where.exe

  • File Path: C:\WINDOWS\SysWOW64\where.exe
  • Description: Where - Lists location of files

Hashes

Type Hash
MD5 EB5CBB1B1F3205A3A1CEEA01D205D85A
SHA1 E068095151BB1E635BBA8BCCE9136C82C46D390D
SHA256 2D6548EF07BE461A9849655DEBE8A2CAFAFA48E6F40D14E09F4BAFD630051566
SHA384 2AB721B60B839719B13B3351A57CD14E0421D81257C2CF93B9ED32BE467DF16F081D49ACEBB09293AA9A613197ABE804
SHA512 F113AC2389E3B27837667BE3EFEF6F90C2770A9DFC32D3EF3ECFCAF4308B78E6DEBE70365E877EFA5C988580B935C4CE659B7E6A31384DC2B4D4081F6F751C86
SSDEEP 768:SXPGKQJissLr48DEww6YR9v46OFdshxufObnm:SXPGKQ4RLYwmvfdxhbn

Runtime Data

Usage (stdout):


WHERE [/R dir] [/Q] [/F] [/T] pattern...

Description:
    Displays the location of files that match the search pattern.
    By default, the search is done along the current directory and
    in the paths specified by the PATH environment variable.

Parameter List:
    /R       Recursively searches and displays the files that match the
             given pattern starting from the specified directory.

    /Q       Returns only the exit code, without displaying the list
             of matched files. (Quiet mode)

    /F       Displays the matched filename in double quotes.

    /T       Displays the file size, last modified date and time for all
             matched files.

    pattern  Specifies the search pattern for the files to match.
             Wildcards * and ? can be used in the pattern. The
             "$env:pattern" and "path:pattern" formats can also be
             specified, where "env" is an environment variable and
             the search is done in the specified paths of the "env"
             environment variable. These formats should not be used
             with /R. The search is also done by appending the
             extensions of the PATHEXT variable to the pattern.

     /?      Displays this help message.

  NOTE: The tool returns an error level of 0 if the search is
        successful, of 1 if the search is unsuccessful and
        of 2 for failures or errors.

Examples:
    WHERE /?
    WHERE myfilename1 myfile????.*
    WHERE $windir:*.* 
    WHERE /R c:\windows *.exe *.dll *.bat  
    WHERE /Q ??.??? 
    WHERE "c:\windows;c:\windows\system32:*.dll"
    WHERE /F /T *.dll 

Usage (stderr):

ERROR: Invalid argument or option - '/h'.
Type "WHERE /?" for usage help.

Signature

  • Status: Signature verified.
  • Serial: 330000023241FB59996DCC4DFF000000000232
  • Thumbprint: FF82BC38E1DA5E596DF374C53E3617F7EDA36B06
  • Issuer: CN=Microsoft Windows Production PCA 2011, O=Microsoft Corporation, L=Redmond, S=Washington, C=US
  • Subject: CN=Microsoft Windows, O=Microsoft Corporation, L=Redmond, S=Washington, C=US

File Metadata

  • Original Filename: where.exe
  • Product Name: Microsoft Windows Operating System
  • Company Name: Microsoft Corporation
  • File Version: 10.0.18362.1 (WinBuild.160101.0800)
  • Product Version: 10.0.18362.1
  • Language: English (United States)
  • Legal Copyright: Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

Possible Misuse

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

Source Source File Example License
sigma proc_creation_win_susp_where_execution.yml where_exe: DRL 1.0
sigma proc_creation_win_susp_where_execution.yml Image\|endswith: '\where.exe' DRL 1.0
atomic-red-team T1562.001.md if ((cmd.exe /c “where.exe Sysmon.exe 2> nul | findstr Sysmon 2> nul”) -or (Test-Path $env:Temp\Sysmon\Sysmon.exe)) { exit 0 } else { exit 1 } MIT License. © 2018 Red Canary
atomic-red-team T1562.001.md if(cmd.exe /c “where.exe Sysmon.exe 2> nul | findstr Sysmon 2> nul”) { C:\Windows\Sysmon.exe -accepteula -i } else MIT License. © 2018 Red Canary

Additional Info*

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


where

Displays the location of files that match the given search pattern.

Syntax

where [/r <Dir>] [/q] [/f] [/t] [$<ENV>:|<Path>:]<Pattern>[ ...]

Parameters

Parameter Description
/r <Dir> Indicates a recursive search, starting with the specified directory.
/q Returns an exit code (0 for success, 1 for failure) without displaying the list of matched files.
/f Displays the results of the where command in quotation marks.
/t Displays the file size and the last modified date and time of each matched file.
[$<ENV>:|<Path>:]<Pattern>[ …] Specifies the search pattern for the files to match. At least one pattern is required, and the pattern can include wildcard characters (* and ?). By default, where searches the current directory and the paths that are specified in the PATH environment variable. You can specify a different path to search by using the format $ENV:Pattern (where ENV is an existing environment variable containing one or more paths) or by using the format Path:Pattern (where Path is the directory path you want to search). These optional formats should not be used with the /r command-line option.
/? Displays help at the command prompt.

Remarks

  • If you do not specify a file name extension, the extensions listed in the PATHEXT environment variable are appended to the pattern by default.
  • Where can run recursive searches, display file information such as date or size, and accept environment variables in place of paths on local computers.

Examples

To find all files named Test in drive C of the current computer and its subdirectories, type:

where /r c:\ test

To list all files in the Public directory, type:

where $public:*.*

To find all files named Notepad in drive C of the remote computer, Computer1, and its subdirectories, type:

where /r \\computer1\c notepad.*

Additional References


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