Am 21.11.19 um 13:59 schrieb Odo Poppinger:
Am 20.11.19 um 12:29 schrieb Elmar Stellnberger:
debcheckroot is targeted at technically experienced users. No way to
hunt rootkits authored by the NSA otherwise. You have to be a tough
user to take this challenge! Well you can of course also use it for
other kinds of rootkits by other governments or from criminals but
interpreting the results requires some kind of knowledge about a
Linux system. You need to know what the kernel is, what an initrd is,
what you can find under /bin, /usr/bin, /sbin and /usr/sbin.
The tool has primarily been written against 5 eyes rootkits but I
think it is still missing some features to take this challenge. f.i.
it should be possible to unpack *.deb-s in an own boot run, separate
from downloading and verification. That would shield against attacks
targeted at the unpacking which affect the very system debcheckroot
runs on. Supporting file only repos for customly downloaded and
installed packages like my printer driver would also be an issue.
Why not simply use sha256 - lists as can already be used and generated
with debcheckroot (as far as I have seen)? That would resolve the
problem of a possible infection of the host system running
debcheckroot because there are no archives that need to be unpacked
when using plain sha256 file lists. We would only need some official
support by Debian for this, i.e. someone who creates/updates these
sha256 lists every time the updates repository is updated and puts
them online in a publicly known place.
Yes, that is a very good idea!:
* debcheckroot with sha256-lists is considerably faster because it does
not need to download and unpack all packages
* unknown/forgotten packages of elder versions could still be checked
because the sha256sums are not forgotten
* You can generate sha256sums incrementally with debcheckroot, i.e.
extend an existing list only for the new packages