Nytro Posted November 2, 2015 Report Posted November 2, 2015 WSUSpect ProxyWritten by Paul Stone and Alex Chapman, Context Information SecuritySummaryThis is a proof of concept script to inject 'fake' updates into non-SSL WSUS traffic. It is based on our Black Hat USA 2015 presentation, 'WSUSpect – Compromising the Windows Enterprise via Windows Update'White paper: http://www.contextis.com/documents/161/CTX_WSUSpect_White_Paper.pdfSlides: http://www.contextis.com/documents/162/WSUSpect_Presentation.pdfPrerequisitesYou'll need the Python Twisted library installed. You can do this by running:pip install twistedYou also need to place a Microsoft-signed binary (e.g. PsExec) into the payloads directory. This script has been tested on Python 2.7. It does not yet work with Python 3.x; contributions are welcome.UsageTo test this out, you'll need a target Windows 7 or 8 machine that is configured to receive updates from a WSUS server over unencrypted HTTP. The machine should be configured to proxy through the machine running this script. This can be done by manually changing the proxy settings or via other means such as WPAD poisoning (e.g. using Responder)python wsuspect_proxy.py payload_name [port]An example payload for PsExec is set up that will launch cmd.exe running as Administrator:python wsuspect_proxy.py psexecIf you are having problems getting the script to work we'd recommend using a GUI proxy tool such as Burp (and configuring Burp to use this script as a proxy) to see if the update XML is being correctly inserted.CustomisationModify payloads/payloads.ini to change the payloads and their arguments.Known IssuesCurrently doesn't support Windows 10 targetsDoesn't yet support Python 3ScreenshotsSursa: https://github.com/ctxis/wsuspect-proxy Quote