On 14/01/21 11:56, Erik Poupaert wrote:
dpkg -V <package>
The reason why I am carrying out this audit is, however, because I somehow
suspect that the system could be compromised.
as suggested you can use debsums
you can also use
* to detect missing or unexplained files
cruft
Note: the output can be very very long, save it to a file and set the
--ignore flag to directory where you are sure there are no problems
* to detect rootkit
chkrootkit
rkhunter
If your system is compromised and try to understand from where they come
in or you want to check for vulnerability on your system you can use (I
never try these):
checksecurity
tiger
To see open security bugs on installed package:
debian-security-support
Note that, in theory, your system can be compromised with code in
RAM/GPU MEMORY/BIOS/UEFI/...
For RAM and similar you can solve restarting your PC with a trusted
system, but for others normally you are unable to check if something is
wrong and from that PC can be that you cannot start a trusted system
I'm not a security expert, but this thinks is very interesting...
Ciao
Davide