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JuicyPotato

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RoguePotato, PrintSpoofer, SharpEfsPotato, GodPotatochevron-right

Juicy Potato (abusing the golden privileges)

A sugared version of RottenPotatoNGarrow-up-right, with a bit of juice, i.e. another Local Privilege Escalation tool, from a Windows Service Accounts to NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM

Summary

From juicy-potato Readmearrow-up-right:

RottenPotatoNGarrow-up-right and its variantsarrow-up-right leverages the privilege escalation chain based on BITSarrow-up-right servicearrow-up-right having the MiTM listener on 127.0.0.1:6666 and when you have SeImpersonate or SeAssignPrimaryToken privileges. During a Windows build review we found a setup where BITS was intentionally disabled and port 6666 was taken.

We decided to weaponize RottenPotatoNGarrow-up-right: Say hello to Juicy Potato.

For the theory, see Rotten Potato - Privilege Escalation from Service Accounts to SYSTEMarrow-up-right and follow the chain of links and references.

We discovered that, other than BITS there are a several COM servers we can abuse. They just need to:

  1. be instantiable by the current user, normally a “service user” which has impersonation privileges

  2. implement the IMarshal interface

  3. run as an elevated user (SYSTEM, Administrator, …)

After some testing we obtained and tested an extensive list of interesting CLSID’sarrow-up-right on several Windows versions.

Juicy details

JuicyPotato allows you to:

  • Target CLSID pick any CLSID you want. Herearrow-up-right you can find the list organized by OS.

  • COM Listening port define COM listening port you prefer (instead of the marshalled hardcoded 6666)

  • COM Listening IP address bind the server on any IP

  • Process creation mode depending on the impersonated user’s privileges you can choose from:

    • CreateProcessWithToken (needs SeImpersonate)

    • CreateProcessAsUser (needs SeAssignPrimaryToken)

    • both

  • Process to launch launch an executable or script if the exploitation succeeds

  • Process Argument customize the launched process arguments

  • RPC Server address for a stealthy approach you can authenticate to an external RPC server

  • RPC Server port useful if you want to authenticate to an external server and firewall is blocking port 135

  • TEST mode mainly for testing purposes, i.e. testing CLSIDs. It creates the DCOM and prints the user of token. See here for testingarrow-up-right

Usage

Final thoughts

From juicy-potato Readmearrow-up-right:

If the user has SeImpersonate or SeAssignPrimaryToken privileges then you are SYSTEM.

It’s nearly impossible to prevent the abuse of all these COM Servers. You could think about modifying the permissions of these objects via DCOMCNFG but good luck, this is gonna be challenging.

The actual solution is to protect sensitive accounts and applications which run under the * SERVICE accounts. Stopping DCOM would certainly inhibit this exploit but could have a serious impact on the underlying OS.

From: http://ohpe.it/juicy-potato/arrow-up-right

Examples

Note: Visit this pagearrow-up-right for a list of CLSIDs to try.

Get a nc.exe reverse shell

Powershell rev

Launch a new CMD (if you have RDP access)

CLSID Problems

Oftentimes, the default CLSID that JuicyPotato uses doesn't work and the exploit fails. Usually, it takes multiple attempts to find a working CLSID. To get a list of CLSIDs to try for a specific operating system, you should visit this page:

Checking CLSIDs

First, you will need some executables apart from juicypotato.exe.

Download Join-Object.ps1arrow-up-right and load it into your PS session, and download and execute GetCLSID.ps1arrow-up-right. That script will create a list of possible CLSIDs to test.

Then download test_clsid.bat arrow-up-right(change the path to the CLSID list and to the juicypotato executable) and execute it. It will start trying every CLSID, and when the port number changes, it will mean that the CLSID worked.

Check the working CLSIDs using the parameter -c

References

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