enum4linux-ng.py is a rewrite of Mark Lowe's (former Portcullis Labs now Cisco CX Security Labs) enum4linux.pl, a tool for enumerating information from Windows and Samba systems, aimed for security professionals and CTF players. The tool is mainly a wrapper around the Samba tools nmblookup, net, rpcclient and smbclient.
I made it for educational purposes for myself and to overcome issues with enum4linux.pl. It has the same functionality as the original tool (though it does some things differently). Other than the original tool it parses all output of the Samba tools and allows to export all findings as YAML or JSON file. The idea behind this is to allow other tools to import the findings and further process them. It is planned to add new features in the future.
Features
support for YAML and JSON export
colored console output (can be disabled via NO_COLOR)
ldapsearch und polenum are natively implemented
support for multiple authentication methods
support for legacy SMBv1 connections
auto detection of IPC signing support
'smart' enumeration will automatically disable tests which would otherwise fail
timeout support
SMB dialect checks
IPv6 support (experimental)
Differences
Some things are implemented differently compared to the original enum4linux. These are the important differences:
RID cycling is not part of the default enumeration (-A) but can be enabled with -R
parameter naming is slightly different (e.g. -A instead of -a)
Credits
I'd like to thank and give credit to the people at former Portcullis Labs (now Cisco CX Security Labs), namely:
If you use the tool: Don't use it for illegal purposes.
Run
An example run could look like that:
$ enum4linux-ng.py -As <target> -oY out
Demo
Windows Server 2012 R2
This demonstrates a run against Windows Server 2012 R2 standard installation. The following command is being used:
enum4linux-ng.py 192.168.125.131 -u Tester -p 'Start123!' -oY out
A user 'Tester' with password 'Start123!' was created. Firewall access was allowed. Once the enumeration is finished, I scroll up so that the results become more clear. Since no other enumeration option is specified, the tool will assume -A which behaves similar to enum4linux -a option. User and password are passed in. The -oY option will export all enumerated data as YAML file for further processing in out.yaml. The tool automatically detects at the beginning that LDAP is not running on the remote host. It will therefore skip any further LDAP checks which would normally be part of the default enumeration.
Metasploitable 2
The second demo shows a run against Metasploitable 2. The following command is being used:
enum4linux-ng.py 192.168.125.145 -A -C
This time the -A and -C option are used. While the first one behaves similar to enum4linux -a option, the second one will enable enumeration of services. This time no credentials were provided. The tool automatically detects that it needs to use SMBv1. No YAML or JSON file is being written. Again I scroll up so that the results become more clear.
Usage
ENUM4LINUX - next generation
usage: enum4linux-ng.py [-h] [-A] [-As] [-U] [-G] [-Gm] [-S] [-C] [-P] [-O] [-L] [-I] [-R] [-N] [-w DOMAIN] [-u USER] [-p PW | -K TICKET_FILE | -H NTHASH] [--local-auth] [-d] [-k USERS] [-r RANGES] [-s SHARES_FILE] [-t TIMEOUT]
[-v] [--keep] [-oJ OUT_JSON_FILE | -oY OUT_YAML_FILE | -oA OUT_FILE]
host
This tool is a rewrite of Mark Lowe's enum4linux.pl, a tool for enumerating information from Windows and Samba systems. It is mainly a wrapper around the Samba tools nmblookup, net, rpcclient and smbclient. Other than the original
tool it allows to export enumeration results as YAML or JSON file, so that it can be further processed with other tools. The tool tries to do a 'smart' enumeration. It first checks whether SMB or LDAP is accessible on the target.
Depending on the result of this check, it will dynamically skip checks (e.g. LDAP checks if LDAP is not running). If SMB is accessible, it will always check whether a session can be set up or not. If no session can be set up, the
tool will stop enumeration. The enumeration process can be interupted with CTRL+C. If the options -oJ or -oY are provided, the tool will write out the current enumeration state to the JSON or YAML file, once it receives SIGINT
triggered by CTRL+C. The tool was made for security professionals and CTF players. Illegal use is prohibited.
positional arguments:
host
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-A Do all simple enumeration including nmblookup (-U -G -S -P -O -N -I -L). This option is enabled if you don't provide any other option.
-As Do all simple short enumeration without NetBIOS names lookup (-U -G -S -P -O -I -L)
-U Get users via RPC
-G Get groups via RPC
-Gm Get groups with group members via RPC
-S Get shares via RPC
-C Get services via RPC
-P Get password policy information via RPC
-O Get OS information via RPC
-L Get additional domain info via LDAP/LDAPS (for DCs only)
-I Get printer information via RPC
-R Enumerate users via RID cycling
-N Do an NetBIOS names lookup (similar to nbtstat) and try to retrieve workgroup from output
-w DOMAIN Specify workgroup/domain manually (usually found automatically)
-u USER Specify username to use (default "")
-p PW Specify password to use (default "")
-K TICKET_FILE Try to authenticate with Kerberos, only useful in Active Directory environment
-H NTHASH Try to authenticate with hash
--local-auth Authenticate locally to target
-d Get detailed information for users and groups, applies to -U, -G and -R
-k USERS User(s) that exists on remote system (default: administrator,guest,krbtgt,domain admins,root,bin,none). Used to get sid with "lookupsids"
-r RANGES RID ranges to enumerate (default: 500-550,1000-1050)
-s SHARES_FILE Brute force guessing for shares
-t TIMEOUT Sets connection timeout in seconds (default: 5s)
-v Verbose, show full samba tools commands being run (net, rpcclient, etc.)
--keep Don't delete the Samba configuration file created during tool run after enumeration (useful with -v)
-oJ OUT_JSON_FILE Writes output to JSON file (extension is added automatically)
-oY OUT_YAML_FILE Writes output to YAML file (extension is added automatically)
-oA OUT_FILE Writes output to YAML and JSON file (extensions are added automatically)
Installation
There are multiple ways to install the tool. Either the tool comes as a package with your Linux distribution or you need to do a manual install.
Automatic Installation
I'm aware of the following Linux distributions which package the tool:
Archstrike
$ pacman -S enum4linux-ng
NixOS
(tested on NixOS 20.9)
$ nix-env -iA nixos.enum4linux-ng
Manual Installation
Dependencies
The tool uses the samba clients tools, namely:
nmblookup
net
rpcclient
smbclient
These should be available for all Linux distributions. The package is typically called smbclient, samba-client or something similar.
In addition, you will need the following Python packages:
ldap3
PyYaml
impacket
For a faster processing of YAML (optional!) also install (should come as a dependency for PyYaml for most Linux distributions):
LibYAML
Some examples for specific Linux distributions installations are listed below. Alternatively, distribution-agnostic ways (python pip, python virtual env and Docker) are possible.
Linux distribution specific
For all distribution examples below, LibYAML is already a dependency of the corresponding PyYaml package and will be therefore installed automatically.
(tested on Kali Linux 2020.1, recent Debian (e.g. Buster) or Ubuntu versions should work, for Ubuntu 18.04 or below use the Docker or Python virtual environment variant)
Remember you need to still install the samba tools as mentioned above. In addition, make sure you run source venv/bin/activate everytime you spawn a new shell. Otherwise the wrong Python interpreter with the wrong libraries will be used (your system one rather than the virtual environment one).
Once finished an example run could look like this:
$ docker run -t enum4linux-ng -As <target>
Contribution and Support
Occassionally, the tool will spit out error messages like this:
Could not <some text here>, please open a GitHub issue
In that case, please rerun the tool with the -v and --keep option. This will allow you to see the exact command which caused the error message. Copy that command, run it in your terminal and redirect the output to a file. Then open a GitHub issue here, pasting the command and attaching the error output file. That helps to debug the issue. Of course, you can debug it yourself and make a pull request.
If the tool is helpful for you, I'm happy if you leave a star!
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