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I apologize if I put my question here in PANDA v1.0, as I was hesitant to put it in the new PANDA v2.0.
I am experimenting with your pmemaccess plugin, it is super interesting, since it exposes the physical memory of a guest VM through a linux socket.
According to what I read, once the connection is made through the socket, you can use the socket in whatever you want, I want to see the life memory of a guest VM. I used the plugin pmemaccess, in the command line of qemu-systemx86_64 ... -panda pmemaccess:path=/tmp/socket1,mode=0 (or I change it to mode 1), as through the console of it. What I did was occupy the volatility (example: volatility sockets -f socket1), I did not specify any profile, I just want it to be able to "open communication" with the socket, once I did it, both in volatility and In the QEMU-PANDA console it sends me the message that it is connected. Once I verify that the console tells me that the communication is already done, I open another terminal and use the socat to see how the data flows, through the socket (example: socat -t100 -x -v UNIX-LISTEN:/path/to/sock,mode=777,reuseaddr,fork UNIX-CONNECT:/path/to/sock.original).
And according to, you should see the data flow, but, nothing happens, it does not send me any message. Literally, it does not send me anything, only the cursor blinks, I did the test with an Arch ISO image, then I used an image with windows 7 64 bits. And again nothing.
I also comment, that in addition, I put that same complement in the QEMU v5.1.0 and the result is the same, I create the socket in the qemu console, I link it with the volatility and nothing.
I occupy a sony vaio i5, 8 gigs of memory
Kali 2020.3 64 bits.
I hope you can help me to see if it is possible to see the guest's memory live.
Thanks for your time and advice in advance.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
I apologize if I put my question here in PANDA v1.0, as I was hesitant to put it in the new PANDA v2.0.
I am experimenting with your pmemaccess plugin, it is super interesting, since it exposes the physical memory of a guest VM through a linux socket.
According to what I read, once the connection is made through the socket, you can use the socket in whatever you want, I want to see the life memory of a guest VM. I used the plugin pmemaccess, in the command line of qemu-systemx86_64 ... -panda pmemaccess:path=/tmp/socket1,mode=0 (or I change it to mode 1), as through the console of it. What I did was occupy the volatility (example: volatility sockets -f socket1), I did not specify any profile, I just want it to be able to "open communication" with the socket, once I did it, both in volatility and In the QEMU-PANDA console it sends me the message that it is connected. Once I verify that the console tells me that the communication is already done, I open another terminal and use the socat to see how the data flows, through the socket (example: socat -t100 -x -v UNIX-LISTEN:/path/to/sock,mode=777,reuseaddr,fork UNIX-CONNECT:/path/to/sock.original).
And according to, you should see the data flow, but, nothing happens, it does not send me any message. Literally, it does not send me anything, only the cursor blinks, I did the test with an Arch ISO image, then I used an image with windows 7 64 bits. And again nothing.
I also comment, that in addition, I put that same complement in the QEMU v5.1.0 and the result is the same, I create the socket in the qemu console, I link it with the volatility and nothing.
I occupy a sony vaio i5, 8 gigs of memory
Kali 2020.3 64 bits.
I hope you can help me to see if it is possible to see the guest's memory live.
Thanks for your time and advice in advance.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: