For those of you who conduct pentests or red team assessments, you are probably aware that there are only so many ways to pivot, or conduct lateral movement to a Windows system. Some of those techniques include psexec, WMI, at, Scheduled Tasks, and WinRM (if enabled). Since there are only a handful of techniques, more mature defenders are likely able to prepare for and detect attackers using them. Due to this, I set out to find an alternate way of pivoting to a remote system.

Recently, I have been digging into COM (Component Object Model) internals. My interest in researching new lateral movement techniques led me to DCOM (Distributed Component Object Model), due to the ability to interact with the objects over the network. Microsoft has some good documentation on DCOM here and on COM here. You can find a solid list of DCOM applications using PowerShell, by running “ Get-CimInstance Win32_DCOMApplication ”.

While enumerating the different DCOM applications, I came across the MMC Application Class (MMC20.Application). This COM object allows you to script components of MMC snap-in operations. While enumerating the different methods and properties within this COM object, I noticed that there is a method named “ExecuteShellCommand” under Document.ActiveView.

You can read more on that method here. So far, we have a DCOM application that we can access over the network and can execute commands. The final piece is to leverage this DCOM application and the ExecuteShellCommand method to obtain code execution on a remote host.

Fortunately, as an admin, you can remotely interact with DCOM with PowerShell by using “ [activator]::CreateInstance([type]::GetTypeFromProgID ”. All you need to do is provide it a DCOM ProgID and an IP address. It will then provide you back an instance of that COM object remotely:

It is then possible to invoke the “ExecuteShellCommand” method to start a process on the remote host:

As you can see, calc.exe is running under Matt while the user “Jason” is logged in:

By using this DCOM application and the associated method, it is possible to pivot to a remote host without using psexec, WMI, or other well-known techniques.

To further demonstrate this, we can use this technique to execute an agent, such as Cobalt Strike’s Beacon, on a remote host. Since this is a lateral movement technique, it requires administrative privileges on the remote host:

As you can see, the user “Matt” has local admin rights on “192.168.99.132”. You can then use the ExecuteShellCommand method of MMC20.Application to execute staging code on the remote host. For this example, a simple encoded PowerShell download cradle is specified. Be sure to pay attention to the requirements of “ExecuteShellCommand” as the program and its parameters are separated:

The result of executing this through an agent results in obtaining access to the remote target:

To detect/mitigate this, defenders can disable DCOM, block RPC traffic between workstations, and look for a child process spawning off of “mmc.exe”.

Edit: After some investigating and back & forth with James Forshaw, it appears that the Windows Firewall will block this technique by default. As an additional mitigation, ensure the windows firewall is enabled and “Microsoft Management Console” isn’t an enabled rule.

Cheers!

Matt N.