709a65bc822c77 has 0 records
Table tbPerSrvUpdate7c8a5e85b4eca34cb0451dfa50104289 has 713 records
Table tbPerSrvUserUpdateData7c8a5e85b4eca34cb0451dfa50104289 has 0 records
Find all *.edb files in c:\ and list their table contents. Recurse (-r) all subdirectories and acquire live files (-a) with FGET before you list tables (-l).
C:\> ese2csv.exe -ral "C:\*.edb"
TABLE LISTING FOR ESE FILE C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Search\Data\Applications\Windows\Windows.edb
Table MSysObjects has 858 records
Table MSysObjectsShadow has 858 records
Table MSysObjids has 55 records
Table MSysLocales has 8 records
Table CatalogManager_Properties has 0 records
Table CatalogStorageManager has 1 records
Table SystemIndex_Gthr has 3170 records
Table SystemIndex_GthrPth has 292 records
Table SystemIndex_1_Properties has 225 records
Table SystemIndex_1 has 18 records
<TRUNCATED>
Recursivly (-r) go through every *.edb file in c:. Acquire (-a) a copy of the locked file. Find the table named tbTimers in one of them and dump (-d) it.
C:\Users\Win10Lab\Desktop>ese2csv.exe -rad tbTimers -- "C:\*.edb"
Processing tbTimers
C:\Users\Win10Lab\Desktop>type tbTimers.csv
TimerId,ExpirationTime,IdleOnly,NetworkOnly
b'e763a82909861e4db7cd5668f857f1db',b'31354874915ed501',0,0
Dump the dbTimers table without a plugin specifying the full path. Since no -a is provided the file must not be locked by the OS.
C:>ese2csv.exe -d tbTimers -- C:\Windows\SoftwareDistribution\DataStore\DataStore.edb
C:\Windows\SoftwareDistribution\DataStore\DataStore.edb True
Processing tbTimers
C:>type tbTimers.csv
TimerId,ExpirationTime,IdleOnly,NetworkOnly
b'e763a82909861e4db7cd5668f857f1db',b'eaaadd49c85dd501',0,0
Make (-m) a srum plugin template (which requires editing)
C:>ese2csv.exe -ma c:\windows\system32\sru\srudb.dat > srudb_plugin.py
After editing the YAML and functions in the new srum plugin use it (-p) to list new friendly table names
C:>ese2csv.exe -p srudb_plugin -l srudb.dat
srudb.dat True
Table MSysObjects aka MSysObjects has 262 records
Table MSysObjectsShadow aka MSysObjectsShadow has 262 records
Table MSysObjids aka MSysObjids has 41 records
Table MSysLocales aka MSysLocales has 7 records
Table SruDbIdMapTable aka SruDbIdMapTable has 33946 records
Table SruDbCheckpointTable aka SruDbCheckpointTable has 0 records
Table {D10CA2FE-6FCF-4F6D-848E-B2E99266FA89} aka Application Resources has 122856 records
Table {DD6636C4-8929-4683-974E-22C046A43763} aka Network Connections has 2599 records
Table {FEE4E14F-02A9-4550-B5CE-5FA2DA202E37} aka Energy Usage has 1736 records
Table {973F5D5C-1D90-4944-BE8E-24B94231A174} aka Network Usage has 14445 records
Table {FEE4E14F-02A9-4550-B5CE-5FA2DA202E37}LT aka Energy Usage (Long-Term) has 126 records
Table {D10CA2FE-6FCF-4F6D-848E-B2E99266FA86} aka Application Resource Usage has 3719 records
Table {DA73FB89-2BEA-4DDC-86B8-6E048C6DA477} aka Unknown4 has 13778 records
Table {5C8CF1C7-7257-4F13-B223-970EF5939312} aka Unknown1 has 16982 records
Table {7ACBBAA3-D029-4BE4-9A7A-0885927F1D8F} aka Unknown2 has 1544 records
Table {B6D82AF1-F780-4E17-8077-6CB9AD8A6FC4} aka Unknown3 has 98 records
And dump a table based on its friendly name
C:>ese2csv.exe -p srudb_config -d "Network Usage" -- srudb.dat
srudb.dat True
Processing Network Usage
Creating a plugin.
I know this needs to be flushed out more but here is some basic documentation.
Start out your plugins with the -m option and redirecting it to a file. Then edit the plugin and customize the output. This example creates a plugin for the srudb.dat file.
C:>ese2csv.exe -ma c:\windows\system32\sru\srudb.dat > srudb_plugin.py
You can place four "call back" functions in your plugin that are executed automatically by ese2csv.
- plugin_init(ese_database) - This function will receive one argument. The ese_database. It is called when the program first loads and can be used to setup data structures that other functions depend upon.
- plugin_modify_header(list_of_headers, table_name) - This function is called after the headers are read from the ESE database before they are written to the CSV. This is your chance to add or change the headers.
- plugin_modify_row(list_of_row_values, table_name) - This function is called for every row in the ESE before itis written to the CSV. This is your chance to add to or modify rows. This is also where you can accumulate values or do additional processing or row data.
- plugin_end_of_file(csv_writer_object, table_name) - This function is called before the csv file is closed. Write your accumulated values or clean up data structures.
There are also built in functions that are available inside the plugin for you to call
- lookup("yaml table name", value) - Will lookup the value in the the specified YAML lookup table (defined in the yaml or by table_reference entries).
- extract_live_file(live_path) - Takes in a path to a file locked by the OS and returns a path to an unlocked copy that was extracted with FGET.EXE
- smart_retrieve(ese_db, rownum, colnum) - Retrieves the specified row and column from the ese database
- blob_to_string(bytes) - Attempts to convert the bytes into a string
- ole_timestamp(bytes) - Takes in bytes and interprets it as an OLE timestamp
- file_timestamp(bytes) - Takes in bytes and interprets it as a File Timestamp
- args - The variable args is a list containing the arguments passwd to --plugin-args on the CLI
You can also create your own functions. These functions are called by setting the format fields in the YAML. See srudb_plugin for example.
YAML format field can be in the form of:
-
None - Do Nothing to data. Put in CSV as is.
-
function:function_name - Call function_name and pass it the data. Put what is returned in the CSV
-
lookup:YAML_LOOKUP_TABLE - Call lookup("YAML_LOOKUP_TABLE", current_value) and put what is returned in the CSV.