- **`awareness.bat`** - Little and quick Windows Situational-Awareness set of commands to execute after gaining initial foothold (coming from APT34: https://www.fireeye.com/blog/threat-research/2016/05/targeted_attacksaga.html ) ([gist](https://gist.github.com/mgeeky/237b48e0bb6546acb53696228ab50794))
- **`Find-CLSIDForProgID.ps1`** - Tries to locate COM object's `ProgID` based on a given CLSID.
- **`find-system-and-syswow64-binaries.py`** - Finds files with specified extension in both System32 and SysWOW64 and then prints their intersection. Useful for finding executables (for process injection purposes) that reside in both directories (such as `WerFault.exe`)
- **`GlobalProtectDisable.cpp`** - Global Protect VPN Application patcher allowing the Administrator user to disable VPN without Passcode. ([gist](https://gist.github.com/mgeeky/54ac676226a1a4bd9fd8653e24adc2e9))
Steps are following:
1. Launch the application as an Administrator
2. Read instructions carefully and press OK
3. Right-click on GlobalProtect tray-icon
4. Select "Disable"
5. Enter some random meaningless password
After those steps - the GlobalProtect will disable itself cleanly.
From now on, the GlobalProtect will remain disabled until you reboot the machine (or restart the PanGPA.exe process or PanGPS service).
- **`impacket-binaries.sh`** - Simple one-liner that downloads all of the Windows EXE impacket binaries put out in [Impacket Binaries](https://github.com/ropnop/impacket_static_binaries) repo. [gist](https://gist.github.com/mgeeky/2f990f14f1e7cf78fce21b8761234604)
- **`rdpFileUpload.py`** - RDP file upload utility via Keyboard emulation. Uploads specified input file or directory, encodes it and retypes encoded contents by emulating keyboard keypresses into previously focused RDP session window. That will effectively transmit contents of the file onto the remote host without use of any sort of built-in file upload functionality. Remote desktop protocols such as RDP/VNC could be abused in this way by smuggling to the connected host implant files, etc. In case a directory was specified on input, will recursively add every file from that directory and create a Zip archive that will be later uploaded. Average transfer bandwidths largely depend on your connectivity performance and system utilization.
I've experienced following:
* transfer to the Citrix Receiver RDP session: `40-60 bytes/s`
* transfer to LAN RDP session RDP session: `400-800 bytes/s`
- **`revshell.c`** - Utterly simple reverse-shell, ready to be compiled by `mingw-w64` on Kali. No security features attached, completely not OPSEC-safe.
- **`Simulate-DNSTunnel.ps1`** - Performs DNS Tunnelling simulation for purpose of triggering installed Network IPS and IDS systems, generating SIEM offenses and picking up Blue Teams.