Difference between revisions of "Autopsy"
From SleuthKitWiki
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* The [[Autopsy User's Guide]] has information on how to use the tool in an investigation. | * The [[Autopsy User's Guide]] has information on how to use the tool in an investigation. | ||
* The [[Autopsy Developer's Guide]] has information on contributing to Autopsy and developing for it. Note that Autopsy 3 was designed as platform to integrate other digital forensics tools. The developer's guide also outlines how to develop modules to integrate into Autopsy. | * The [[Autopsy Developer's Guide]] has information on contributing to Autopsy and developing for it. Note that Autopsy 3 was designed as platform to integrate other digital forensics tools. The developer's guide also outlines how to develop modules to integrate into Autopsy. | ||
+ | * A list of [[Autopsy 3rd Party Modules]] is available. |
Revision as of 13:23, 22 January 2014
The Autopsy Forensic Browser is a graphical interface to the The Sleuth Kit and other digital investigation tools. Together, they can analyze Windows and UNIX disks and file systems (NTFS, FAT, UFS1/2, Ext2/3, etc.).
Autopsy 3 is Java-based and designed to be an end-to-end platform for digital forensics. That means that it can be extended by other developers. Full details can be found on the sleuthkit.org site.
Autopsy 2 is an old-school HTML-based interface. You can get the list of official features at the sleuthkit.org site.
Documentation
- The Autopsy User's Guide has information on how to use the tool in an investigation.
- The Autopsy Developer's Guide has information on contributing to Autopsy and developing for it. Note that Autopsy 3 was designed as platform to integrate other digital forensics tools. The developer's guide also outlines how to develop modules to integrate into Autopsy.
- A list of Autopsy 3rd Party Modules is available.