DetectionLab
BadBlood
DetectionLab | BadBlood | |
---|---|---|
31 | 10 | |
4,476 | 1,906 | |
- | - | |
4.4 | 0.0 | |
about 1 year ago | 11 months ago | |
HTML | PowerShell | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
DetectionLab
-
Cyber Lab Design
I would tell someone they should use a cloud lab like Clong's "Detection Lab" which gives them not only the security aspect but the cloud and engineering aspects as well.
- Home Virtual SIEM Lab Suggestions?
- malware analysis
- Sandbox suggestions for VM isolation & investigations?
- I am kind a lost
-
Work setup
Detection Lab Link: https://github.com/clong/DetectionLab
-
learning splunk. is there a way to "play" with it?
Not sure what your goal with splunk is but I'd recommend Detection lab! Once you get the pre reqs setup, building and tearing down is super easy and you get a pre-baked ad environment to generate logs for you. https://github.com/clong/DetectionLab
-
Tool that automatically generates a realistic office scenario of vms?
I found a great starting point at the repo of DetectionLab : https://github.com/clong/DetectionLab
-
I'm a noob with expensive equipment
While it's true what most are saying, that you don't need a powerful system to learn hacking....... You DO have a valid point that a powerful system enables things a weaker system may not. For example with 64GB of RAM you can run a full network lab simulation such as https://github.com/clong/DetectionLab additionally a solid high end graphics card will let you run things like hashcat a lot faster. In theory you could make a rainbow table. You still need a lot of time to understand all the basics but yeah there's a few cool things you can do with more power it's not ENTIRELY unneeded. I wish I knew about the local defcon group long ago. They're welcoming and some have capture the flags you can play. Understand the various job roles there are in security and figure out which one you like. You get paid to do specific things not just learn about hacking.
-
where does one get experience with SIEM tools
Github DetectioLab
BadBlood
-
Powershell error message help from using Powerview.ps1
If you want to try more of this kind of stuff or explore what you can find with PowerSploit I can recommend running BadBlood on your DC (after taking a snapshot) https://github.com/davidprowe/BadBlood It creates a bunch of randomized users, groups, OUs, SPNs and stuff.
- Need to setup AD lab for praticing..
- Failed with 60 points (with Lab report) in first attempt
- Virtual AD environmnet to play with Bloodhound
- Active directory scripts for setting a lab?
-
Complex AD Lab
you may want to check out something like this. https://github.com/davidprowe/BadBlood
- BadBlood fills a Microsoft Active Directory Domain with a structure and thousands of objects. The output of the tool is a domain similar to a domain in the real world. After BadBlood is ran on a domain, security analysts and engineers can practice using tools...
- There was a resource I found a while ago, a GitHub repo with scripts for setting up vulnerable AD configurations for a home lab. Does anyone know the one?
- Active directory pen testing lab
-
Cybersecurity physical labs
take a look at https://github.com/microsoft/MSLab, you can install Hyper-V 2019 server and use the scenarios to create a lab to your liking. I'm using this approach to establish a stable/consistent starting point for an AD environment with OUs, computers, groups, and users generated randomly by https://github.com/davidprowe/BadBlood to gauge the differences in logging and detection fidelity between different EDR solutions.
What are some alternatives?
DetectionLabELK - DetectionLabELK is a fork from DetectionLab with ELK stack instead of Splunk.
vulnerable-AD - Create a vulnerable active directory that's allowing you to test most of the active directory attacks in a local lab
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.
security-onion - Security Onion 16.04 - Linux distro for threat hunting, enterprise security monitoring, and log management
GOAD - game of active directory
Adaz - :wrench: Deploy customizable Active Directory labs in Azure - automatically.
WSLab - Azure Stack HCI, Windows 10 and Windows Server rapid lab deployment scripts
DVWA - Damn Vulnerable Web Application (DVWA)
ADLab - Custom PowerShell module to setup an Active Directory lab environment to practice penetration testing.
HELK - The Hunting ELK
red_team_attack_lab - Red Team Attack Lab for TTP testing & research