Adalanche
HardeningKitty
Adalanche | HardeningKitty | |
---|---|---|
17 | 14 | |
1,530 | 1,149 | |
- | 3.8% | |
9.0 | 2.9 | |
about 2 months ago | about 2 months ago | |
Go | PowerShell | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Adalanche
- Active Directory ACL Visualizer and Explorer
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Adalanche v2023.5.3 released
You can find open source edition at GitHub (https://github.com/lkarlslund/Adalanche) as usual.
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Active Directory Security Tools
Adalanche - AD ACL Explorer/Visualizer - https://github.com/lkarlslund/Adalanche
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Adalanche
Adalanche instantly shows what permissions users and groups have in Active Directory. Collects and analyzes information from AD or from local Windows machines. Allows you to find misconfigurations and see who can take over accounts, machines or the entire domain. Kindly recommended by dcdiagfix.
- adalanche v2021.11.3 released: new UI, better analysis, improved performance
- adalanche: Active Directory ACL Visualizer and Explorer - who's really Domain Admin?
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A bit of a rant....
You could you try my tool adalanche (https://github.com/lkarlslund/adalanche), which visualizes who can do what in your Active Directory environment. Many managers aren't technical at all, but if they see a graph showing how Mike from HR can basically become DA and then assign himself permissions to read the Director of ITs emails, perhaps that could help convince them.
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Privileges needed in VCenter to take over a virtualized Domain Controller?
I'm working on an experimental addition to my graph based Active Directory analyzer "adalanche" (https://github.com/lkarlslund/adalanche) and as I'm more blue than red I could use some input from you.
HardeningKitty
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If You Had To Create All IT Policies From Scratch
Also Hardening-Kitty. https://github.com/scipag/HardeningKitty
- CIS benchmark Windows Server 2022
- Windows OS Security
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Creating a jump host in 2023
Critically, harden the OS. Like, more than you think you need to. Way more. Consider the jump host capability as a core component of each system/environment/platform/application it's used to access/manage and assess value and risk with all those business processes/functions in mind even though you're using one jump host for each of those use cases because, inevitably, the same template/container/configuration/script will be reused so any misconfigurations will replicate. If you need a Windows OS, consider hardening kitty as it offers a locally executable option for both hardening and auditing. If you need to met regulatory requirements (HIPAA, CMMC, FISMA, PCI, etc.), consider OpenSCAP or whatever paid solution you use for agent-based vuln scans (avoid less intensive solutions that only run unauthenticated scans or network-based audits, they tend to avoid non-CVE vulns that exist in the configuration). If you need to rely on open source endpoint security solutions like Wazuh make sure they integrate nicely with SIEM, SOAR, and remote management. Wherever possible, use DevOps-friendly solutions for configuration management (think Ansible and Terraform vice Github Actions :) ) and remember that, if you're responding to an incident, you're going to want to suspend all of your jump boxes, retain any storage and their full memory state, and spin up verifiably clean jump boxes so you have confidence in your connections into the environment. This is the most commonly overlooked need (most orgs seem to be aware of their privilege sprawl issue) and it has a MASSIVE impact on your ability to quickly begin effective investigation and response efforts in the event of an incident (most orgs do NOT seem to be aware of this and it costs them time and meaningful information during incidents).
- Active Directory Security Tools
- Help!! Is there a Scanning tool that helps scan the whole Windows Build Image?
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Is Windows Defender for Business any good?
Agree. Harden your endpoints (if unsure where to start consider hardening kitty, https://github.com/scipag/HardeningKitty) and harden Defender (https://0ut3r.space/2022/03/06/windows-defender/). Add Sysmon with a good config (https://github.com/olafhartong/sysmon-modular) and you've reached a good starting point.
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Ciphers... Edge... I wanna AES256 SHA384 only
I use a tool called Hardening-Kitty https://github.com/scipag/HardeningKitty , which has recommended policy lists from a variety of organizations. I check my computer with all of them. They don't all agree, of course, so I kind of pick and choose a little. But the lists have helped me find things I had no idea where they were.
- PowerShell script to confirm server configuration
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There’s a GitHub repo for testing every single Windows security / privilege mechanism. I’ve lost the book mark, anyone know it?
A related tool that I found somewhere on reddit recently: HardeningKitty
What are some alternatives?
BloodHound - Six Degrees of Domain Admin
windows_hardening - HardeningKitty and Windows Hardening settings and configurations
GOAD - game of active directory
AutomaticMaintenance - Helps IT engineers to establish a continuous update process in large intertangled infrastructures.
ldapnomnom - Quietly and anonymously bruteforce Active Directory usernames at insane speeds from Domain Controllers by (ab)using LDAP Ping requests (cLDAP)
SchannelConfiguration - Configure SChannel Security Settings via Group Policy
adsys - Active Directory bridging tool suite
hardentools - Hardentools simply reduces the attack surface on Microsoft Windows computers by disabling low-hanging fruit risky features.
AutomatedLab - AutomatedLab is a provisioning solution and framework that lets you deploy complex labs on HyperV and Azure with simple PowerShell scripts. It supports all Windows operating systems from 2008 R2 to 2022, some Linux distributions and various products like AD, Exchange, PKI, IIS, etc.
PowerZure - PowerShell framework to assess Azure security
pingcastle - PingCastle - Get Active Directory Security at 80% in 20% of the time
Audit-Test-Automation - The Audit Test Automation Package gives you the ability to get an overview about the compliance status of several systems. You can easily create HTML-reports and have a transparent overview over compliance and non-compliance of explicit setttings and configurations in comparison to industry standards and hardening guides.