osquery is a SQL powered operating system instrumentation, monitoring, and analytics framework.
Available for Linux, macOS, Windows and FreeBSD.
osquery exposes an operating system as a high-performance relational database. This allows you to write SQL-based queries to explore operating system data. With osquery, SQL tables represent abstract concepts such as running processes, loaded kernel modules, open network connections, browser plugins, hardware events or file hashes.
SQL tables are implemented via a simple plugin and extensions API. A variety of tables already exist and more are being written: https://osquery.io/schema. To best understand the expressiveness that is afforded to you by osquery, consider the following SQL queries:
List the users
:
SELECT * FROM users;
Check the processes
that have a deleted executable:
SELECT * FROM processes WHERE on_disk = 0;
Get the process name, port, and PID, for processes listening on all interfaces:
SELECT DISTINCT processes.name, listening_ports.port, processes.pid
FROM listening_ports JOIN processes USING (pid)
WHERE listening_ports.address = '0.0.0.0';
Find every macOS LaunchDaemon that launches an executable and keeps it running:
SELECT name, program || program_arguments AS executable
FROM launchd
WHERE (run_at_load = 1 AND keep_alive = 1)
AND (program != '' OR program_arguments != '');
Check for ARP anomalies from the host's perspective:
SELECT address, mac, COUNT(mac) AS mac_count
FROM arp_cache GROUP BY mac
HAVING count(mac) > 1;
Alternatively, you could also use a SQL sub-query to accomplish the same result:
SELECT address, mac, mac_count
FROM
(SELECT address, mac, COUNT(mac) AS mac_count FROM arp_cache GROUP BY mac)
WHERE mac_count > 1;
These queries can be:
- performed on an ad-hoc basis to explore operating system state using the osqueryi shell
- executed via a scheduler to monitor operating system state across a set of hosts
- launched from custom applications using osquery Thrift APIs
To download the latest stable builds and for repository information and installation instructions visit https://osquery.io/downloads.
Building osquery from source is encouraged! Check out our contributing guide and join the community on Slack.
By contributing to osquery you agree that your contributions will be licensed as defined on the LICENSE file.
We keep track of security announcements in our tagged version release notes on GitHub. We aggregate these into SECURITY.md too.
Facebook has a bug bounty program that includes osquery. If you find a security vulnerability in osquery, please submit it via the process outlined on that page and do not file a public issue. For more information on finding vulnerabilities in osquery, see our blog post Bug Hunting osquery.
If you're interested in learning more about osquery read the launch blog post for background on the project, visit the users guide.
Development and usage discussion is happening in the osquery Slack, grab an invite automatically here!