BloodHound
SecLists
BloodHound | SecLists | |
---|---|---|
28 | 177 | |
9,474 | 54,519 | |
0.9% | - | |
7.6 | 9.6 | |
4 months ago | 3 days ago | |
PowerShell | PHP | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | 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.
BloodHound
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Dealing with large BloodHound datasets
Tool Language Url Notes SharpHound .NET 4 executable https://github.com/BloodHoundAD/SharpHound/ Also possible to be executed in-memory using Cobalt Strike, check @william_knows’ blog post AzureHound PowerShell https://github.com/BloodHoundAD/AzureHound/ Specifically for Azure environments, outside of the scope of this article SharpHound.ps1 PowerShell https://github.com/BloodHoundAD/BloodHound/ Available from the Collectors folder. Using PowerShell reflectively loads the embedded SharpHound.exe .NET executable. It exposes the Invoke-BloodHound function which calls the main function of the SharpHound binary. SharpHound.py Python https://github.com/fox-it/BloodHound.py/ Python version of SharpHound ADExplorerSnapshot.py Python https://github.com/c3c/ADExplorerSnapshot.py/ Convert Sysinternals ADExplorer snapshots to BloodHound-compatible JSON files. BOFHound Python https://github.com/fortalice/bofhound/ Generate BloodHound compatible JSON from logs written by ldapsearch BOF and pyldapsearch.
- Problem enumerating/connecting using Bloodhound on my Kali VM
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User that is not a member of Domain Admins Group anymore is able to add members to that group.
Run Sharphound and bloodhound Bloodhound. It is excellent in determining relationships and privilege escalation paths that would allow the access.
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4 AD Attacks and How to Protect Against Them
BloodHound is a web application that identifies and visualizes attack paths in Active Directory environments. It identifies the fastest series of steps from any AD account or machine to a desired target, such as membership in the Domain Admins group. Regularly checking your AD using BloodHound can be an effective defense mechanism that helps you ensure that compromising an account or machine doesn’t enable an attacker to compromise your domain.
- Junior Pen Tester - CTF interview
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What are some of the most frequently used (or favorite) tools in your toolbox?
Bloodhound - AD attack path management/enumeration
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AD Enumeration room Bloodhound part is broken?
I solved it by grabbing a new version of Sharphound.ps1 on the attack box, you can find it here: https://github.com/BloodHoundAD/BloodHound/tree/master/Collectors.
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BSides SLC: Community, Fun, And Security Best Practices In Salt Lake City
No live event would be complete without sessions. There were over 30 speakers who covered topics from starting a career in InfoSec, to in-depth sessions about using specific tools like BloodHound. Here are just a few high-level themes and highlights. All of these sessions, including mine, will be made available on the BSidesSLC YouTube channel soon.
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Creating a jump host in 2023
If you're planning to use Active Directory and/or Azure AD, run ADRecon/AzureADRecon and Bloodhound frequently and review in depth. Run ScoutSuite frequently and review as part of a normal operational cycle (e.g., at weekly team meetings make the results available and set aside 15 minutes to discuss and make assignments). Look critically at where these three tools overlap within two or three degrees of separation from your jump hosts (e.g., hosts/nodes that are one or two devices away and users/security groups that are one or two devices away) for help prioritizing when you have too many high-risk/high-impact items to look through.
- Blue Team...What tools can you not live with out?
SecLists
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Where can I find a large list of common usernames?
https://github.com/danielmiessler/SecLists/blob/master/Usernames/xato-net-10-million-usernames.txt is not enough usernames
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DarkBeam leaks billions of email and password combinations
This reminds me of [0] where they maintain composite lists of frequently used passwords. Also in the repo is probably my favorite pull request ever [1].
[0] https://github.com/danielmiessler/SecLists
[1] https://github.com/danielmiessler/SecLists/pull/155
- Would you take this order?
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What's the problem with my API?
Maybe swagger.txt
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I had a machine running for two weeks on the public cloud. Every few seconds there was an automated SSH login attempt. Here is the full list of usernames - some of which are quite curious.
Typical of the sorts of information a tester/attacker might be using from: Daniel Miessler's SecLists
- How does one find a list of banned/breached passwords to add to our Azure Custom Password Block list?
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[OC] I updated our famous password table for 2023
Oh, and then you have this.
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Join Celebrations! Appwrite 1.3 Ships Relationships
You can now also enable a rule for password dictionary. Appwrite knows what are the most common passwords, and with this rule enabled, it will not allow you users to set any of those passwords. It prevents your users from having passwords like password, 123456678, or qwertyui. Appwrite currently knows the 10,000 most commonly used passwords thanks to the same list used by other industry-leading auth providers. You can check out the dictionary list on GitHub.
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Help crack wpa2
Try wifite if you don’t know how to use hashcat it is pretty simple. Hashcat is pretty easy as well I am to lazy to get on my laptop right now but just get the right wordlist Seclist has a shit load of them https://github.com/danielmiessler/SecLists
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Help me find the code
Fellow rust players know the way
What are some alternatives?
pingcastle - PingCastle - Get Active Directory Security at 80% in 20% of the time
Probable-Wordlists - Version 2 is live! Wordlists sorted by probability originally created for password generation and testing - make sure your passwords aren't popular!
ADRecon - ADRecon is a tool which gathers information about the Active Directory and generates a report which can provide a holistic picture of the current state of the target AD environment.
gobuster - Directory/File, DNS and VHost busting tool written in Go
Adalanche - Active Directory ACL Visualizer and Explorer - who's really Domain Admin? (Commerical versions available from NetSection)
wpscan - WPScan WordPress security scanner. Written for security professionals and blog maintainers to test the security of their WordPress websites. Contact us via [email protected]
CrackMapExec - A swiss army knife for pentesting networks
big-list-of-naughty-strings - The Big List of Naughty Strings is a list of strings which have a high probability of causing issues when used as user-input data.
PowerSploit - PowerSploit - A PowerShell Post-Exploitation Framework
btcrecover - An open source Bitcoin wallet password and seed recovery tool designed for the case where you already know most of your password/seed, but need assistance in trying different possible combinations.
RustScan - 🤖 The Modern Port Scanner 🤖
english-words - :memo: A text file containing 479k English words for all your dictionary/word-based projects e.g: auto-completion / autosuggestion