7MS #502: Building a Pentest Lab in Azure

7MS #502: Building a Pentest Lab in Azure

Happy new year friends! Today I share the good, bad, ugly, and BROKEN things I've come across while migrating our Light Pentest LITE training lab from on-prem VMware ESXi to Azure. It has been a fun and frustrating process, but my hope is that some of the tips in today's episode will save you some time/headaches/money should you setup a pentesting training camp in the cloud.

Things I like

  • No longer relying on a single point of failure (Intel NUC, switch, ISP, etc.)

  • You can schedule VMs to auto-shutdown at a certain time each day, and even have Azure send you a notification before the shutdown so you can delay - or suspend altogether - the operation

Things I don't like

  • VMs are by default (I believe) joined to Azure AD, which I don't want. Here's how I got machines unjoined from Azure AD and then joined to my pwn.town domain:
dsregcmd /leave Add-Computer -DomainName pwn.town -Restart
  • Accidentally provision a VM in the wrong subnet? The fix may be rebuilding the flippin' VM (more info in today's episode).

  • Just about every operation takes for freakin' ever. And it's confusing because if you delete objects out of the portal, sometimes they don't actually disappear from the GUI for like 5-30 minutes.

  • Using backups and snapshots is archaic. You can take a snapshot in the GUI or PowerShell easy-peasy, but if you actually want to restore those snapshots you have to convert them to managed disks, then detach a VM's existing disk, and attach the freshly converted managed disks. This is a nightmare to do with PowerShell.

  • Deleting data is a headache. I understand Azure is probably trying to protect you against deleting stuff and not being able to get it back, but they night a right-click > "I know what I'm doing, DELETE THIS NOW" option. Otherwise you can end up in situations where in order to delete data, you have to disable soft delete, undelete deleted data, then re-delete it to actually make it go away. WTH, you say? This doc will help it make more sense (or not).

Things that are broken

  • Promiscuous mode - just plain does not work as far as I can tell. So I can't do protocol poisoning exercises with something like Inveigh.

  • Hashcat - I got CPU-based cracking working in ESXi by installing OpenCL drivers, but try as I may, I cannot get this working in Azure. I even submitted an issue to the hashcat forums but so far no replies.

On a personal note, it has been good knowing you because I'm about to spend all my money on a new hobby: indoor skydiving.

Avsnitt(689)

7MS #674: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 71

7MS #674: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 71

Today’s tale of pentest pwnage is another great one!  We talk about: The SPNless RBCD attack (covered in more detail in this episode) Importance of looking at all “branches” of outbound permissions that your user has in BloodHound This devilishly effective MSOL-account-stealing PowerShell script (obfuscate it first!) A personal update on my frustration with ringing in my ears

9 Maj 49min

7MS #673: ProxmoxRox

7MS #673: ProxmoxRox

Today we’re excited to release ProxmoxRox – a repo of info and scripts to help you quickly spin up Ubuntu and Windows VMs.  Also, some important news items: 7MinSec.club in-person meeting is happening Wednesday, May 14!  More details here. We did our second Tuesday TOOLSday this week and showed you some local privesc techniques when you have local admin on an endpoint

3 Maj 30min

7MS #672: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 70

7MS #672: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 70

Today’s a fun tale of pentest pwnage where we leveraged a WinRM service ticket in combination with the shadow credentials attack, then connected to an important system using evil-winrm and make our getaway with some privileged Kerberos TGTs!  I also share an (intentionally) vague story about a personal struggle I could use your thoughts/prayers/vibes with.

25 Apr 55min

7MS #671: Pentesting GOAD

7MS #671: Pentesting GOAD

Hello! This week Joe “The Machine” Skeen and I kicked off a series all about pentesting GOAD (Game of Active Directory).  In part one we covered: Checking for null session enumeration on domain controllers Enumerating systems with and without SMB signing Scraping AD user account descriptions Capturing hashes using Responder Cracking hashes with Hashcat

18 Apr 25min

7MS #670: Adventures in Self-Hosting Security Services

7MS #670: Adventures in Self-Hosting Security Services

Hi friends, today I’m kicking off a series talking about the good/bad/ugly of hosting security services. Today I talk specifically about transfer.zip. By self-hosting your own instance of transfer.zip, you can send and receive HUGE files that are end-to-end encrypted using WebRTC.  Sweet!  I also supplemented today’s episode with a short live video over at 7MinSec.club.

11 Apr 36min

7MS #669: What I’m Working on This Week – Part 3

7MS #669: What I’m Working on This Week – Part 3

Hi friends, in this edition of what I’m working on this week: 3 pulse-pounding pentests that had…problems Something I’m calling the unshadow/reshadow credentials attack Heads-up on a new video experiment I’m going to try next week

4 Apr 42min

7MS #668: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 69

7MS #668: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 69

Hola friends! Today’s tale of pentest pwnage talks about abusing Exchange and the Azure ADSync account! Links to the discussed things: adconnectdump – for all your ADSync account dumping needs! Adam Chester PowerShell script to dump MSOL service account dacledit.py (part of Impacket) to give myself full write privileges on the MSOL sync account: dacledit.py -action ‘write’ -rights ‘FullControl’ -principal lowpriv -target MSOL-SYNC-ACCOUNT -dc-ip 1.2.3.4 domain.com/EXCHANGEBOX$ -k -no-pass Looking to tighten up your Exchange permissions – check out this crazy detailed post

28 Mars 30min

7MS #667: Pentesting GOAD SCCM - Part 2!

7MS #667: Pentesting GOAD SCCM - Part 2!

Hey friends, our good buddy Joe “The Machine” Skeen and I are back this week with part 2 (check out part 1!) tackling GOAD SCCM again!  Spoiler alert: this time we get DA!  YAY! Definitely check out these handy SCCM resources to help you – whether it be in the lab or IRL (in real life): GOAD SCCM walkthrough MisconfigurationManager – tremendous resource for enumerating/attacking/privesc-ing within SCCM This gist from Adam Chester will help you decrypt SCCM creds stored in SQL

21 Mars 28min

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