Autopsy User Documentation  4.11.0
Graphical digital forensics platform for The Sleuth Kit and other tools.
Data Sources

A data source is the thing you want to analyze. It can be a disk image, some logical files, a local disk, etc. You must open a case prior to adding a data source to Autopsy.

Autopsy supports four types of data sources:

Adding a Data Source

You can add a data source in several ways:

The data source must remain accessible for the duration of the analysis because the case contains a reference to the data source. It does not copy the data source into the case folder.

Regardless of the type of data source, there are some common steps in the process:

1) You will select the type of data source.

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2) You will be prompted to specify the data source to add. This screen varies based on the data source type. Details on adding each type of data source are provided below.

NOTE: If you are adding a data source to a multi-user case, ensure that all Autopsy clients will have access to the data source at the same path. We recommend using UNC paths to ensure this consistent mapping.

3) Autopsy will perform a basic examination of the data source and populate an embedded database with an entry for each file in the data source. No content is analyzed in the process, only the files are enumerated.

4) While it is examining the data source, you will be prompted with a list of ingest modules to enable. If one or more ingest profiles have been saved, there will be a screen before this asking whether to use one of the saved profiles or do a custom setup. See Ingest Modules for more information on setting up ingest profiles.

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5) After you configure the ingest modules, you may need to wait for Autopsy to finish its basic examination of the data source.

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6) After the ingest modules have been configured and the basic examination of the data source is complete, the ingest modules will begin to analyze the file contents.

You cannot remove a data source from a case.

Adding a Disk Image

Autopsy supports disk images in the following formats:

data_source_disk_image.png

To add a disk image:

  1. Choose "Disk Image or VM File" from the data source types.
  2. Browse to the first file in the disk image. You need to specify only the first file and Autopsy will find the rest.
  3. Choose to perform orphan file finding on FAT file systems. This can be a time intensive process because it will require that Autopsy look at each sector in the device.
  4. Choose the timezone that the disk image came from. This is most important for when adding FAT file systems because it does not store timezone information and Autopsy will not know how to normalize to UTC.
  5. Optionally choose the sector size. The Auto Detect mode will work correctly on the majority of images, but if adding the data source fails you may want to try the other sector sizes.
  6. Optionally enter one or more hashes for the image. These will be saved under the image metadata and can be verified using the Data Source Integrity Module.

Adding a Local Disk

Autopsy can analyze a local disk without needing to first make an image copy of it. This is most useful when analyzing a USB-attached device through a write blocker.

Note that if you are analyzing a local disk that is being updated, then Autopsy will not see files that are added after you add it as a data source.

You will need to be running Autopsy as an Administrator to view all devices.

There is an option to make a copy of the local disk as a VHD during analysis. This VHD can be loaded in Windows or analyzed through Autopsy. There is an additional option to update the image path in the case database to this newly created file. Enabling this option will allow you to browse the case data normally even after the local disk is removed. Note that at least one ingest module must successfully run in order to generate the complete image copy.

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To add a local drive:

  1. Choose "Local Disk" from the data source types.
  2. Use the "Select Disk" button to open a dialog showing the local disks. This may take a minute to load. Then select the device from the list.
  3. Choose to perform orphan file finding. See comment in Adding a Disk Image about this setting.
  4. Choose whether to create a VHD copy of the local disk and whether to update the image path.
  5. Optionally choose the sector size. The Auto Detect mode will work correctly on the majority of images, but if adding the data source fails you may want to try the other sector sizes.

Adding a Logical File

You can add files or folders that are on your local computer (or on a shared drive) without putting them into a disk image. This is useful if you have only a collection of files that you want to analyze.

Some things to note when doing this:

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To add logical files:

  1. Choose "Logical Files" from the data source types.
  2. Leave the top combo box on "Local files and folders"
  3. Press the "Add" button and navigate to a folder or file to add. Choosing a folder will cause all of its contents (including sub-folders) to be added.
  4. Continue to press "Add" until all files and folders have been selected.

All of the files that you added in the panel will be grouped together into a single data source, called "LogicalFileSet" in the main UI.

There is also limited support for logical evidence (L01) files. To add one as a data source, select "Logical evidence file (L01)" in the top combo box and then browse to your file.

Adding an Unallocated Space Image File

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To add unallocated space image files:

  1. Choose "Unallocated Space Image File" from the data source types.
  2. Browse to the file.
  3. Choose whether to break the image up into chunks. Breaking the image up will give better performance since the chunks can be processed in parallel, but there is a chance that keywords or carved files that span chunk boundaries will be missed.

Copyright © 2012-2019 Basis Technology. Generated on Fri Jun 21 2019
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