Mozilla is no longer maintaining the Mozilla InvestiGator (MIG) project.
Mozilla is also no longer making use of this code internally.
You are welcome to use this code as is with no warranty. Please fork it to continue development.
MASCHE stands for Memory Analysis Suite for Checking the Harmony of Endpoints. It is being developed as a project for the Mozilla Winter of Security program.
It works on Linux, Mac OS and Windows.
These are the current features:
- listlibs: Searches for processes that have loaded a certain library.
- pgrep: Has the same functionallity as pgrep on linux.
- memaccess/memsearch: Allows access and search into a given process memory.
You can find examples under the examples folder.
You need golang
installed.
You need glibc for 64 and 32 bits installed. On Fedora, the packages are:
- glibc-devel.i686
- glibc-devel.x86_64
- glibc-headers.i686
- glibc-headers.x86_64
- glibc.i686
- glibc.x86_64
In order to compile and run masche in windows you will need a gcc compiler. You can use mingw if you are running a 32 bits version of Windows or mingw-64 if you are running a 64 bits one.
Just run go build
on the package/example that you want.
It's possible to cross-compile from linux. And this is the recommended way.
- Install a cross compiler (for example,
mingw-w64
) - Enable cross compiling in your go toolchain (run
GOOS=windows ./all.bash
inside your$GOROOT/src
folder)
After that you should be able to cross compile masche without problems, just make sure to export the correct global variables: GOOS=windows
CGO_ENABLED=1
CC=<your-cross-compiler>
(for example: CC=x86_64-w64-ming32-gcc
)