DCShadow
DCShadow is an advanced Active Directory (AD) attack technique used by adversaries to stealthily modify directory data by impersonating a domain controller (DC). It is considered highly dangerous because it bypasses many traditional security controls and blends in with legitimate replication traffic.
What is DCShadow?
DCShadow is a post-exploitation technique (introduced publicly by researchers at Black Hat 2018) that allows attackers to:
- Register a rogue machine as a fake domain controller
- Push malicious changes into Active Directory via replication
- Avoid detection by traditional logging mechanisms
Instead of modifying AD objects via standard administrative APIs (which generate logs), DCShadow injects changes as if they originated from a legitimate DC replication process.
Key Concept: Active Directory Replication
Active Directory uses a multi-master replication model, meaning:
- All domain controllers can make changes
- Changes are synchronized using replication protocols (DRSUAPI)
- Normally:
- DC1 updates an object → replicates to DC2, DC3, etc.
- With DCShadow:
- Attacker introduces a fake DC → pushes malicious changes → other DCs accept them as legitimate
How DCShadow Works (High-Level)
This is a conceptual overview for understanding and defense (not operational instructions).
1. Initial Compromise
An attacker first gains high privileges, typically:
- Domain Admin
- Enterprise Admin
- Or equivalent rights
2. Register Rogue Domain Controller
The attacker:
- Adds a fake domain controller object in AD (configuration partition)
- Uses directory services APIs to make it appear legitimate
3. Prepare Malicious Changes
Examples include:
- Adding a user to Domain Admins
- Modifying ACLs (permissions)
- Injecting persistence mechanisms
4. Trigger Replication
The attacker:
- Uses replication protocols to push changes
- Mimics legitimate DC-to-DC synchronization
Other DCs accept these changes without suspicion.
5. Remove Evidence
After execution:
- The rogue DC object can be removed
- Minimal logs remain compared to normal admin activity
Why DCShadow is Dangerous
Stealth
- Changes happen via replication, not standard AD modification APIs
- Avoids many event logs like:
- Event ID 4728 (group membership changes)
- Event ID 5136 (directory object changes)
Persistence
- Attackers can grant themselves:
- Replication rights
- Hidden backdoor accounts
- Hard to detect and remove
Trust Exploitation
- AD inherently trusts replication from domain controllers
- DCShadow exploits this design assumption
Common Attack Goals
DCShadow is often used for:
- Privilege Escalation
- Add the attacker account to privileged groups
- Persistence
- Modify ACLs to maintain long-term access
- Backdoor Creation
- Grant DS-Replication rights (similar to DCSync capability)
- Identity Manipulation
- Change attributes like:
- adminCount
- SIDHistory
DCShadow vs DCSync
They are often used together in sophisticated attacks.
Detection Challenges
Detecting DCShadow is difficult because:
- Replication traffic is expected behavior
- Logs are minimal or indirect
- Attack duration is often short
Detection Indicators
Defenders should monitor for:
Suspicious DC Registrations
- Unexpected domain controller objects
- Changes in:
- nTDSDSA
- serverReference
Unusual Replication Activity
- Replication from non-standard hosts
- Unexpected invocation of replication APIs
Directory Changes Without Logs
- Privilege changes with no corresponding event logs
Network Monitoring
- Look for replication traffic (DRSR) from non-DC systems
Mitigation Strategies
Limit Privileges
- Reduce the number of Domain Admin accounts
- Use Just-In-Time (JIT) access
Enable Advanced Logging
- Directory Services auditing
- Replication event monitoring
Monitor AD Changes
- Use tools like:
- Microsoft Defender for Identity
- SIEM solutions
Harden Domain Controllers
- Restrict who can:
- Add DC objects
- Modify replication permissions
Detect Replication Abuse
- Alert on:
- Non-DC systems initiating replication
- Changes to replication permissions
Summary
DCShadow is a sophisticated attack that:
- Exploits Active Directory replication trust
- Enables stealthy domain-wide modifications
- Is difficult to detect using traditional logging
It highlights a critical reality:
- In Active Directory, replication is trust, and trust can be abused.