Provided by: samhain_3.1.0-7build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       samhain - check file integrity

SYNOPSIS

   INITIALIZING, UPDATING, AND CHECKING
       samhain { -t init|--set-checksum-test=init } [--init2stdout] [-r DEPTH|--recursion=DEPTH] [log-options]

       samhain  {  -t  update|--set-checksum-test=update  }  [-D  |  --daemon  |  --foreground]  [--forever] [-r
       DEPTH|--recursion=DEPTH] [log-options]

       samhain  {  -t  check|--set-checksum-test=check  }  [-D  |  --daemon  |  --foreground]  [--forever]   [-r
       DEPTH,--recursion=DEPTH] [log-options]

   LISTING THE DATABASE
       samhain [-a | --full-detail] [--delimited] -d file| --list-database=file

   VERIFYING AN AUDIT TRAIL
       samhain [-j | --just-list] -L logfile| --verify-log=logfile

       samhain -M mailbox| --verify-mail=mailbox

   MISCELLANEOUS
       samhain --server-port=portnumber

       samhain -H string | --hash-string=string

       samhain -c | --copyright

       samhain -v | --version

       samhain -h | --help

       samhain -V key@/path/to/executable | --add-key=key@/path/to/executable

   SERVER STARTUP
       yule [-q | --qualified] [ --chroot=chrootdir] [-D | --daemon | --foreground] [log-options]

   SERVER MISCELLANEOUS
       yule [-P password | --password=password]

       yule [-G | --gen-password]

   LOG OPTIONS
       [-s  threshold  |  --set-syslog-severity=threshold]  [-l  threshold  |  --set-log-severity=threshold] [-m
       threshold | --set-mail-severity=threshold] [-e threshold | --set-export-severity=threshold] [-p threshold
       |     --set-print-severity=threshold]    [-x    threshold    |    --set-external-severity=threshold]    [
       --set-prelude-severity=threshold]    [    --set-database-severity=threshold]    [    --enable-trace]    [
       --trace-logfile=tracefile]

WARNING

       The  information  in this man page is not always up to date.  The authoritative documentation is the user
       manual.

DESCRIPTION

       samhain is a file integrity / intrusion detection system both for single hosts and networks.  It consists
       of  a monitoring application (samhain) running on individual hosts, and (optionally) a central log server
       (yule).  Currently, samhain can monitor the integrity of files/directories, and (optionally)  also  check
       for  kernel  rootkits (Linux and FreeBSD only), search the disk for SUID/SGID, and watch for login/logout
       events.

       samhain/yule can log by email, to a tamper-resistant, signed log file, to syslog, to the Prelude IDS,  to
       a  MySQL/PostgreSQL/Oracle  database, and/or to stdout (/dev/console if run as daemon).  samhain/yule can
       run as a daemon, and can use a time server instead of the host's system clock. Most of the  functionality
       is defined by a configuration file that is read at startup.

       Most  options of these usually would be set in the configuration file.  Options given on the command line
       will override those in the configuration file.

   OPTIONS FOR INITIALIZING, UPDATING, AND CHECKING
       samhain -t init, --set-checksum-test=init [options]

       Initialize the database of file signatures. The path to the database is  compiled  in,  and  initializing
       will  append  to  the respective file (or create it, if it does not exist).  It is ok to append to e.g. a
       JPEG image, but it is an error to append to an already existing file signature database.

       [--init2stdout]
              Write the database to stdout.

       [-r DEPTH|--recursion=DEPTH]
              Set the (global) recursion depth.

       samhain -t update, --set-checksum-test=update [options]

       Update the database of file signatures. The path to the  database  is  compiled  in,  and  updating  will
       overwrite  the database, starting from the start of the database (which may not be identical to the start
       of the file - see above).

       [-r DEPTH|--recursion=DEPTH]
              Set the (global) recursion depth.

       [-D|--daemon]
              Run as daemon. File checks are performed as specified by the timing options in  the  configuration
              file. Updates are saved after each file check.

       [--foreground]
              Run  in  the  foreground.  This  will  cause  samhain  to exit after the update, unless the option
              --forever is used.

       [--forever]
              If not running as daemon, do not exit after finishing the update, but loop  forever,  and  perform
              checks  with  corresponding  database updates according to the timing options in the configuration
              file.

       samhain -t check, --set-checksum-test=check [options]

       Check the filesystem against the database of file signatures.  The path to the database is compiled in.

       [-r DEPTH|--recursion=DEPTH]
              Set the (global) recursion depth.

       [-D|--daemon]
              Run as daemon. File checks are performed as specified by the timing options in  the  configuration
              file.

       [--foreground]
              Run  in  the  foreground.  This will cause samhain to exit after the file check, unless the option
              --forever is used.

       [--forever]
              If not running as daemon, do not exit after finishing the check, but  loop  forever,  and  perform
              checks according to the timing options in the configuration file.

   OPTIONS FOR LISTING THE DATABASE
       samhain [-a | --full-detail] [--delimited] -d file| --list-database=file

       List the entries in the file signature database in a ls -l like format.

       [-a | --full-detail]
              List  all informations for each file, not only those you would get with ls -l. Must precede the -d
              option.

       [--delimited]
              List all informations for each file, in a comma-separated format.  Must precede the -d option.

       [--list-file=file]
              List the literal content of the given file as stored in the database.  Content is  not  stored  by
              default, must be enabled in the runtime configuration file. Must precede the -d option.

   OPTIONS TO VERIFY AN AUDIT TRAIL
       These  options  will only work, if the executable used for verifying the audit trail is compiled with the
       same --enable-base=... option as the executable of the reporting process.

       samhain [-j | --just-list] -L logfile| --verify-log=logfile

       Verify the integrity of a signed logfile. The signing key is  auto-generated  on  startup,  and  sent  by
       email.   samhain  will  ask  for the key. Instead of entering the key, you can also enter the path to the
       mailbox holding the respective email message.

       [-j | --just-list]
              Just list the logfile, do not verify it. This option must come first.  It is mainly  intended  for
              listing the content of an obfuscated logfile, if samhain is compiled with the stealth option.

              samhain -M mailbox| --verify-mail=mailbox

              Verify the integrity of the email reports from samhain. All reports must be in the same file.

   MISCELLANEOUS OPTIONS
       samhain --server-port=portnumber

       Choose the port on the server host to which the client will connect.

       samhain -H string | --hash-string=string

       Compute  the  TIGER192  checksum  of  a  string.  If  the string starts with a '/', it is considered as a
       pathname, and the checksum of the corresponding file will be computed.

       samhain -c | --copyright

       Print the copyright statement.

       samhain -v | --version

       Show version and compiled-in options.

       samhain -h | --help

       Print supported command line options (depending on compilation options).

       samhain -V key@/path/to/executable | --add-key=key@/path/to/executable

       See the section "SECURITY" below.

   SERVER STARTUP OPTIONS
       yule [-q | --qualified] [ --chroot=chrootdir] [-D | --daemon | --foreground] [log-options]

       Start the server, which is named yule by default. If the server is started with superuser privileges,  it
       will drop them after startup.

       [-q | --qualified]
              Log  client  hostnames  with  fully qualified path. The default is to log only the leftmost domain
              label (i.e. the hostname).

       [      --chroot=chrootdir] Chroot to the listed directory after startup.

       [-D | --daemon]
              Run as daemon.

       [--foreground]
              Run in the foreground.

   MISCELLANEOUS SERVER OPTIONS
       yule [-G | --gen-password]

       Generate a random 8-byte password and print it out in hexadecimal notation.

       yule [-P password | --password=password]

       Use the given password and generate an entry suitable for the  [Clients]  section  of  the  configuration
       file.

   LOGGING OPTIONS
       Depending on the compilation options, some logging facilities may not be available in your executable.

       -s threshold, --set-syslog-severity=threshold
              Set  the  threshold  for  logging events via syslogd(8).  Possible values are debug, info, notice,
              warn, mark, err, crit, alert, and none.  By default, everything equal to and above  the  threshold
              will  be  logged.   Time stamps have the priority warn, system-level errors have the priority err,
              and important start-up messages the priority alert.  The signature key for the log file will never
              be logged to syslog or the log file itself.

       -l threshold, --set-log-severity=threshold
              Set the threshold for logging events to the log file.

       -m threshold, --set-mail-severity=threshold
              Set the threshold for logging events via e-mail.

       -e threshold, --set-export-severity=threshold
              Set the threshold for forwarding events via TCP to a log server.

       -x threshold, --set-extern-severity=threshold
              Set  the  threshold  for  calling  external  logging  programs/scripts  (if any are defined in the
              configuration file).

       -p threshold, --set-print-severity=threshold
              Set the threshold for logging events to stdout.  If samhain runs as a daemon, this  is  redirected
              to /dev/console.

       --set-prelude-severity=threshold
              Set the threshold for logging events to the Prelude IDS.

       --set-database-severity=threshold
              Set the threshold for logging events to the MySQL/PostgreSQL/Oracle database.

SIGNALS

       SIGUSR1
              Switch on/off maximum verbosity for console output.

       SIGUSR2
              Suspend/continue  the process, and (on suspend) send a message to the server. This message has the
              same priority as timestamps.  This signal allows to run samhain -t init -e none on the  client  to
              regenerate the database, with download of the configuration file from the server, while the daemon
              is suspended (normally you would get errors because of concurrent access  to  the  server  by  two
              processes from the same host).

       SIGHUP Reread the configuration file.

       SIGTERM
              Terminate.

       SIGQUIT
              Terminate after processing all pending requests from clients.

       SIGABRT
              Unlock the log file, pause for three seconds, then proceed, eventually re-locking the log file and
              starting a fresh audit trail on next access.

       SIGTTOU
              Force a file check (only client/standalone, and only in daemon mode).

DATABASE

       The database (default name samhain_file) is a binary file, which can be created or updated using  the  -t
       init  or  the -t update option.  If you use -t init, you need to remove the old database first, otherwise
       the new version will be appended to the old one.  The file may be (clear text) signed by PGP/GnuPG.
       It is recommended to use GnuPG with the options gpg -a --clearsign --not-dash-escaped
       samhain will check the signature, if compiled with support for that.

       At startup samhain will compute the checksum of the database, and verify it for each further access. This
       checksum  is  not  stored  on disk (i.e. is lost after program termination), as there is no secure way to
       store it.

LOG FILE

       Each entry in the log file has the format Severity : [Timestamp] Message,  where  the  timestamp  may  be
       obtained  from a time server rather than from the system clock, if samhain has been compiled with support
       for this.  Each entry is followed by a signature, which is computed as Hash(Entry Key_N),  and  Key_N  is
       computed  as Hash(Key_N-1), i.e. only knowledge of the first signature key in this chain allows to verify
       the integrity of the log file. This first key is autogenerated and e-mailed to the designated recipient.

       The default name of the log file is samhain_log.  To prevent multiple instances of samhain  from  writing
       to  the  same  log  file,  the  log  file is locked by creating a lock file, which is normally deleted at
       program termination.  The default name of the lock  file  is  samhain.lock.   If  samhain  is  terminated
       abnormally,  i.e.  with  kill  -9,  a  stale  lock file might remain, but usually samhain will be able to
       recognize that and remove the stale lock file on the next startup.

EMAIL

       E-mails are sent (using built-in SMTP code) to one recipient only.  The subject line  contains  timestamp
       and  hostname,  which  are  repeated  in  the  message body.  The body of the mail contains a line with a
       signature similar to that in the log file, computed from the message and a key. The key is iterated by  a
       hash chain, and the initial key is revealed in the first email sent.  Obviously, you have to believe that
       this first e-mail is authentical ...

CLIENT/SERVER USAGE

       To monitor several machines, and collecting data by a central log server, samhain may be  compiled  as  a
       client/server  application. The log server (yule) will accept connection requests from registered clients
       only. With each client, the server will first engage in a challenge/response protocol for  authentication
       of the client and establishing a session key.

       This  protocol requires on the client side a password, and on the server side a verifier that is computed
       from the password.

       To register a client, simply do the following:
       First, with the included utility program samhain_setpwd re-set the compiled-in default  password  of  the
       client  executable to your preferred value (with no option, a short usage help is printed).  To allow for
       non-printable chars, the new value must be given as a 16-digit hexadecimal string (only  0123456789ABCDEF
       in string), corresponding to an 8-byte password.
       Second,  after  re-setting  the  password  in the client executable, you can use the server's convenience
       function yule -P password that will take as input the (16-digit hex) password, compute the  corresponding
       verifier, and outputs a default configuration file entry to register the client.
       Third,  in  the  configuration  file  for  the  server,  under the [Clients] section, enter the suggested
       registration entry  of  the  form  Client=hostname@salt@verifier,  where  hostname  must  be  the  (fully
       qualified)  hostname  of  the  machine  on  which the client will run.  Don't forget to reload the server
       configuration thereafter.

       If a connection attempt is made, the server will lookup the entry for the connecting host,  and  use  the
       corresponding  value  for  the  verifier  to  engage  in  the session key exchange. Failure to verify the
       client's response(s) will result in aborting the connection.

STEALTH

       samhain may be compiled with support for a stealth mode of operation, meaning that the program can be run
       without  any  obvious  trace  of its presence on disk. The supplied facilities are simple - they are more
       sophisticated than just running the program under a  different  name,  and  might  thwart  efforts  using
       'standard' Unix commands, but they will not resist a search using dedicated utilities.

       In  this  mode,  the  runtime  executable  will  hold no printable strings, and the configuration file is
       expected to be a postscript file with uncompressed image data, wherein the configuration data are  hidden
       by  steganography.   To  create  such  a  file  from  an  existing  image,  you may use e.g.  the program
       convert(1), which is part of the ImageMagick(1) package, such as: convert +compress ima.jpg ima.ps.

       To hide/extract the configuration data within/from the postscript file, a utility program samhain_stealth
       is provided.  Use it without options to get help.

       Database  and  log  file  may  be e.g. existing image files, to which data are appended, xor'ed with some
       constant to mask them as binary data.

       The user is responsible by herself for re-naming the compiled executable(s) to  unsuspicious  names,  and
       choosing (at compile time) likewise unsuspicious names for config file, database, and log (+lock) file.

SECURITY

       For  security  reasons, samhain will not write log or data files in a directory, remove the lock file, or
       read the configuration file, if any element in the path is  owned  or  writeable  by  an  untrusted  user
       (including group-writeable files with untrusted users in the group, and world-writeable files).
       root and the effective user are always trusted. You can add more users in the configuration file.

       Using  a  numerical  host  address in the e-mail address is more secure than using the hostname (does not
       require DNS lookup).

       If you use a precompiled samhain executable (e.g. from a binary distribution), in principle a prospective
       intruder could easily obtain a copy of the executable and analyze it in advance. This will enable her/him
       to generate fake audit trails and/or generate a trojan for this particular binary distribution.
       For this reason, it is possible for the user to add more key material into the binary executable. This is
       done with the command:

       samhain --add-key=key@/path/to/executable

       This  will read the file /path/to/executable, add the key key, which should not contain a '@' (because it
       has a special meaning, separating key from path), overwrite any key previously set by this  command,  and
       write  the  new binary to the location /path/to/executable.out (i.e. with .out appended). You should then
       copy the new binary to the location of the old one (i.e. overwrite the old one).

       Note that using a precompiled samhain executable from a binary package distribution  is  not  recommended
       unless you add in key material as described here.

NOTES

       For   initializing   the  key(s),  /dev/random  is  used,  if  available.  This  is  a  device  supplying
       cryptographically strong (non-deterministic) random noise. Because it is slow, samhain  might  appear  to
       hang  at  startup.  Doing some random things (performing rain dances, spilling coffee, hunting the mouse)
       might speed up things. If you do not have /dev/random, lots of statistics from  vmstat(8)  and  the  like
       will be pooled and mixed by a hash function.

       Some hosts might check whether the sender of the mail is valid.  Use only login names for the sender.
       For sending mails, you may need to set a relay host for the sender domain in the configuration file.

BUGS

       Whoever  has the original signature key may change the log file and send fake e-mails. The signature keys
       are e-mailed at program startup with  a  one-time  pad  encryption.   This  should  be  safe  against  an
       eavesdropper  on  the  network, but not against someone with read access to the binary, if she has caught
       the e-mail.

FILES

       /etc/samhainrc
       /usr/local/man/man8/samhain.8
       /usr/local/man/man5/samhainrc.5
       /var/log/samhain_log
       /var/lib/samhain/samhain_file
       /var/lib/samhain/samhain.html
       /var/run/samhain.pid

SEE ALSO

       samhainrc(5)

AUTHOR

       Rainer Wichmann (http://la-samhna.de)

BUG REPORTS

       If you find a bug in samhain, please send electronic mail to support@la-samhna.de.  Please  include  your
       operating  system  and its revision, the version of samhain, what C compiler you used to compile it, your
       'configure' options, and any information that you deem helpful.

COPYING PERMISSIONS

       Copyright (©) 1999, 2004 Rainer Wichmann

       Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual page provided  the  copyright
       notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies.

       Permission  is  granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual page under the conditions
       for verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
       permission notice identical to this one.

                                                 07 August 2004                                       SAMHAIN(8)