Adversaries may impair command history logging to hide commands they run on a compromised system. Various command interpreters keep track of the commands users type in their terminal so that users can retrace what they've done.On Linux and macOS, command history is tracked in a file pointed to by the environment variable
HISTFILE
. When a user logs off a system, this information is flushed to a file in the user's home directory called. The
/.bash_historyHISTCONTROL
environment variable keeps track of what should be saved by thehistory
command and eventually into the/.bash_history
file when a user logs out.HISTCONTROL
does not exist by default on macOS, but can be set by the user and will be respected.Adversaries may clear the history environment variable (
unset HISTFILE
) or set the command history size to zero (export HISTFILESIZE=0
) to prevent logging of commands. Additionally,HISTCONTROL
can be configured to ignore commands that start with a space by simply setting it to "ignorespace".HISTCONTROL
can also be set to ignore duplicate commands by setting it to "ignoredups". In some Linux systems, this is set by default to "ignoreboth" which covers both of the previous examples. This means that “ ls” will not be saved, but “ls” would be saved by history. Adversaries can abuse this to operate without leaving traces by simply prepending a space to all of their terminal commands.On Windows systems, the
PSReadLine
module tracks commands used in all PowerShell sessions and writes them to a file ($env:APPDATA\Microsoft\Windows\PowerShell\PSReadLine\ConsoleHost_history.txt
by default). Adversaries may change where these logs are saved usingSet-PSReadLineOption -HistorySavePath {File Path}
. This will causeConsoleHost_history.txt
to stop receiving logs. Additionally, it is possible to turn off logging to this file using the PowerShell commandSet-PSReadlineOption -HistorySaveStyle SaveNothing
.(Citation: Microsoft PowerShell Command History)(Citation: Sophos PowerShell command audit)(Citation: Sophos PowerShell Command History Forensics)
Disables history collection in shells
Supported Platforms: Linux, macOS
Name | Description | Type | Default Value |
---|---|---|---|
evil_command | Command to run after shell history collection is disabled | String | whoami |
export HISTCONTROL=ignoreboth
#{evil_command}
The HISTCONTROL variable is set to ignore (not write to the history file) command that are a duplicate of something already in the history and commands that start with a space. This atomic sets this variable in the current session and also writes it to the current user's ~/.bash_profile so that it will apply to all future settings as well. https://www.linuxjournal.com/content/using-bash-history-more-efficiently-histcontrol
Supported Platforms: macOS, Linux
- export HISTCONTROL=ignoreboth
- echo export "HISTCONTROL=ignoreboth" >> ~/.bash_profile
- ls
- whoami > recon.txt