Running YARA from the command-line¶
In order to invoke YARA you’ll need two things: a file with the rules you want to use (either in source code or compiled form) and the target to be scanned. The target can be a file, a folder, or a process.
yara [OPTIONS] RULES_FILE TARGET
Rule files can be passed directly in source code form, or can be previously
compiled with the yarac
tool. You may prefer to use your rules in compiled
form if you are going to invoke YARA multiple times with the same rules. This
way you’ll save time, because for YARA it is faster to load compiled rules than
compiling the same rules over and over again.
The rules will be applied to the target specified as the last argument to YARA,
if it’s a path to a directory all the files contained in it will be scanned.
By default YARA does not attempt to scan directories recursively, but you can
use the -r
option for that.
Available options are:
-
-t
<tag> --tag=<tag>
¶ Print rules tagged as <tag> and ignore the rest.
-
-i
<identifier> --identifier=<identifier>
¶ Print rules named <identifier> and ignore the rest.
-
-n
¶
Print not satisfied rules only (negate).
-
-D
--print-module-data
¶ Print module data.
-
-g
--print-tags
¶ Print tags.
-
-m
--print-meta
¶ Print metadata.
-
-s
--print-strings
¶ Print matching strings.
-
-L
--print-string-length
¶ Print length of matching strings.
-
-e
--print-namespace
¶ Print rules’ namespace.
-
-p
<number> --threads=<number>
¶ Use the specified <number> of threads to scan a directory.
-
-l
<number> --max-rules=<number>
¶ Abort scanning after matching a number of rules.
-
-a
<seconds> --timeout=<seconds>
¶ Abort scanning after a number of seconds has elapsed.
-
-k
<slots> --stack-size=<slots>
¶ Allocate a stack size of “slots” number of slots. Default: 16384. This will allow you to use larger rules, albeit with more memory overhead.
New in version 3.5.0.
-
-d
<identifier>=<value>
¶ Define external variable.
-
-x
<module>=<file>
¶ Pass file’s content as extra data to module.
-
-r
--recursive
¶ Recursively search for directories.
-
-f
--fast-scan
¶ Fast matching mode.
-
-w
--no-warnings
¶ Disable warnings.
-
--fail-on-warnings
¶
Treat warnings as errors. Has no effect if used with –no-warnings.
-
-v
--version
¶ Show version information.
-
-h
--help
¶ Show help.
Here you have some examples:
Apply rule in /foo/bar/rules to all files in the current directory. Subdirectories are not scanned:
yara /foo/bar/rules .
Apply rules in /foo/bar/rules to bazfile. Only reports rules tagged as Packer or Compiler:
yara -t Packer -t Compiler /foo/bar/rules bazfile
Scan all files in the /foo directory and its subdirectories:
yara -r /foo
Defines three external variables mybool, myint and mystring:
yara -d mybool=true -d myint=5 -d mystring="my string" /foo/bar/rules bazfile
Apply rules in /foo/bar/rules to bazfile while passing the content of cuckoo_json_report to the cuckoo module:
yara -x cuckoo=cuckoo_json_report /foo/bar/rules bazfile