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SqliteFind is a Volatility plugin for finding sqlite database rows. It can automatically find database schemas in sqlite_master tables, and recover database rows from memory.

Installing

"sqlitefind.py" must be in the plugin path and "sqlitetools.py" must be importable. You should either add this directory to your volatility plugin path, or add a link to these files inside the volatility plugin folder.

Requires the YARA Python API. Try installing the pip package "yara-python". Running "import yara" should work in the Python shell.

Basic Usage

Find tables:

$ volatility -f <memory file> sqlitefindtables

Recover table rows:

$ volatility -f <memory file> sqlitefind -t <table name>

For a guided tour, see the Tutorial.

See below for the common options, or use --help for a complete list of options.

sqlitefindtables Command

Searches for an sqlite_master table and shows the schemas found in them.

$ volatility -f <memory file> sqlitefindtables

Use -R/--raw-sql to output the schema in raw SQL.

sqlitefind Command

Searches for database rows in memory, given the table schema. There are a few ways to specify the schema. You can specify the table name, in which case the schema matching the table name will be searched for in an sqlite_master table:

$ volatility -f <memory file> sqlitefind -t <table name>

Alternatively, you can specify the table schema manually:

$ volatility -f <memory file> sqlitefind 
             -c "id:int,null; place_name:string; visited:bool"

Schema strings are output from sqlitefindtables, so you can just copy from there and modify if needed. Each column, separated by a semicolon, is a comma separated list of types. If a column starts with name:, then name is used as the column name. You can use the following types:

One thing to notice is that NULL is not allowed by default. Make sure to add null to your type list if it is a possible value.

Output Format

You can include different values in the output using the "-O" option, which is a comma separated list of:

For example, to show the memory address of the row followed by the values:

$ volatility -f <memory file> sqlitefind \
             -c "int,null; string; bool" \
             -O "address,all_values"

CSV output is also supported, using "--output=csv":

$ volatility -f <memory file> sqlitefind \
             -c "id:int,null; field1:string; field2:bool" \
             -O "address,values" \
             --output=csv --output-file=data.csv

Limitations

Needle Size - Based on the table schema, we may not be able to find a suitable sequence of bytes to search for. The smaller the needle size, the slower the search will take.

Large Records - If a record does not fit in one B-Tree cell, it will be either missed or corrupted. This is because the rows are searched without using any database header information. If a row is large enough to be split between multiple pages, we can only find the data from the first page. After that, we will either read garbage data, or encounter an error and assume that it's not a real row.

False positives - There are a lot of checks to make the data parsed is actually a row, but especially when there are not many columns, false positives can be found. Usually false positives are easy to recognize by hand. They typically contain many NULL values (None) and strings will contain nonsensical data.

About

Written by Michael Brown as a project for the Computer Forensics class taught by Fabian Monrose at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill. Feel free to contact me at michael@msbrown.net, or start an issue on GitHub.

The idea of searching for sqlite database rows in memory is based on Dave Lassalle's (@superponible) firefox volatility plugins, which can find firefox and chromium data in memory. I wanted to generalize the idea so no code would need to be updated when a schema changes, and any sqlite database could be recovered.