GRR Rapid Response is an incident response framework focused on remote live forensics.
- Quickstart: Fast automated installation
- Downloads
- User Manual
- Blog
- Administration Documentation (Setup and Configuration)
- Publications: Papers, Presentations, Workshops etc.
- Project FAQ
- Developer and Implementation Documentation
- The GRR Configuration system
- Release Notes: check these when upgrading
- Project Roadmap
- Search Documentation (using github search)
- License Information
- Troubleshooting
Nov 5 2014: We've got a great new logo, which you will see turning up in the admin UI soon. It replaces our long-standing unofficial logo :)
Oct 28 2014: We've started a blog as a supplement to the documentation. Check out the first post on how to set up the distributed datastore.
Oct 15 2014: We're now fully migrated to github. The code.google.com page will just be a redirect here. Open issues, documentation and code have been moved over, and we will only update this repository in the future.
GRR consists of an agent (client) that can be deployed to a target system, and
server infrastructure that can manage and talk to the agent.
Client Features:
- Cross-platform support for Linux, Mac OS X and Windows clients.
- Live remote memory analysis using open source memory drivers for Linux, Mac OS X and Windows, and the Rekall memory analysis framework.
- Powerful search and download capabilities for files and the Windows registry.
- Secure communication infrastructure designed for Internet deployment.
- Client automatic update support.
- Detailed monitoring of client CPU, memory, IO usage and self-imposed limits.
Server Features:
- Fully fledged response capabilities handling most incident response and forensics tasks.
- OS-level and raw file system access, using the SleuthKit (TSK).
- Enterprise hunting (searching across a fleet of machines) support.
- Fully scaleable back-end to handle very large deployments.
- Automated scheduling for recurring tasks.
- Fast and simple collection of hundreds of digital forensic artifacts.
- Asynchronous design allows future task scheduling for clients, designed to work with a large fleet of laptops.
- Ajax Web UI.
- Fully scriptable IPython console access.
- Basic system timelining features.
- Basic reporting infrastructure.
See [quickstart](https://github.com/google/grr-doc/blob/master/quickstart.adoc Quickstart) to start using it.
[](http://wiki.grr.googlecode.com/git/Screenshot from 2013-11-18 18:36:13.png) [](http://wiki.grr.googlecode.com/git/Screenshot from 2013-11-18 18:36:46.png) [](http://wiki.grr.googlecode.com/git/Screenshot from 2013-11-18 18:37:37.png) [](http://wiki.grr.googlecode.com/git/Screenshot from 2013-11-18 18:40:49.png) [](http://wiki.grr.googlecode.com/git/Screenshot from 2013-11-18 18:41:45.png)