Thursday, July 30, 2009

Cygwin Installation

Note: I am reusing a post from my forensics class at John Jay College. This will be used as a reference for an upcoming post on Volatility module installation. So be patient, there is more to come...

This post goes over an installation of Cygwin which is a Linux-like environment for windows. Since most of you have Windows machines, this will allow you run tools that normally run under Linux/Unix environments.

The setup file is here.

When you download setup, double click it. You should see the following:




Press ``Next'' and choose ``Install from the Internet'' :



Choose where to install Cygwin (by default it is in C:\Cygwin):



Cygwin will create a directory in which it will store the its files during installation. After installation you can delete the folder. The default location is the desktop:



Select your internet connection. The default is OK:



Select a mirror (mirrorservice.org is good):



Press ``Next'' You should see the following:



Next you will see a list of packages you can download. By default these are organized by category:



If you press the plus signs on the left hand side, it will open up the category and you can select specific packages:




Here is a list of packages you need organized by category:

    From the Base category
  1. Everything
    From the Devel category
  1. Gcc: C, C++, Fortran compilers
  2. gcc-mingw: Mingw32 support headers and libraries for GCC
  3. gcc2: Version X.XX.X [whatever is latest] of C, C++, Fortran compilers
  4. gdb: The GNU Debugger
  5. make: The GNU version of the `make' utility
  6. mingw-runtime: MinGW Runtime
  7. openssl-devel: The OpenSSL development environment
    From the Editors category
  1. Nano: A pico clone text editor with extensions [works like pico]
  2. vim: Vi Improved – enhanced vi editor
    From the Interpreters category
  1. Perl
  2. Python
    From the Utils category
  1. until-linux: Random collection of Linux utilities
  2. file
  3. ELFIO
    From the Text category
  1. less: A file pager program, similar to more(1)



After you have made your selections, press next for installation to begin. This part is the actual installation, and may take some time. Just let it finish. After it finishes you will be asked if you want to create shortcuts on the desktop. Make sure to click Finish.

Running Cygwin

When you run Cygwin for the first time, it might take a little longer to start up. This is because it is configuring
a few more files for your environment. Then you should get a command line prompt that looks like:

You are now able to work on your programs at home on your windows machines.

2 comments:

Considering Things said...

That's a nice walk-through. The only thing I do different, is select multiple mirror locations, in case they don't have everything or are not all fresh. The Cygwin setup will sort it all out and provide one full and current list (as current as what it could find).

New-to-your-blog question: Have you reviewed Strawberry Perl? Since many people install Cygwin for the Perl goodies, I thought I'd suggest it for those "born in a Windows environment" users. It is a well supported, and free Perl environment, plus compiler (more than Vanilla Perl, cute) and libraries, so you can compile new modules in a completely native Windows environment.

Jamie Levy said...

Thanks for the comment :-) That's actually a good idea to use multiple mirrors. For the class I was teaching I made them choose from one particular mirror so we would all be on the same page in case we needed to troubleshoot.

Nice suggestion on Strawberry Perl! I haven't reviewed it, but perhaps I will :-)