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analyzing-disk-image-with-autopsy

This Claude Code skill guides forensic investigators through comprehensive disk image analysis using Autopsy, a digital forensics platform. It covers environment setup, case creation, ingest module configuration, and file system examination using both Autopsy's GUI and Sleuth Kit command-line tools. Use this skill when examining forensic disk images in raw or EnCase format to recover deleted files, analyze metadata, search for keywords, and generate investigative reports for legal proceedings or security incidents.

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git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/mukul975/Anthropic-Cybersecurity-Skills /tmp/analyzing-disk-image-with-autopsy && cp -r /tmp/analyzing-disk-image-with-autopsy/skills/analyzing-disk-image-with-autopsy ~/.claude/skills/analyzing-disk-image-with-autopsy
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SKILL.md

# Analyzing Disk Image with Autopsy

## When to Use
- When you have a forensic disk image and need structured analysis of its contents
- During investigations requiring file recovery, keyword searching, and timeline analysis
- When non-technical stakeholders need visual reports from forensic evidence
- For examining file system metadata, deleted files, and embedded artifacts
- When building a comprehensive case from multiple disk images

## Prerequisites
- Autopsy 4.x installed (Windows) or Autopsy 4.x with The Sleuth Kit (Linux)
- Forensic disk image in raw (dd), E01 (EnCase), or AFF format
- Minimum 8GB RAM (16GB recommended for large images)
- Java Runtime Environment (JRE) 8+ for Autopsy
- Sufficient disk space for the Autopsy case database (2-3x image size)
- Hash databases (NSRL, known-bad hashes) for file identification

## Workflow

### Step 1: Install Autopsy and Configure Environment

```bash
# On Linux, install Sleuth Kit and Autopsy
sudo apt-get install autopsy sleuthkit

# Download Autopsy 4.x (GUI version) from official source
wget https://github.com/sleuthkit/autopsy/releases/download/autopsy-4.21.0/autopsy-4.21.0.zip
unzip autopsy-4.21.0.zip -d /opt/autopsy

# On Windows, run the MSI installer from sleuthkit.org
# Launch Autopsy
/opt/autopsy/bin/autopsy --nosplash

# For Sleuth Kit command-line analysis alongside Autopsy
sudo apt-get install sleuthkit
```

### Step 2: Create a New Case and Add the Disk Image

```
1. Launch Autopsy > "New Case"
2. Enter Case Name: "CASE-2024-001-Workstation"
3. Set Base Directory: /cases/case-2024-001/autopsy/
4. Enter Case Number, Examiner Name
5. Click "Add Data Source"
6. Select "Disk Image or VM File"
7. Browse to: /cases/case-2024-001/images/evidence.dd
8. Select Time Zone of the original system
9. Configure Ingest Modules (see Step 3)
```

```bash
# Alternatively, use Sleuth Kit CLI to verify the image first
img_stat /cases/case-2024-001/images/evidence.dd

# List partitions in the image
mmls /cases/case-2024-001/images/evidence.dd

# Output example:
# DOS Partition Table
# Offset Sector: 0
# Units are in 512-byte sectors
#      Slot    Start        End          Length       Description
#      00:  -----   0000000000   0000002047   0000002048   Primary Table (#0)
#      01:  00:00   0000002048   0001026047   0001024000   NTFS (0x07)
#      02:  00:01   0001026048   0976771071   0975745024   NTFS (0x07)

# List files in a partition (offset 2048 sectors)
fls -o 2048 /cases/case-2024-001/images/evidence.dd
```

### Step 3: Configure and Run Ingest Modules

```
Enable the following Autopsy Ingest Modules:
- Recent Activity: Extracts browser history, downloads, cookies, bookmarks
- Hash Lookup: Compares files against NSRL and known-bad hash sets
- File Type Identification: Identifies files by signature, not extension
- Keyword Search: Indexes content for full-text searching
- Email Parser: Extracts emails from PST, MBOX, EML files
- Extension Mismatch Detector: Finds files with wrong extensions
- Exif Parser: Extracts metadata from images (GPS, camera, timestamps)
- Encryption Detection: Identifies encrypted files and containers
- Interesting Files Identifier: Flags files matching custom rule sets
- Embedded File Extractor: Extracts files from ZIP, Office docs, PDFs
- Picture Analyzer: Categorizes images using PhotoDNA or hash matching
- Data Source Integrity: Verifies image hash during ingest
```

```bash
# Configure NSRL hash set for known-good filtering
# Download NSRL from https://www.nist.gov/itl/ssd/software-quality-group/national-software-reference-library-nsrl
wget https://s3.amazonaws.com/rds.nsrl.nist.gov/RDS/current/rds_modernm.zip
unzip rds_modernm.zip -d /opt/autopsy/hashsets/

# Import into Autopsy:
# Tools > Options > Hash Sets > Import > Select NSRLFile.txt
# Mark as "Known" (to filter out known-good files)
```

### Step 4: Analyze File System and Recover Deleted Files

```bash
# In Autopsy GUI: Navigate tree structure
# - Data Sources > evidence.dd > vol2 (NTFS)
# - Examine directory tree, note deleted files (marked with X)

# Using Sleuth Kit CLI for targeted recovery
# List deleted files
fls -rd -o 2048 /cases/case-2024-001/images/evidence.dd

# Recover a specific deleted file by inode
icat -o 2048 /cases/case-2024-001/images/evidence.dd 14523 > /cases/case-2024-001/recovered/deleted_document.docx

# Extract all files from a directory
tsk_recover -o 2048 -d /Users/suspect/Documents \
   /cases/case-2024-001/images/evidence.dd \
   /cases/case-2024-001/recovered/documents/

# Get detailed file metadata
istat -o 2048 /cases/case-2024-001/images/evidence.dd 14523
# Shows: creation, modification, access, MFT change timestamps, size, data runs
```

### Step 5: Perform Keyword Searches and Tag Evidence

```
In Autopsy:
1. Keyword Search panel > "Ad Hoc Keyword Search"
2. Search terms: credit card patterns, SSN regex, email addresses
3. Example regex for credit cards: \b(?:4[0-9]{12}(?:[0-9]{3})?|5[1-5][0-9]{14})\b
4. Example regex for SSN: \b\d{3}-\d{2}-\d{4}\b
5. Review results > Right-click items > "Add Tag"
6. Create tags: "Evidence-Critical", "Evidence-Supporting", "Requires-Review"
7. Add comments to tagged items documenting relevance
```

```bash
# Using Sleuth Kit for CLI keyword search
srch_strings -a -o 2048 /cases/case-2024-001/images/evidence.dd | \
   grep -iE '(password|secret|confidential)' > /cases/case-2024-001/keyword_hits.txt

# Search for specific file signatures
sigfind -o 2048 /cases/case-2024-001/images/evidence.dd 25504446
# 25504446 = %PDF header signature
```

### Step 6: Build Timeline and Generate Reports

```
In Autopsy:
1. Timeline viewer: Tools > Timeline
2. Select date range of interest (incident window)
3. Filter by event type: File Created, Modified, Accessed, Web Activity
4. Zoom into suspicious time periods
5. Export timeline events as CSV for external analysis

Generate Report:
1. Generate Report > HTML Report
2. Select tagged items and data sources to include
3. Configure report sections: