Book Image

Learning Python for Forensics - Second Edition

By : Preston Miller, Chapin Bryce
Book Image

Learning Python for Forensics - Second Edition

By: Preston Miller, Chapin Bryce

Overview of this book

Digital forensics plays an integral role in solving complex cybercrimes and helping organizations make sense of cybersecurity incidents. This second edition of Learning Python for Forensics illustrates how Python can be used to support these digital investigations and permits the examiner to automate the parsing of forensic artifacts to spend more time examining actionable data. The second edition of Learning Python for Forensics will illustrate how to develop Python scripts using an iterative design. Further, it demonstrates how to leverage the various built-in and community-sourced forensics scripts and libraries available for Python today. This book will help strengthen your analysis skills and efficiency as you creatively solve real-world problems through instruction-based tutorials. By the end of this book, you will build a collection of Python scripts capable of investigating an array of forensic artifacts and master the skills of extracting metadata and parsing complex data structures into actionable reports. Most importantly, you will have developed a foundation upon which to build as you continue to learn Python and enhance your efficacy as an investigator.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Rapidly triaging systems – pysysinfo.py

We are now ready to dive into the focus of this chapter, the pysysinfo.py script after having already covered the importance of collecting volatile information and the libraries we will use. This script is composed of a number of functions, most of which have to do with the psutil library, but at its heart identifies early on what type of system it is running on and, if that system is using the Windows operating system, runs an additional function using the WMI API, discussed previously. You can see in the following diagram how the various functions interact with each other and make up the code discussed throughout the remainder of this chapter:

This script was developed and tested on Python 2.7.15 and 3.7.1. As with any script we develop, we must start with the imports necessary to successfully execute the code we've developed...