ROADtools common components library


Keywords
azure-active-directory, azuread, microsoft-graph, python
License
MIT
Install
pip install roadlib==0.23.0

Documentation

ROADtools

(Rogue Office 365 and Azure (active) Directory tools)

Python 3 only License: MIT

ROADtools logo

ROADtools is a framework to interact with Azure AD. It consists of a library (roadlib) with common components, the ROADrecon Azure AD exploration tool and the ROADtools Token eXchange (roadtx) tool.

ROADlib

PyPI version

ROADlib is a library that can be used to authenticate with Azure AD or to build tools that integrate with a database containing ROADrecon data. The database model in ROADlib is automatically generated based on the metadata definition of the Azure AD internal API. ROADlib lives in the ROADtools namespace, so to import it in your scripts use from roadtools.roadlib import X

ROADrecon

PyPI version Build Status

ROADrecon is a tool for exploring information in Azure AD from both a Red Team and Blue Team perspective. In short, this is what it does:

  • Uses an automatically generated metadata model to create an SQLAlchemy backed database on disk.
  • Use asynchronous HTTP calls in Python to dump all available information in the Azure AD graph to this database.
  • Provide plugins to query this database and output it to a useful format.
  • Provide an extensive interface built in Angular that queries the offline database directly for its analysis.

ROADrecon uses async Python features and is only compatible with Python 3.7 and newer (development is done with Python 3.8, tests are run with versions up to Python 3.11).

Installation

There are multiple ways to install ROADrecon:

Using a published version on PyPi
Stable versions can be installed with pip install roadrecon. This will automatically add the roadrecon command to your PATH.

Using a version from GitHub
Every commit to master is automatically built into a release version with Azure Pipelines. This ensures that you can install the latest version of the GUI without having to install npm and all it's dependencies. You can download the roadlib and roadrecon build files from the Azure Pipelines artifacts (click on the button "1 Published". The build output files are stored in ROADtools.zip. You can either install the .whl or .tar.gz files directly using pip or unzip both and install the folders in the correct order (roadlib first):

pip install roadlib/
pip install roadrecon/

You can also install them in development mode with pip install -e roadlib/.

Developing the front-end
If you want to make changes to the Angular front-end, you will need to have node and npm installed. Then install the components from git:

git clone https://github.com/dirkjanm/roadtools.git
pip install -e roadlib/
pip install -e roadrecon/
cd roadrecon/frontend/
npm install

You can run the Angular frontend with npm start or ng serve using the Angular CLI from the roadrecon/frontend/ directory. To build the JavaScript files into ROADrecon's dist_gui directory, run npm build.

Using ROADrecon

See this Wiki page on how to get started.

ROADtools Token eXchange (roadtx)

PyPI version Build Status

roadtx is a tool for exchanging and using different types of Azure AD issued tokens. It supports many different authentication flows, device registration and PRT related operations. For an overview of the tool, see the roadtx Wiki.

Installation

There are multiple ways to install roadtx. Note that roadtx requires Python 3.7 or newer.

Using a published version on PyPi
Stable versions can be installed with pip install roadtx. This will automatically add the roadtx command to your PATH.

Using a version from GitHub You can clone this repository and install roadlib and then roadtx to make sure you have the latest versions of both the tool and the library:

pip install roadlib/
pip install roadtx/

You can also install them in development mode with pip install -e roadtx/.

Using roadtx

See the Wiki on how to use roadtx.