Co-authored-by: Rachael Shaw <r@rachael.wtf>
5.1 KiB
File carving
Fleet supports osquery's file carving functionality as of Fleet 3.3.0. This allows the Fleet server to request files (and sets of files) from osquery agents, returning the full contents to Fleet.
File carving data can be either stored in Fleet's database or to an external S3 bucket. For information on how to configure the latter, consult the configuration docs.
Configuration
Given a working flagfile for connecting osquery agents to Fleet, add the following flags to enable carving:
--disable_carver=false
--carver_disable_function=false
--carver_start_endpoint=/api/v1/osquery/carve/begin
--carver_continue_endpoint=/api/v1/osquery/carve/block
--carver_block_size=8000000
The default flagfile provided in the "Add New Host" dialog also includes this configuration.
Carver block size
The carver_block_size
flag should be configured in osquery.
For the (default) MySQL Backend, the configured value must be less than the value of
max_allowed_packet
in the MySQL connection, allowing for some overhead. The default for MySQL 5.7
is 4MB and for MySQL 8 it is 64MB.
For the S3/Minio backend, this value must be set to at least 5MiB (5242880
) due to the
constraints of S3's multipart
uploads.
Compression
Compression of the carve contents can be enabled with the carver_compression
flag in osquery. When used, the carve results will be compressed with Zstandard compression.
Usage
File carves are initiated with osquery queries. Issue a query to the carves
table, providing carve = 1
along with the desired path(s) as constraints.
For example, to extract the /etc/hosts
file on a host with hostname mac-workstation
:
fleetctl query --hosts mac-workstation --query 'SELECT * FROM carves WHERE carve = 1 AND path = "/etc/hosts"'
The standard osquery file globbing syntax is also supported to carve entire directories or more:
fleetctl query --hosts mac-workstation --query 'SELECT * FROM carves WHERE carve = 1 AND path LIKE "/etc/%%"'
Retrieving carves
List the non-expired (see below) carves with fleetctl get carves
. Note that carves will not be available through this command until osquery checks in to the Fleet server with the first of the carve contents. This can take some time from initiation of the carve.
To also retrieve expired carves, use fleetctl get carves --expired
.
Contents of carves are returned as .tar archives, and compressed if that option is configured.
To download the contents of a carve with ID 3, use
fleetctl get carve --outfile carve.tar 3
It can also be useful to pipe the results directly into the tar command for unarchiving:
fleetctl get carve --stdout 3 | tar -x
Expiration
Carve contents remain available for 24 hours after the first data is provided from the osquery client. After this time, the carve contents are cleaned from the database and the carve is marked as "expired".
The same is not true if S3 is used as the storage backend. In that scenario, it is suggested to setup a bucket lifecycle configuration to avoid retaining data in excess. Fleet, in an "eventual consistent" manner (i.e. by periodically performing comparisons), will keep the metadata relative to the files carves in sync with what it is actually available in the bucket.
Alternative carving backends
Minio
Configure the following:
FLEET_S3_ENDPOINT_URL=minio_host:port
FLEET_S3_BUCKET=minio_bucket_name
FLEET_S3_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=your_secret_access_key
FLEET_S3_ACCESS_KEY_ID=acces_key_id
FLEET_S3_FORCE_S3_PATH_STYLE=true
FLEET_S3_REGION=minio
or any non-empty string otherwise Fleet will attempt to derive the region.
Troubleshooting
Check carve status in osquery
Osquery can report on the status of carves through queries to the carves
table.
The details provided by
fleetctl query --labels 'All Hosts' --query 'SELECT * FROM carves'
can be helpful to debug carving problems.
Ensure carver_block_size
is set appropriately
carver_block_size
is an osquery flag that sets the size of each part of a file carve that osquery
sends to the Fleet server.
When using the MySQL backend (default), this value must be less than the max_allowed_packet
setting in MySQL. If it is too large, MySQL will reject the writes.
When using S3, the value must be at least 5MiB (5242880 bytes), as smaller multipart upload sizes are rejected. Additionally, S3 limits the maximum number of parts to 10,000.
The value must be small enough that HTTP requests do not time out.
Start with a default of 2MiB for MySQL (2097152 bytes), and 5MiB for S3/Minio (5242880 bytes).