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Full Discussion: Debug help
Operating Systems OS X (Apple) Debug help Post 302787109 by DGPickett on Thursday 28th of March 2013 04:28:18 PM
Old 03-28-2013
UNIX has an interesting command that tells you the unique names of all executed executables and the count of executions since boot. Darned if I can recall what it is called.

You might look for files with odd permission for where they are, files with setuid or setgid, changes in the list, age, checksum of files owned by root and his priviledged buddies. You might want to run a proprietary checksum for that, hackers put in compensation dummy data for common checksums, maybe a personal md5.
 

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sum(1)							      General Commands Manual							    sum(1)

NAME
sum - print checksum and block or byte count of file(s) SYNOPSIS
[file ...] Remarks is obsolescent and should not be used in new applications that are intended to be portable between systems. Use instead (see cksum(1)). DESCRIPTION
calculates and prints to standard output a checksum for each named file, and also prints the size of the file in 512 byte blocks, rounded up. The default algorithm is a 16-bit sum of the bytes in which overflow is ignored. Alternate algorithms can be selected with the and options. Standard input is used if no file names are given. is typically used to verify data integrity when copying files between systems. Options recognizes the following options: Use an alternate algorithm in which the 16-bit sum is right rotated with each byte in computing the checksum. Use the 32-bit cyclical redundancy check (CRC) algorithm used by RETURN VALUE
returns the following values upon completion: All files were processed successfully. One or more files could not be read or some other error occurred. If an inaccessible file is encountered, continues processing any remaining files, but the final exit status is affected. DIAGNOSTICS
Read error conditions are indistinguishable from end of file on most devices; check the block or byte count. WARNINGS
This command is likely to be withdrawn from X/Open standards. Applications using this command might not be portable to other vendors' platforms. The usage of cksum(1) is recommended. SEE ALSO
cksum(1), wc(1). STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
sum(1)
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