The goal of DanderSpritz lab is to allow researchers and defenders to quickly stand up a fully functional version of DanderSpritz - The Equation Group's Post exploitation tool-set and a Windows Server 2008 Domain and client as targets. The Windows target have some reverse engineering tools that I found useful while investigating DanderSpritz and it's capabilities.
Read a little bit about DanderSpritz lab here: https://medium.com/@francisck/introducing-danderspritz-lab-461912313d7c
A website I've created to document DanderSpritz capabilities and tools: https://danderspritz.com
NOTE: This lab has not been hardened in any way (it is intentionally vulnerable) and runs with default vagrant credentials. Please do not connect or bridge it to any networks you care about.
- 20GB+ of free disk space
- 8GB+ of RAM
- 20GB bandwidth usage (to download ISOs, updates, service packs, etc)
- Packer v1.2.3 or newer
- Vagrant v2.1.1 or newer
- Vagrant-Reload Plugin
- Virtualbox (VMWare Fusion/Workstation coming later)
DanderSpritz uses Packer, Vagrant, and the Vagrant-reload plug-in to install and configure the lab from scratch. Packer will download Windows ISOs directly from Microsoft and install trial versions of the software for use during research.
- Clone this repo to your own machine
git clone git@github.com:francisck/DanderSpritz_lab.git
- Make sure you have the Vagrant-reload plug installed
vagrant plugin install vagrant-reload
- In order to download the ISOs and perform the build-out of the Vagrant boxes run the following command:
packer build danderspritz_lab.json
- Once the Vagrant boxes are built, start the VMs and let them continue some additional configuration:
vagrant up
- Launch the Windows Command Prompt (cmd) and run the following:
D:\
python fb.py
- Set a default target address of 192.168.40.3
- Set a default callback address of 192.168.40.4
- Do not use redirection (at first)
- Leave the default log directory
- Create a new project (option 0)
- Name your new project
- Leave the default logs directory
- Run the following command to exploit the machine using EternalBlue
use eternalblue
- Choose all of the default options except the delivery mechanism. Use "FB" (traditional deployment) as the delivery mechanism
- Once eternalblue succeeds, configure danderspritz and peddlecheap
- Launch another Windows Command Prompt (cmd) and run the following:
D:\
python configure_lp
- Allow Java through the firewall
- Select
browse
next to "Log directory" and choose the name of the FuzzBunch project you created - Click "go"
- In the DanderSpritz console, run the following command:
pc_prep
- Select the standard x64-winnt level 3 sharedlib payload
5
- Do not select advanced settings
- Choose to perform an immediate callback
- Use the default PC ID (0)
- Select "Yes" to "Do you want to listen?"
- Do not change listen ports
- Leave the default "callback" address (127.0.0.1)
- Do not change the exe name
- Use the default key (option 2)
- Validate that the PeddleCheap configuration is valid
- Do not configure with FC (felonycrowbar)
- Copy the location of the configured binary:
- In the original Fuzzbunch Window type:
use doublepulsar
- Choose "yes" when asked if you want to be prompted for variable settings
- Select all default variable settings except the target architecture (choose option 1)
1) x64 x64 64-bits
- Select the "RunDLL" function (option 2)
2) RunDLL Use an APC to inject a DLL into a user mode process.
- Leave all other options default and select "Yes" when asked if you want to execute the plugin
- You should see "Doublepulsar succeeded"
- In DanderSpritz select "PeddleCheap" at the top of the screen
- Select the "default" key from the key dropdown menu
- Enter the address of the target machine (192.168.40.3)
- Select "Connect to target"
- Select your Fuzzbunch project name
- Wait for the DanderSpritz Survey to complete (will take quite a while) and you'll have to answer a few questions along the way
- Profit!
The purpose of this project is to allow security researchers to build and configure a fully functional DanderSpritz lab easily for reverse engineering and testing.
- Do not run this against any targets outside of this lab.
- Do not use this for "red team engagements"
- Do Contribute your research back to the community
- Do Reach out to me with any questions you may have :)
Once you've ran packer once, you won't need to run it again. The Vagrant boxes will be available for you to rebuild, tear down, restart your lab.
Below are some useful commands that you may use as you work with the lab:
- Bring up all DanderSprotz Lab hosts:
vagrant up
- Bring up a specific host:
vagrant up <hostname>
- Restart a specific host:
vagrant reload <hostname>
- Restart a specific host and re-run the provision process:
vagrant reload <hostname> --provision
- Destroy a specific host
vagrant destroy <hostname>
- Destroy the entire Danderspritz Lab environment:
vagrant destroy
- Snapshot a machine:
vagrant snapshot save <hostname> <snapshot_name>
- Restore a machine snapshot:
vagrant snapshot restore <hostname> <snapshot_name>
- Check the status of each host:
vagrant status
- Suspend the lab environment:
vagrant suspend
- Resume the lab environment:
vagrant resume
If you run into an issue where the test license is expired, you can re-arm the hosts up to 3 times (for 90 days of Windows license goodness) by running this command on an administrative command prompt
`slmgr /rearm'
You'll have to reboot the machine.
- Domain Name: windomain.local
- Administrator login (all machines): vagrant:vagrant
- DC (Domain Controller): 192.168.40.2/24
- Target: 192.168.40.3/24
- DanderSpritz: 192.168.40.4/24
- DC - Windows 2008 R2 Domain Controller
- Windows Domain Controller for Windomain.local
- WEF Server Configuration GPO
- Powershell logging GPO
- Enhanced Windows Auditing policy GPO
- Target - Windows 7 Workstation
- Simulates target workstation / machine
- Joined to Windomain.local Windows AD Domain
- Some reversing / visibility tools pre-installed
- Chocolatey (with FireEye Flare REPO) available for further tool installation
- DanderSpritz Box - Windows 10
- DanderSprirtz & Fuzzbunch pre-installed
- Sysmon
- Sysinternal Tools (Procmon, TCPview, etc)
- API Monitor
- InfoPe
- HxD
- PEView
- Windbg
- WireShark
- Binary Ninja
- HashCalc
- IDA 7 Free
- Ollydbg
- Enhanced Auditing GPO
- PowerShell logging GPO
- Windows Events forwarded to Domain Controller (WEC)
A sizable percentage of this code was borrowed and adapted from Chris Long's DetectionLab project along with Stefan Scherer's packer-windows and adfs2 Github repos. A huge thanks to to everyone who has contributed their code to making projects like this easier (or even possible).
- Introducing Detection Lab
- Windows Event Forwarding for Network Defense
- palantir/windows-event-forwarding
- Monitoring what matters — Windows Event Forwarding for everyone
- Use Windows Event Forwarding to help with intrusion detection
- The Windows Event Forwarding Survival Guide
- SwiftOnSecurity - Sysmon Config