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- <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
- <!DOCTYPE pkgmetadata SYSTEM "http://www.gentoo.org/dtd/metadata.dtd">
- <pkgmetadata>
- <maintainer type="project">
- <email>forensics@gentoo.org</email>
- <name>Gentoo Forensics Project</name>
- </maintainer>
- <longdescription>
- mac-robber is a digital forensics and incident response tool that collects data from allocated files in a mounted file system.
- The data can be used by the mactime tool in The Sleuth Kit to make a timeline of file activity. The mac-robber tool is based on
- the grave-robber tool from TCT and is written in C instead of Perl.
- mac-robber requires that the file system be mounted by the operating system, unlike the tools in The Sleuth Kit that process the
- file system themselves. Therefore, mac-robber will not collect data from deleted files or files that have been hidden by
- rootkits. mac-robber will also modify the Access times on directories that are mounted with write permissions.
- "What is mac-robber good for then", you ask? mac-robber is useful when dealing with a file system that is not supported by The
- Sleuth Kit or other forensic tools. mac-robber is very basic C and should compile on any UNIX system. Therefore, you can run
- mac-robber on an obscure, suspect UNIX file system that has been mounted read-only on a trusted system. I have also used
- mac-robber during investigations of common UNIX systems such as AIX.
- </longdescription>
- <upstream>
- <remote-id type="sourceforge">mac-robber</remote-id>
- </upstream>
- </pkgmetadata>
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