Specifying the password on the command line with `--password XXX` leaves the password itself visible to any process on the machine which can scan the process table. On some systems (including common GNU/Linux distributions) this visibility is possible by default. This change should make it possible to offer the password without putting it into the process table; rather, the user puts the password in the environment, and specifies the name of the environment variable, like so: ``` $ export MVT_IOS_BACKUP_PASSWORD=WronglySconeRoundnessUnruffled $ mvt-ios decrypt-backup -d /path/to/dest /path/to/data/XXXXXXXX-YYYYYYYYYYYYYYY/ $ unset MVT_IOS_BACKUP_PASSWORD ``` or you can do so using a prefixed env var, as described in the updated check.md documentation.
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Check a Backup with mvt-ios
The backup might take some time. It is best to make sure the phone remains unlocked during the backup process. Afterwards, a new folder will be created under the path you specified using the UDID of the iPhone you backed up.
Extracting and saving the decryption key (optional)
If you do not wish to enter a password every time when decrypting a backup, MVT can accept a key file instead. This key can be used with the decrypt-backup
command.
To generate a key file, you will need your device backup and the backup password:
$ mvt-ios extract-key --help
Usage: mvt-ios extract-key [OPTIONS] BACKUP_PATH
Extract decryption key from an iTunes backup
Options:
-p, --password TEXT Password to use to decrypt the backup [required]
-k, --key-file FILE Key file to be written (if unset, will print to STDOUT)
--help Show this message and exit.
You can specify the password on the command line, or omit the -p
option to have MVT prompt for a password. The -k
option specifies where to save the file containing the decryption key. If -k
is omitted, MVT will display the decryption key without saving.
Note: This decryption key is sensitive data! Keep the file safe.
To extract the key and have MVT prompt for a password:
mvt-ios extract-key -k /path/to/save/key /path/to/backup
Decrypting a backup
In case you have an encrypted backup, you will need to decrypt it first. This can be done with mvt-ios
as well:
$ mvt-ios decrypt-backup --help
Usage: mvt-ios decrypt-backup [OPTIONS] BACKUP_PATH
Decrypt an encrypted iTunes backup
Options:
-d, --destination TEXT Path to the folder where to store the decrypted
backup [required]
-p, --password TEXT Password to use to decrypt the backup (or, set
MVT_IOS_BACKUP_PASSWORD environment variable)
NOTE: This argument is mutually exclusive with
arguments: [key_file].
-k, --key-file PATH File containing raw encryption key to use to decrypt
the backup NOTE: This argument is mutually exclusive
with arguments: [password].
--help Show this message and exit.
You can specify the password in the environment variable MVT_IOS_BACKUP_PASSWORD
, or via command-line argument, or you can pass a key file. You need to specify a destination path where the decrypted backup will be stored. If a password cannot be found and no key file is specified, MVT will ask for a password. Following is an example usage of decrypt-backup
sending the password via an environment variable:
MVT_IOS_BACKUP_PASSWORD="mypassword" mvt-ios decrypt-backup -d /path/to/decrypted /path/to/backup
Run mvt-ios
on a Backup
Once you have a decrypted backup available for analysis you can use the check-backup
subcommand:
$ mvt-ios check-backup --help
Usage: mvt-ios check-backup [OPTIONS] BACKUP_PATH
Extract artifacts from an iTunes backup
Options:
-i, --iocs PATH Path to indicators file
-o, --output PATH Specify a path to a folder where you want to store JSON
results
-f, --fast Avoid running time/resource consuming features
-l, --list-modules Print list of available modules and exit
-m, --module TEXT Name of a single module you would like to run instead of
all
--help Show this message and exit.
Following is a basic usage of check-backup
:
mvt-ios check-backup --output /path/to/output/ /path/to/backup/udid/
This command will create a few JSON files containing the results from the extraction. If you do not specify a --output
option, mvt-ios
will just process the data without storing results on disk.
Through the --iocs
argument you can specify a STIX2 file defining a list of malicious indicators to check against the records extracted from the backup by mvt. Any matches will be highlighted in the terminal output as well as saved in the output folder using a "_detected" suffix to the JSON file name.