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******************************************************************** As of 6/27/2013 Scalpel has been released under the Apache 2.0 License and the source is available at The Sleuth Kit github repository. It is not being actively maintained. The Autopsy team started to do work on it to integrate tightly into via Java/JNI bindings, but ran into several memory leaks and the effort was abandoned. No official releases are being made. You can submit pull requests, but they may take a while to get reviewed. ******************************************************************** Scalpel is a file carving and indexing application that runs on Linux and Windows. The first version of Scalpel, released in 2005, was based on Foremost 0.69. There have been a number of internal releases since the last public release, 1.60, primarily to support our own research. The newest public release v2.0, has a number of additional features, including: o minimum carve sizes. o multithreading for quicker execution on multicore CPUs. o asynchronous I/O that allows disk operations to overlap with pattern matching--this results in a substantial performance improvement. o regular expression support for headers/footers. o embedded header/footer matching for better processing of structured file types that may contain embedded files. o for advanced users, support for massively-threaded execution on Graphics Processing Units (GPUs). This feature is available only on Linux and requires installation of the NVIDIA CUDA SDK, modification of scalpel.h to enable the GPU threading mode, and compilation with the CUDA toolchain. Our implementation also requires an NVIDIA GPU with compute capability >= 1.2, so older CUDA-capable cards probably won't work. The NVIDIA GTX 260 is relatively inexpensive and powerful and has the appropriate compute capability. The GPU-enhanced version of Scalpel is able to do preview carving at rates that exceed the disk bandwidth of most file servers, so for big jobs, it may be worth the extra effort required to use this feature. Note that regular expression-based headers and footers are NOT currently supported when GPU acceleration is in use! We might address this in a future release. Scalpel performs file carving operations based on patterns that describe particular file or data fragment "types". These patterns may be based on either fixed binary strings or regular expressions. A number of default patterns are included in the configuration file included in the distribution, "scalpel.conf". The comments in the configuration file explain the format of the file carving patterns supported by Scalpel. Important note: The default configuration file, "scalpel.conf", has all supported file patterns commented out--you must edit this file before running Scalpel to activate some patterns. Resist the urge to simply uncomment all file carving patterns; this wastes time and will generate a huge number of false positives. Instead, uncomment only the patterns for the file types you need. Scalpel options are described in the Scalpel man page, "scalpel.1". You may also execute Scalpel w/o any command line arguments to see a list of options. NOTE: Compilation is necessary on Unix platforms and on Mac OS X. For Windows platforms, a precompiled scalpel.exe is provided. If you do wish to recompile Scalpel on Windows, you'll need a mingw (gcc) setup. Scalpel will not compile using Visual Studio C compilers. Note that our compilation environment for Windows is currently 32-bit; we haven't tested on the 64-bit version of mingw, but will address this int the future. COMPILE INSTRUCTIONS ON SUPPORTED PLATFORMS: Linux/Mac OS X: % ./bootstrap % ./configure % make Windows (mingw): cd src mingw32-make -f Makefile.win and enjoy. If you want to install the binary and man page in a more permanent place, just copy "scalpel" (or "scalpel.exe") and "scalpel.1" to appropriate locations, e.g., on Linux, "/usr/local/bin" and "/usr/local/man/man1", respectively. On Windows, you'll also need to copy the pthreads and tre regular expression library dlls into the same directory as "scalpel.exe". OTHER SUPPORTED PLATFORMS We are not currently supporting Scalpel on Unix variants other than Linux. Go ahead and try a ./configure and make and see what happens, but be sure to do thorough testing before using Scalpel in production work. If you are interested in supporting a version of Scalpel on an alternate platforms, please contact us. If you are interested in supporting a GPU-enhanced version of Scalpel on Windows, we are also interesting in hearing from you. LIMITATIONS: Carving Windows physical and logical device files (e.g., \\.\physicaldrive0 or \\.\c:) isn't currently supported because it requires us to rewrite some portions of Scalpel to use Windows file I/O functions rather than standard Unix calls. This may be supported in a future release. Block map features are currently disabled, as we are rewriting this subsystem to enhance interoperability with the Sleuthkit. An improved version of the block map features will return in a subsequent release. The -s command line option ("skip") has been removed and will be replaced with a more robust facility in the next major release. DEPENDENCIES: Scalpel uses the POSIX threads library. On Win32, Scalpel is distributed with the Pthreads-win32 - POSIX Threads Library for Win32, which is Copyright(C) 1998 John E. Bossom and Copyright(C) 1999,2005 by Pthreads-win32 contributors. This library is licensed under the LGPL. Scalpel for Win32 uses the tre regular expression library and is distributed with tre-0.7.5, which is licensed under the LGPL. Cheers, --Golden and Vico.
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Scalpel is an open source data carving tool. It is not being actively maintained.
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