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Docker Forensics

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Container modification

There are suspicions that some docker container was compromised:

docker ps
CONTAINER ID        IMAGE               COMMAND             CREATED             STATUS              PORTS               NAMES
cc03e43a052a        lamp-wordpress      "./run.sh"          2 minutes ago       Up 2 minutes        80/tcp              wordpress

You can easily find the modifications done to this container with regards to the image with:

docker diff wordpress
C /var
C /var/lib
C /var/lib/mysql
A /var/lib/mysql/ib_logfile0
A /var/lib/mysql/ib_logfile1
A /var/lib/mysql/ibdata1
A /var/lib/mysql/mysql
A /var/lib/mysql/mysql/time_zone_leap_second.MYI
A /var/lib/mysql/mysql/general_log.CSV
...

In the previous command C means Changed and A, Added.
If you find that some interesting file like /etc/shadow was modified you can download it from the container to check for malicious activity with:

docker cp wordpress:/etc/shadow.

You can also compare it with the original one running a new container and extracting the file from it:

docker run -d lamp-wordpress
docker cp b5d53e8b468e:/etc/shadow original_shadow #Get the file from the newly created container
diff original_shadow shadow

If you find that some suspicious file was added you can access the container and check it:

docker exec -it wordpress bash

Images modifications

When you are given an exported docker image (probably in .tar format) you can use container-diff to extract a summary of the modifications:

docker save <image> > image.tar #Export the image to a .tar file
container-diff analyze -t sizelayer image.tar
container-diff analyze -t history image.tar
container-diff analyze -t metadata image.tar

Then, you can decompress the image and access the blobs to search for suspicious files you may have found in the changes history:

tar -xf image.tar

Basic Analysis

You can get basic information from the image running:

docker inspect <image> 

You can also get a summary history of changes with:

docker history --no-trunc <image>

You can also generate a dockerfile from an image with:

alias dfimage="docker run -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock --rm alpine/dfimage"
dfimage -sV=1.36 madhuakula/k8s-goat-hidden-in-layers>

Dive

In order to find added/modified files in docker images you can also use the dive (download it from releases) utility:

#First you need to load the image in your docker repo
sudo docker load < image.tar                                                                                                                                                                                                         1 ⨯
Loaded image: flask:latest

#And then open it with dive:
sudo dive flask:latest

This allows you to navigate through the different blobs of docker images and check which files were modified/added. Red means added and yellow means modified. Use tab to move to the other view and space to collapse/open folders.

With die you won't be able to access the content of the different stages of the image. To do so you will need to decompress each layer and access it.
You can decompress all the layers from an image from the directory where the image was decompressed executing:

tar -xf image.tar
for d in `find * -maxdepth 0 -type d`; do cd $d; tar -xf ./layer.tar; cd ..; done

Credentials from memory

Note that when you run a docker container inside a host you can see the processes running on the container from the host just running ps -ef

Therefore (as root) you can dump the memory of the processes from the host and search for credentials just like in the following example.

Deepen your expertise in Mobile Security with 8kSec Academy. Master iOS and Android security through our self-paced courses and get certified:

{% embed url="https://academy.8ksec.io/" %}

{% hint style="success" %} Learn & practice AWS Hacking:HackTricks Training AWS Red Team Expert (ARTE)
Learn & practice GCP Hacking: HackTricks Training GCP Red Team Expert (GRTE)

Support HackTricks
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