find.exe

  • File Path: C:\windows\SysWOW64\find.exe
  • Description: Find String (grep) Utility

Hashes

Type Hash
MD5 C0708CC729C51E096140CEB98E8A5919
SHA1 719E9E130B06D5F00EE254FD98B136572A667DD8
SHA256 DFA180160E8D58FB471AC0C4602619852FFD74D6426464E0EB6C61C06AFE065B
SHA384 E03D7B48350EB7E6E97EB84E78C366B7523670E87740EE84D4BF82DDD5AC7898F3569A4D4132599FEF453CCBAFC8D487
SHA512 C0A3BF592175DB582DFB971A99FD931C4D02DAEFA8565E72E61105FD9B76FBFE4664C3F1BC373E003B9C411E31C0D9DCB99CBF1227E2DE3ED54D2300AA724BAD
SSDEEP 192:RssQ9pabJsiuGYWTXDKo9PTswLiDb/3oVZPZakVkhFWwIWvUZ:R9QKYWTGo9PxZPQkirWwIWvU

Signature

  • Status: The file C:\windows\SysWOW64\find.exe is not digitally signed. You cannot run this script on the current system. For more information about running scripts and setting execution policy, see about_Execution_Policies at http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=135170
  • Serial: ``
  • Thumbprint: ``
  • Issuer:
  • Subject:

File Metadata

  • Original Filename: FIND.EXE.MUI
  • Product Name: Microsoft Windows Operating System
  • Company Name: Microsoft Corporation
  • File Version: 6.3.9600.16384 (winblue_rtm.130821-1623)
  • Product Version: 6.3.9600.16384
  • Language: English (United States)
  • Legal Copyright: Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

Possible Misuse

The following table contains possible examples of find.exe being misused. While find.exe is not inherently malicious, its legitimate functionality can be abused for malicious purposes.

Source Source File Example License
sigma sysmon_suspicious_remote_thread.yml - '\find.exe' DRL 1.0

Additional Info*

*The information below is copied from MicrosoftDocs, which is maintained by Microsoft. Available under CC BY 4.0 license.


find

Searches for a string of text in a file or files, and displays lines of text that contain the specified string.

Syntax

find [/v] [/c] [/n] [/i] [/off[line]] <"string"> [[<drive>:][<path>]<filename>[...]]

Parameters

Parameter Description
/v Displays all lines that don’t contain the specified <string>.
/c Counts the lines that contain the specified <string> and displays the total.
/n Precedes each line with the file’s line number.
/i Specifies that the search is not case-sensitive.
[/off[line]] Doesn’t skip files that have the offline attribute set.
<"string"> Required. Specifies the group of characters (enclosed in quotation marks) that you want to search for.
[<drive>:][<path>]<filename> Specifies the location and name of the file in which to search for the specified string.
/? Displays help at the command prompt.

Exit codes

Exit code Description
0 The searched string was found
1 Searched string not found
2 Searched file not found or invalid command line switch was given
Remarks
  • If you don’t use /i, this command searches for exactly what you specify for string. For example, this command treats the characters a and A differently. If you use /i, however, the search becomes case insensitive, and it treats a and A as the same character.

  • If the string you want to search for contains quotation marks, you must use double quotation marks for each quotation mark contained within the string (for example, “"”This string contains quotation marks”””).

  • If you omit a file name, this command acts as a filter, taking input from the standard input source (usually the keyboard, a pipe ( ), or a redirected file) and then displays any lines that contain string.
  • To exit the console search use CTRL-X or CTRL-z.

  • You can type parameters and command-line options for the find command in any order.

  • You can’t use wildcards (* and ?) in the searched string. To search for a string with wild cards and regex patterns, you can use the FINDSTR command.

  • If you use /c and /v in the same command line, this command displays a count of the lines that don’t contain the specified string. If you specify /c and /n in the same command line, find ignores /n.

  • This command doesn’t recognize carriage returns. When you use this command to search for text in a file that includes carriage returns, you must limit the search string to text that can be found between carriage returns (that is, a string that is not likely to be interrupted by a carriage return). For example, this command doesn’t report a match for the string tax file if a carriage return occurs between the words tax and file.

  • The command accepts wildcards for file names. When searching in file (or files) it will print the file of the processed file predeceased by ten dashes.

  • Find command cannot read alternate data streams. For searching in alternate data streams use findstr, more or for /f commands.

Examples

To display all lines from pencil.md that contain the string pencil sharpener, type:

find "pencil sharpener" pencil.md

To find the text, “The scientists labeled their paper for discussion only. It is not a final report.” (including the quotes) in the report.txt file, type:

find """The scientists labeled their paper for discussion only. It is not a final report.""" < report.txt

To search for a set of files, you can use wildcards. To search the current directory for files that have the extension .bat and that contain the string PROMPT ignoring the case, type:

find /i "PROMPT" *.bat
To find files names in a directory that contain the string CPU, use the pipe ( ) to direct the output of the dir command to the find command as follows:
dir c:\temp /s /b | find "CPU"

Find all running processes that do NOT contain agent:

tasklist | find /v /i "agent"

Check if a service is running:

sc query  Winmgmt | find "RUNNING" >nul 2>&1 && (echo service is started) || (echo service is stopped)

Additional References


MIT License. Copyright (c) 2020-2021 Strontic.