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Showing posts with label disk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label disk. Show all posts

Sunday, June 11, 2017

Difficult Disk Imaging

Difficult Disk Imaging


In the past few weeks, Ive had the opportunity to make forensic disk images of what one might call "non-standard" devices.  The devices were a Lenovo Thinkstation D20, an Acer Netbook, and an MacBook Air.

Lenovo Thinkstation

The Lenovo presented a few problems.  First, it was seized and disassembled by non-computer-forensics professionals.  Translated: the drives were removed and not marked as to their bays or cabling.  Two drives were identical in size and the third was over three times larger.  All were were SAS (Serial Attached SCSI) drives which have non-standard connectors.  I had no connectors to remove the drives and image them individually (though cannibalization from the Lenovo was possible), and the computer specs suggested that there was a raid array on the two drives of matching size.

What did I do?  I decided to use CAINE, a forensic boot disc, and an external hard drive.  CAINE would allow me to use the Lenovo for the specialized connectors needed for the SAS drives, and allow the hardware controller on the motherboard to reassemble RAID array.

The first step was to ensure I could boot the system with CAINE.  I was unable to boot from CD-ROM using the Lenovos optical drive (which was unusual, to be sure) but I was able to get a USB version of CAINE booted.  I ensured, by adjusting the BIOS, that the USB would be the first device to boot.

I reinstalled and connect the drives, uncertain as to proper order, and booted CAINE.  Lucky for me, the on-board RAID controller detected the disks, reported there have been a change in the devices (the drive order), and then correctly reassembled the array.  CAINE reported two drives (the large disk, with the OS as it turns out), and the array.  I imaged both to the external drive with Guymager, a graphical front end for libewf, an open sourced disk imaging library and toolset that produces images in expert witness format.

Acer Netbook

The Acer Netbook was probably the least troublesome device, but did not lend itself well to disassembly.  Drive removal and hardware write-blocking are the ideals in forensic disk imaging.  However, this isnt always possible or convenient.  In the case of the Acer Netbook D255, there was no simple hard disk cover to remove.  Hard disk access appears to involve keyboard removal and an underlying cover, or seven case screws and an almost surgical separation of plastic catches.  Simply put, I didnt want to break the netbook, and I know that some storage devices have ROM chips that prevent them from being read when disconnected from the particular motherboard anyway.

Again, CAINE to the rescue.  In the case of the ACER, there was no boot menu.  Changes to the BIOS were needed to ensure the USB device booted before the internal hard disk.  I tried to boot CAINE with an attached USB optical drive and with a USB version of CAINE.  The ACER did not register the USB optical drive in the BIOS, but the USB flash drive with CAINE was detected.  I booted from the USB, mounted a external hard drive, and imaged the drive with libewf.

MacBook Air

This was my first encounter with the MacBook Air.  Like the Acer, the construction of the device discouraged disassembly.  I know that the Macs wont boot from a FAT formatted USB because of the EFI boot schema.  However, booting from CD-ROM is possible by pressing and holding the "C" key immediately after powering the computer.

I attached a USB CD-ROM drive because the AIR does not have an optical drive like other MacBooks.  I initially booted with CAINE, but the graphics drivers were incompatible with the Mac.  I attempted a graphics safe-mode boot and a text-only boot, but the same result: a garbled display that made proceeding impossible.

I obtained a second forensic boot disk called DEFT.  It is a newer release than CAINE and I hoped it had updated graphics drivers that might overcome the problem.  The initial boot froze the system.  DEFT boots into text mode, and there are no other menu choices.  However, a series boot options at the bottom of the boot screen reminded me of some boot issues I have experienced in that past several versions of Ubuntu, on which both these forensics distributions are based.  I passed the "nomodeset" option in the F6 menu (curiously named "Password"),  and DEFT booted to a text screen.  I was also able to boot to a GUI with the deft-gui command.

With this in mind, I revisited CAINE.  I have a preference for CAINE because I understand how it works and its implementation of write-blocking and have tested it.  The CAINE developer, Nanni Bassetti, is ever-ready to help new users and explain his techniques.  I do not know how DEFT works and the information is not readily available, at least not in English.  This is not to disparage DEFT in anyway.  Im just trying to highlight the fact that we must use tools that we understand and have tested.

I again booted the MacBook Air with Caine.  At the boot screen, there is no obvious way to pass boot options.  However, pressing escape brings up a boot command line.  Pressing tab displays the boot options on the original boot screen.  I passed the arguments "textonly nomodeset" and CAINE successfully booted to a console.  At the console, I was able to start the GUI with "startx".  I accomplished imaging as before, with libewf and an external USB hard disk drive.
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Friday, June 9, 2017

Disable Low Disk Space Notification in Wondows XP

Disable Low Disk Space Notification in Wondows XP


Open regedit & follow the steps below:

1. Navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftware
MicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesExplorer

2. On the Edit menu, click New, click DWORD value .

3. Name the new DWORD Value as NoLowDiskSpaceChecks

4. Right click the new DWORD Value and Modify the data value to 1.

5. Exit the registry editor and restart your computer.
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Thursday, May 4, 2017

Disk SpeedUp Freeware to Defragment and Optimize Hard Disk

Disk SpeedUp Freeware to Defragment and Optimize Hard Disk


Glarysoft Disk SpeedUp is a completely free tool to analyze, defragment and optimize disk space in quick time and enhance your computer performance. The freeware is easy to use, without any toolbar or adware and boasts an intuitive interface.

The user-friendly interface offers basic functions:
  1. Analyze the disk
  2. Defrag the disk
  3. Defrag and optimize the selected disk/file/folder
  4. Automatic defrag (when PC is idle)
  5. Automatic shutdown (when defrag completed and schedule preset)
Apart from the above the tool features advanced settings to meet advanced requests.
Disk SpeedUp Freeware Review
When the download of the application is complete, installing it will take a minute. Initially, you will see the main application window split into 2 tabs dedicated to
  1. Defragmenting tasks
  2. Configuring settings
If you observe the image closely, you will find all drives along with their capacity limit, free space and fragmented space and status are shown in the list. You can select any of the features and perform an analysis to evaluate the defragmentation status.

The results of the operation performed are shown in the Report tab, which includes the file name, the number of fragments, the size, and the path of the files.
Disk SpeedUp
Boot Time Defrag is a feature that permits a user to defrag main hard drive before Windows even starts, which under normal conditions cannot be defragmented since they�re in use while Windows is running.
Boot time defrag
The handy utility also allows you to schedule the program to run on a daily, weekly or monthly basis.
For optimizing purposes, first select the hard drives you want to optimize and then choose Defrag and Optimize from the File menu. Thereafter, go to Tools > Options > Optimize.
tools menu
The menu option holds the optimization settings that you can change. Under Move large files to the end of the drive you will notice the following four options:
  • Minimum file size: This option can be altered to one of ten file sizes from 10-100 MB.
  • Files that were not accessed in last month: Any file that not accessed in a month is automatically moved to the slower portion of the hard drive.
  • Files in the Recycle Bin: All files under the Recycle Bin will be moved.
  • Files in the selected types: Below this option you will find other useful options like Archives, Movies, and Disk Images.
Disk SpeedUp is a useful defragmentation software for Windows. It doesn�t hang up or crash. It has small download size and is pretty easy to install quickly and start defragmentation of files/folders as well as whole hard drives. The only shortfall is it doesn�t work from the right-click context menu in Windows Explorer.
It is available as a free download from its home page.
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