I have deployed LAPS for a number of Enterprise customers to use for managing their Domain Member Windows Server local Administrator account passwords.
In the final part of this blog series we will look at how to audit LAPS password access.
LAPS generated passwords are stored on the Active Directory Computer Object in the attribute ms-Mcs-AdmPwd.
By default, when a principal with the AD permission Read ms-Mcs-AdmPwd reads the attribute ms-Mcs-AdmPwd there is no log entry made on the Domain Controller. Therefore, a compromised account could dump all LAPS set passwords from AD undetected.
We can configure auditing within Active Directory. The LAPS Powershell module allows us to easily do this.
In the example below, Auditing is enabled for the Member Servers Organisational Unit.
All Computer Objects in the Member Server OU will now be audited for LAPS password reads.
Event ID 4662 is logged in the Domain Controller Security event log every time the password attribute (ms-Mcs-AdmPwd) is read. Which Domain Controller it is logged on depends on which Domain Controller the request is sent to by the client requesting it.
Powershell retrieval of the password triggers event ID 4662 on the Domain Controller
The log entries can be parsed using a combination of the event ID and the schemaIDGUID for the attribute ms-Mcs-AdmPwd (which is unique to each AD Forest).
The three key items in the event are:
Security ID (account that read the password)
Object Name (Distinguished Name of the computer whose password was read)
schemaIDGUID (Identifier for the password attribute)
Run the below Powershell command from a device with the Active Directory Powershell module installed to extract the schemaIDGUID for the attribute ms-Mcs-AdmPwd.
I have deployed LAPS for a number of Enterprise customers to use for managing their Domain Member Windows Server local Administrator account passwords.
In part 3 of this blog series we will look at how to monitor LAPS operations.
LAPS is a Client Side Extension for Group Policy. LAPS is triggered each time Group Policy is refreshed on a device. This means you will not find it in Windows Services nor running as a process in Task Manager.
When LAPS is triggered, it checks the attribute ms-Mcs-AdmPwdExpirationTime on the host device’s Active Directory Computer Object. If this attribute has no value or is a date and time in the past then LAPS will attempt to set a new password.
First it will attempt to write the password to the attribute ms-Mcs-AdmPwd on the host device’s AD Computer Object. Once it confirms it has been successfully written to AD, LAPS updates the password on the host device (writes the password to the local Security Account Manager database).
LAPS will only set a new password if a Domain Controller is accessible after a new password has been generated. This ensures that AD always has the current password.
Monitoring LAPS
LAPS logs to the Application event log with the source AdmPwd. By default, LAPS only logs errors.
The logging level is set by the registry key below:
Silent mode; log errors only When no error occurs, no information is logged about CSE activity This is a default value
1
Log errors and warnings
2
Verbose mode, log everything
A full list of the possible log entries are in the document LAPS_TechnicalSpecification.docx which is included with the official LAPS download.
Setting the log entries to a value of 1 should suffice for most environments. Your existing monitoring solution may be able to be configured to generate alerts based on the Event Log entries from LAPS.
Logging Demonstration
The host LAB-CTXHOST has had LAPS installed. It has a GPO applied that sets LAPS to verbose logging by creating the below registry key:
On LAB-CTXHOST using RegEdit we can see that the registry key has been created.
RegEdit
In Windows Event Log, we have filtered the log to only show events from the source AdmPwd.
Application event log filter
Logging Demo: Password Change Not Required
Now we force a Group Policy update by running gpupdate from the command line.
gpupdate
When we refresh the event log, we see event IDs 15, 11 then 14.
Event ID 15: Start of processing LAPS
Event ID 11: LAPS logic
Event ID 14: End of processing LAPS
Reading the events we can see that LAPS took no action because the password expiration date and time on the AD Computer Object for LAB-CTXHOST is 30 days in the future.
Logging Demo: Password Change Required
Using Powershell, we set the expiration date to be in the past. Now we run gpupdate and observe the log entries.
This time we see event IDs 15, 5, 13, 12 then 14.
Event ID 15: Start of processing LAPS
Event ID 5: LAPS has generated a new password and validated it against the GPO controlled password requirements.
Event ID 13: New password successfully written to Active Directory.
Event ID 12: New password successfully updated on the local administrator account.
Event ID 14: End of processing LAPS
Logging Demo: No Domain Controller Available
If the Domain Controller is inaccessible at the start of Group Policy processing, no LAPS log entries will appear. This is because Group Policy processing fails before the LAPS Group Policy Client Side Extension is triggered. LAPS will never reset the password under these conditions.
Logging Demo: No permission over object
During the installation of LAPS, we use the Set-AdmPwdComputerSelfPermission LAPS Powershell module cmdlet to apply the following permission to the Organisational Unit that contains the Computer Objects that are due to receive LAPS.
Principal: SELF
Permission: Write ms-Mcs-AdmPwd
Applies to: Descendent Computer Objects
This allows the devices to update their passwords in Active Directory.
We have now removed this permission for LAB-CTXHOST and used the LAPS Powershell module cmdlet Reset-AdmPwdPassword to set an expiration date and time that is in the past.
After running gpupdate we see the event IDs 15, 5 and 7.
Event ID 15: Begin processing LAPS
Event ID 5: LAPS has generated a new password and validated it against the GPO controlled password requirements.
Event ID 7: LAPS fails to write the password to AD
Summary
We have seen that using the Windows Event Log, we can view to a granular level which step of the LAPS process has failed. In production, logging level 1 (Errors and Warnings) should suffice and most monitoring solutions can be configured to read these logs entries and generate alerts.
I have deployed LAPS for a number of Enterprise customers to use for managing their Domain Member Windows Server local Administrator account passwords.
In Part 2 of this blog series we will look at the different ways to view and reset the passwords.
Part 4 of this blog series “Auditing” [Coming Soon]
Key Points
To view the LAPS passwords, you must be granted the All Extended Attributes permission over the object in Active Directory.
If the Group Policy setting “Do not allow password expiration time longer than required by policy” is set to Enabled; it will not be possible to set an expiry beyond the maximum LAPS Password Age Group Policy setting.
Graphical User Interface
When you install LAPS you are given the option of Management Tools to install.
LAPS Setup Options
The Fat client UI will install a simple app called AdmPwd.UI to the default install location %SYSTEMDRIVE%\Program Files\LAPS
When launched you can search for the computer name. The password will displayed along with the password expiration date.
Fat client UI
To manually reset the password, just click the Set button in LAPS UI tool. When a Group Policy refresh runs on the target machine, the password will be reset.
You can set a future date for the password to expire by clicking the drop down icon on the New expiration time field.
Powershell
When you install LAPS you are given the option of installing the Powershell Module.
Powershell module install
From a Powershell prompt, run the following commands to retrieve a LAPS password:
In the example below the password is being set to expire on 30th November 2019 at 10am.
By using Get-AdmPassword we can confirm that ExpirationTimestamp attribute has been updated.
When the server refreshes its GPO after 30th November 10am, it will read the expiration attribute and trigger
The password only resets if the client is able to write the new password to the AD computer object.
If the client does not have permission to do this or a Domain Controller cannot be contacted at that time then the new password is discarded before it is applied to the local admin account.
Writing the password to AD before the password is written to the local admin account protects against network interruptions during the process.
ADSI Edit
1. On any Domain Controller (or console running Active Directory Remote Server Administration Tools) open ADSI Edit by Right clicking the Start button and select Run.
2. Enter ADSIEdit.msc and select OK.
Run ADSIEdit.msc
3. Right click ADSI Edit in the left hand menu and select Connect to. Choose the Default Naming Context.
Connect to Default naming context
4. On the left, navigate down through the Active Directory structure by double clicking.
5. Browse to the client’s object, right click it and select properties.
Computer object
6. On the Attribute Editor tab, scroll to the attributes:
Password attribute
ms-Mcs-AdmPwd – Stores the password in clear text
ms-Mcs-AdmPwdExpirationTime – Stores the time to reset the password
The expiration time is displayed in computer date format. It must be manually converted to a readable date format.
You can set the expiration time here by converting the desired date back to computer date format and editing the attribute within ADSIEdit.
I have deployed LAPS for a number of Enterprise customers to use for managing their Domain Member Windows Server local Administrator account passwords.
In Part 1 of this blog series we will run through some of the prerequisite checks that I perform when asked to deploy LAPS.
This post is written assuming that we have already read the installation instructions for LAPS. The list does not have to be done sequentially. Although this post is written with Server deployments in mind, the same considerations apply to Workstation deployments.
1. Nominate a management host
Nominate a device on which we will install the LAPS management tools. I normally do this on a management server which will eventually be used to run the LAPS GUI and Powershell module from by administrators. The device must have at least .NET 4.0 and Powershell 2.0.
This can of course be installed on workstations too. In the real world though many enterprises have management servers from which most admin tasks are done.
2. Nominate a test server
This is for testing the LAPS Client Side Extension and GPO. Recommended to be a Virtual Machine on which snapshots/checkpoints can be taken. Should be a non-critical server that we can reboot multiple times.
3. List the Distinguished Names of all Organisational Units that contain the target Member Servers
Typically customers will create an Organisational Unit branch called “Servers” under which they will store all of their server computer accounts. Sometimes there are servers elsewhere so it’s always good to check so that we can target all Servers with a GPO. Get all the servers not in the expected Organisational Unit branch.
In the code snippet, change the “*OU=Servers..” etc. to be the distinguished name of the OU under which the majority of the server computer accounts are.
4. Identify accounts with ‘All Extended Rights’ permission
LAPS passwords are stored on the Active Directory computer object. To view the passwords a user must have the ‘All extended rights’ permission.
By default only SYSTEM and Domain Admins have this permission. It is rare that other users will have been added, however, we should check for anyone who already has this permission so that we do not inadvertently grant unauthorised users access to the new local admin passwords.
In step 3, we created a list of Organisational Units that contain all the Windows Servers that we will target with LAPS. We will now produce a list of users that have the ‘All Extended rights’ permission over these Organisational Units.
The LAPS Powershell module that is installed when you do a Full install of the LAPS client comes with a useful function to do this: Find-AdmPwdExtendedRights
The below script feeds the list of OUs ‘ListOfOU.txt’ in to to the function and creates a list of permission holders per OU.
If any objects other than SYSTEM or Domain Admins appear in the ExtendedRightHolders column then these questions need to be answered:
a) do those objects still require the All Extended Rights permission?
b) are they authorised to be able to view passwords?
5. List of Security Principals that will have access to the LAPS passwords
An important discussion that needs to be had is “Who do you want to have access to local admin passwords?”
Too many organisations have nested Active Directory Security Groups that have inadvertently given junior IT staff Domain Admin rights. This is an ideal time to review this within your organisation or with your customer.
You can grant additional security groups the “All Extended Rights” attribute so that they do not need to have Domain Admin rights.
6. Reboot Schedule
Many Enterprises do not use SCCM to manage their Servers. Another way to deploy the LAPS installer is using Group Policy Software Installation. A draw back of this is that the client machine needs to restart in order for LAPS to install during startup.
To minimise disruption, it may be beneficial to apply the Group Policy at the start of the monthly Windows Security updates schedule and take advantage of the already agreed reboot schedules for servers.
7. Active Directory Replication
One part of deploying LAPS is extending the Active Directory Schema to add the password and password expiration date attributes to computer objects. This relies on AD replication being functional.
We can save ourselves a lot of headache during a Change Request window if we check AD replication health prior to the deployment
repadmin /replsummary
repadmin /replsummary command output
In the green box is the largest time since the last replication for all links on the listed outbound (top) or inbound (bottom) server. If any of these are in multiples of hours then there may be a replication problem.
In the pink box; if there are any failures then there is definitely a replication problem.
We must resolve issues with AD replication before we start implementing LAPS.
8. Identify Read Only Domain Controllers
The two attributes that are added when LAPS extends the Active Directory schema are:
ms-Mcs-AdmPwd
Stores the password in clear text
ms-Mcs-AdmPwdExpirationTime
Stores the time to reset the password
By default the ms-Mcs-AdmPwd attribute is on the Filtered Attribute Set for Read Only Domain Controllers. This means that it is not replicated to RODCs. IT will not be able to retrieve LAPS passwords from the RODC.
There is logic to this, RODCs are typically located in branch locations classed as insecure. They may be behind a locked door but that door could be cupboard on the ground floor and is accessed by many non-IT staff. It must be assumed that that the RODC may one day be stolen and so we want to minimise the impact should this occur.
Do we really want the RODC to store all of the local admin passwords for all of the Servers on the network?
To be able to extent the Active Directory Schema we need Schema Admin Rights. In a tightly controlled environment we need to get the request for these rights in early. No Schema Admin, no LAPS.
11. Name of Local Administrator account
Some organisations have multiple local admin accounts on a server.
You can only manage one account per server per policy.
One device can only be managed by one policy.
We should look to reduce the number of local admin accounts in use on the estate in favour of Domain User and Service Accounts with Role Based Access Control. A single local admin account can meet the needs of the majority of estates.
In LAPS you can just choose to manage the Built-in Local Administrator account regardless of what it is has been renamed to by leaving the Group Policy setting as Not Configured. This is easiest.
If however you need to manage non-Built-in Local Admin accounts then you will need to ensure that all target clients have the desired admin account present and named correctly. If the name is not the same then it will not be managed by LAPS.