http://www.howtoforge.com/faq/1_38_en.html


Either with ckrootkit or with rkhunter.

chkrootkit:

Either install the package that comes with your distribution (on Debian you would run

apt-get install chkrootkit

or download the sources from www.chkrootkit.org and install manually:

wget --passive-ftp ftp://ftp.pangeia.com.br/pub/seg/pac/chkrootkit.tar.gz

tar xvfz chkrootkit.tar.gz

cd chkrootkit-<version>/

make sense


Afterwards, you can move the chkrootkit directory somewhere else, e.g. /usr/local/chkrootkit:

cd ..

mv chkrootkit-<version>/ /usr/local/chkrootkit


Now you can run chkrootkit manually:

cd /usr/local/chkrootkit

./chkrootkit


(if you installed a chkrootkit package coming with your distribution, your chkrootkit might be somewhere else).

You can even run chkrootkit by a cron job and get the results emailed to you:

Run

crontab -e

to create a cron job like this:

0 3 * * * (cd /usr/local/chkrootkit-<version>; ./chkrootkit 2>&1 | mail -s "chkrootkit output my server" [email protected])

That would run chkrootkit every night a 3.00h.

rkhunter:

Download the latest rkhunter sources from www.rootkit.nl:

wget http://downloads.rootkit.nl/rkhunter-1.2.7.tar.gz

tar xvfz rkhunter-1.2.7.tar.gz

cd rkhunter/

./installer.sh


This will install rkhunter to the directory /usr/local/rkhunter. Now run

rkhunter --update

to download the latest chkrootkit/trojan/worm signatures (you should do this regularly).

Now you can scan your system for malware by running

rkhunter -c