Agent skill

performing-authenticated-vulnerability-scan

Authenticated (credentialed) vulnerability scanning uses valid system credentials to log into target hosts and perform deep inspection of installed software, patches, configurations, and security sett

Stars 0
Forks 0

Install this agent skill to your Project

npx add-skill https://github.com/autohandai/community-skills/tree/main/performing-authenticated-vulnerability-scan

SKILL.md

Performing Authenticated Vulnerability Scan

Overview

Authenticated (credentialed) vulnerability scanning uses valid system credentials to log into target hosts and perform deep inspection of installed software, patches, configurations, and security settings. Compared to unauthenticated scanning, credentialed scans detect 45-60% more vulnerabilities with significantly fewer false positives because they can directly query installed packages, registry keys, and file system contents.

Prerequisites

  • Vulnerability scanner (Nessus, Qualys, OpenVAS, Rapid7 InsightVM)
  • Service accounts with appropriate privileges on target systems
  • Secure credential storage (vault integration preferred)
  • Network access from scanner to target management ports
  • Written authorization from system owners

Core Concepts

Why Authenticated Scanning

Unauthenticated scanning can only assess externally visible services and banners, often leading to:

  • Missed vulnerabilities in locally installed software
  • Inaccurate version detection from banner changes
  • Inability to check patch levels, configurations, or local policies
  • Higher false positive rates due to inference-based detection

Authenticated scanning resolves these by directly querying the target OS.

Credential Types by Platform

Linux/Unix Systems

  • SSH Key Authentication: RSA/Ed25519 key pairs (recommended)
  • SSH Username/Password: Fallback for systems without key-based auth
  • Sudo/Su Elevation: Non-root user with sudo privileges
  • Certificate-based SSH: X.509 certificates for enterprise environments

Windows Systems

  • SMB (Windows): Domain or local admin credentials
  • WMI: Windows Management Instrumentation queries
  • WinRM: Windows Remote Management (HTTPS preferred)
  • Kerberos: Domain authentication with service tickets

Network Devices

  • SNMP v3: USM with authentication and privacy (AES-256)
  • SSH: For Cisco IOS, Juniper JunOS, Palo Alto PAN-OS
  • API Tokens: REST API for modern network platforms

Databases

  • Oracle: SYS/SYSDBA credentials or TNS connection
  • Microsoft SQL Server: Windows auth or SQL auth
  • PostgreSQL: Role-based authentication
  • MySQL: User/password with SELECT privileges

Implementation Steps

Step 1: Create Dedicated Service Accounts

bash
# Linux: Create scan service account
sudo useradd -m -s /bin/bash -c "Vulnerability Scanner Service Account" nessus_svc
sudo usermod -aG sudo nessus_svc

# Configure sudo for passwordless specific commands
echo 'nessus_svc ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/dpkg -l, /usr/bin/rpm -qa, \
/bin/cat /etc/shadow, /usr/sbin/dmidecode, /usr/bin/find' | sudo tee /etc/sudoers.d/nessus_svc

# Generate SSH key pair
sudo -u nessus_svc ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -f /home/nessus_svc/.ssh/id_ed25519 -N ""

# Distribute public key to targets
for host in $(cat target_hosts.txt); do
    ssh-copy-id -i /home/nessus_svc/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub nessus_svc@$host
done
powershell
# Windows: Create scan service account via PowerShell
New-ADUser -Name "SVC_VulnScan" `
    -SamAccountName "SVC_VulnScan" `
    -UserPrincipalName "SVC_VulnScan@domain.local" `
    -Description "Vulnerability Scanner Service Account" `
    -PasswordNeverExpires $true `
    -CannotChangePassword $true `
    -Enabled $true `
    -AccountPassword (Read-Host -AsSecureString "Enter Password")

# Add to local Administrators group on targets via GPO or:
Add-ADGroupMember -Identity "Domain Admins" -Members "SVC_VulnScan"
# For least privilege, use a dedicated GPO for local admin rights instead

# Enable WinRM on targets
Enable-PSRemoting -Force
Set-Item WSMan:\localhost\Service\AllowRemote -Value $true
winrm set winrm/config/service '@{AllowUnencrypted="false"}'

Step 2: Configure Scanner Credentials

Nessus Configuration

json
{
  "credentials": {
    "add": {
      "Host": {
        "SSH": [{
          "auth_method": "public key",
          "username": "nessus_svc",
          "private_key": "/path/to/id_ed25519",
          "elevate_privileges_with": "sudo",
          "escalation_account": "root"
        }],
        "Windows": [{
          "auth_method": "Password",
          "username": "DOMAIN\\SVC_VulnScan",
          "password": "stored_in_vault",
          "domain": "domain.local"
        }],
        "SNMPv3": [{
          "username": "nessus_snmpv3",
          "security_level": "authPriv",
          "auth_algorithm": "SHA-256",
          "auth_password": "stored_in_vault",
          "priv_algorithm": "AES-256",
          "priv_password": "stored_in_vault"
        }]
      }
    }
  }
}

Step 3: Validate Credential Access

bash
# Test SSH connectivity
ssh -i /path/to/key -o ConnectTimeout=10 nessus_svc@target_host "uname -a && sudo dpkg -l | head -5"

# Test WinRM connectivity
python3 -c "
import winrm
s = winrm.Session('target_host', auth=('DOMAIN\\\\SVC_VulnScan', 'password'), transport='ntlm')
r = s.run_cmd('systeminfo')
print(r.std_out.decode())
"

# Test SNMP v3 connectivity
snmpwalk -v3 -u nessus_snmpv3 -l authPriv -a SHA-256 -A authpass -x AES-256 -X privpass target_host sysDescr.0

Step 4: Run Authenticated Scan

Configure and launch the scan using the Nessus API:

bash
# Create scan with credentials
curl -k -X POST https://nessus:8834/scans \
  -H "X-Cookie: token=$TOKEN" \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -d '{
    "uuid": "'$TEMPLATE_UUID'",
    "settings": {
      "name": "Authenticated Scan - Production",
      "text_targets": "192.168.1.0/24",
      "launch": "ON_DEMAND"
    },
    "credentials": {
      "add": {
        "Host": {
          "SSH": [{"auth_method": "public key", "username": "nessus_svc", "private_key": "/keys/id_ed25519"}],
          "Windows": [{"auth_method": "Password", "username": "DOMAIN\\SVC_VulnScan", "password": "vault_ref"}]
        }
      }
    }
  }'

Step 5: Verify Credential Success

After scan completion, check credential verification results:

  • Plugin 19506 (Nessus Scan Information): Shows credential status
  • Plugin 21745 (OS Security Patch Assessment): Confirms local checks
  • Plugin 117887 (Local Security Checks): Credential verification
  • Plugin 110385 (Nessus Credentialed Check): Target-level auth status

Credential Security Best Practices

  1. Use a secrets vault (HashiCorp Vault, CyberArk, AWS Secrets Manager) for credential storage
  2. Rotate credentials every 90 days or after personnel changes
  3. Principle of least privilege - only grant minimum required access
  4. Audit credential usage - monitor service account login events
  5. Encrypt in transit - use SSH keys over passwords, WinRM over HTTPS
  6. Separate accounts per scanner - never share credentials across tools
  7. Disable interactive login for scan service accounts where possible
  8. Log all authentication events for scan accounts in SIEM

Common Pitfalls

  • Using domain admin accounts instead of least-privilege service accounts
  • Storing credentials in plaintext scan configurations
  • Not testing credentials before scan launch (leads to wasted scan windows)
  • Forgetting to configure sudo/elevation for Linux targets
  • Windows UAC blocking remote credentialed checks
  • Firewall rules blocking WMI/WinRM/SSH between scanner and targets
  • Credential lockout from multiple failed authentication attempts

Related Skills

  • scanning-infrastructure-with-nessus
  • performing-network-vulnerability-assessment
  • implementing-continuous-vulnerability-monitoring

Expand your agent's capabilities with these related and highly-rated skills.

autohandai/community-skills

mapping-mitre-attack-techniques

Maps observed adversary behaviors, security alerts, and detection rules to MITRE ATT&CK techniques and sub-techniques to quantify detection coverage and guide control prioritization. Use when building an ATT&CK-based coverage heatmap, tagging SIEM alerts with technique IDs, aligning security controls to adversary playbooks, or reporting threat exposure to executives. Activates for requests involving ATT&CK Navigator, Sigma rules, MITRE D3FEND, or coverage gap analysis.

0 0
Explore
autohandai/community-skills

hunting-for-spearphishing-indicators

Hunt for spearphishing campaign indicators across email logs, endpoint telemetry, and network data to detect targeted email attacks.

0 0
Explore
autohandai/community-skills

analyzing-malicious-url-with-urlscan

URLScan.io is a free service for scanning and analyzing suspicious URLs. It captures screenshots, DOM content, HTTP transactions, JavaScript behavior, and network connections of web pages in an isolat

0 0
Explore
autohandai/community-skills

implementing-zero-standing-privilege-with-cyberark

Deploy CyberArk Secure Cloud Access to eliminate standing privileges in hybrid and multi-cloud environments using just-in-time access with time, entitlement, and approval controls.

0 0
Explore
autohandai/community-skills

implementing-pam-for-database-access

Deploy privileged access management for database systems including Oracle, SQL Server, PostgreSQL, and MySQL. Covers session proxy configuration, credential vaulting, query auditing, dynamic credentia

0 0
Explore
autohandai/community-skills

detecting-t1003-credential-dumping-with-edr

Detect OS credential dumping techniques targeting LSASS memory, SAM database, NTDS.dit, and cached credentials using EDR telemetry, Sysmon process access monitoring, and Windows security event correlation.

0 0
Explore

Didn't find tool you were looking for?

Be as detailed as possible for better results