top of page
Writer's pictureSean Metcalf

Active Directory Security Risk #101: Kerberos Unconstrained Delegation (or How Compromise of a Single Server Can Compromise the Domain)

Updated: 2 days ago

Editor's Note: Nearly a decade ago, Sean Metcalf made this post on ADSecurity.org and we're reposting it here in its original form because, after review, little to nothing has changed. We're not sure whether to laugh or cry about that.


At Black Hat USA 2015 this summer (2015), I spoke about the danger in having Kerberos Unconstrained Delegation configured in the environment.

When Active Directory was first released with Windows 2000 Server, Microsoft had to provide a simple mechanism to support scenarios where a user authenticates to a Web Server via Kerberos and needs to update records on a back-end database server on behalf of the user. This is typically referred to as the “Kerberos double-hop issue” and requires delegation in order for the Web Server to impersonate the user when modifying database records.


Diagram showing a web server

Graphic: Kerberos “double-hop issue”

 

Kerberos Unconstrained Delegation:

Microsoft implemented Kerberos “unconstrained delegation” in Windows 2000 that enables this level of delegation. A Domain Admin can enable this delegation level by checking the middle box. The third box is for “constrained delegation” which requires listing of specific Kerberos services on computers to which delegation is enabled.


Kerberos delegation settings in Windows 2000 with options for unconstrained and constrained delegation

Graphic: Computer configured with Kerberos Unconstrained Delegation

 

Discovering computers with Kerberos unconstrained delegation is fairly easy using the Active Directory PowerShell module cmdlet, Get-ADComputer.

  • Unconstrained Delegation: TrustedForDelegation = True

  • Constrained Delegation: TrustedToAuthForDelegation = True


Trusted for Delegation

Graphic: PowerShell to find Kerberos Unconstrained Delegation

 

How does Kerberos Unconstrained Delegation really work?


Kerberos Communication Flow:

Let’s follow the standard Kerberos communication flow. Here’s a quick example describing how Kerberos works:


User logs on with username & password.

1a. Password converted to NTLM hash, a timestamp is encrypted with the hash and sent to the KDC as an authenticator in the authentication ticket (TGT) request (AS-REQ). 1b. The Domain Controller (KDC) checks user information (logon restrictions, group membership, etc) & creates Ticket-Granting Ticket (TGT).

2. The TGT is encrypted, signed, & delivered to the user (AS-REP).Only the Kerberos service (KRBTGT) in the domain can open and read TGT data

3. The User presents the TGT to the DC when requesting a Ticket Granting Service (TGS) ticket (TGS-REQ). The DC opens the TGT & validates PAC checksum – If the DC can open the ticket & the checksum check out, TGT = valid. The data in the TGT is effectively copied to create the TGS ticket

4. The TGS is encrypted using the target service accounts’ NTLM password hash and sent to the user (TGS-REP).

5. The user connects to the server hosting the service on the appropriate port & presents the TGS (AP-REQ). The service opens the TGS ticket using its NTLM password hash.

When Kerberos Unconstrained Delegation is enabled on the server hosting the service specified in the Service Principal Name referenced in the TGS-REQ (step 3), the Domain Controller the DC places a copy of the user’s TGT into the service ticket. When the user’s service ticket (TGS) is provided to the server for service access, the server opens the TGS and places the user’s TGT into LSASS for later use. The Application Server can now impersonate that user without limitation!


NOTE: In order for an application server to be configured with “Kerberos Unconstrained Delegation”, a Domain or Enterprise Admin needs to configure this setting on the computer account in the domain. This permission can be delegated to other groups, so be careful who has this right in Active Directory.

Kerberos Unconstrained Delegation Communication Flow


Graphic: Kerberos Unconstrained Delegation Communication Flow


Credential Theft Leveraging Unconstrained Delegation:

As an attacker, once you have found a server with Kerberos Unconstrained Delegation, what’s next?

  1. Compromise the server via an admin or service account.

  2. Social engineer a Domain Admin to connect to any service on the server with unconstrained delegation.

When the admin connects to this service, the admin’s TGS service ticket (with the TGT) is delivered to the server and placed into LSASS in case it’s needed later.


Powershell compromise the server via an admin or service account.

 

The Domain Admin’s authentication (TGT) ticket can be extracted and re-used (until the ticket lifetime expires).


Domain Admin’s authentication

No need to wait though, the ticket can be used immediately in order to get the domain KRBTGT account password hash (when a Domain Admin is compromised).In this case we use PowerShell remoting to connect to a Domain Controller as the Domain Admin.


PowerShell remoting to connect to a Domain Controller as the Domain Admin.

 Mitigation:

  1. Don’t use Kerberos Unconstrained Delegation – configure servers that require delegation with Constrained Delegation.

  2. Configure all elevated administrator accounts to be “Account is sensitive and cannot be delegated”.

Account is sensitive and cannot be delegated

3. The “Protected Users” group, available starting with Windows Server 2012 R2 Domain Functional Level also mitigates against this issue since delegation is not allowed for accounts in this group.


When Windows 8.1 devices are connecting to Windows Server 2012 R2 hosts

When the Protected Users’ group account is upgraded to the Windows Server 2012 R2 domain functional level, domain controller-based protections are automatically applied. Members of the Protected Users group who authenticate to a Windows Server 2012 R2 domain can no longer authenticate by using:
  • Default credential delegation (CredSSP). Plain text credentials are not cached even when the Allow delegating default credentials Group Policy setting is enabled.

  • Windows Digest. Plain text credentials are not cached even when Windows Digest is enabled.

  • NTLM. The result of the NT one-way function, NTOWF, is not cached.

  • Kerberos long-term keys. The keys from Kerberos initial TGT requests are typically cached so the authentication requests are not interrupted. For accounts in this group, Kerberos protocol verifies authentication at each request.

  • Sign-in offline. A cached verifier is not created at sign-in.


bottom of page