________ _________
/ / by RedByte1337 __ / /
/ _____/___________ ______ | |__ / _____/_____ ______
/ \ __\_ __ \__ \ \____ \| | \ \_____ \\____ \ | |
\ \_\ \ | \/ __ \| |_> | \ \/ \ |_> \___ |
\______ /__| |____ | __/|___| /_______ / ___/ ____|
\/ \/|__| \/ \/|__| \/
The following goes over the recommended installation process using pipx to avoid any dependency conflicts.
GraphSpy is built to work on every operating system, although it was mainly tested on Linux and Windows.
For other installation options and detailed instructions, check the Installation page on the wiki.
# Install pipx (skip this if you already have it)
apt install pipx
pipx ensurepath
# Install the latest version of GraphSpy from pypi
pipx install graphspy
After installation, the application can be launched using the graphspy
command from any location on the system.
Running GraphSpy without any command line arguments will launch GraphSpy and make it available at http://127.0.0.1:5000
by default.
graphspy
Now simply open http://127.0.0.1:5000
in your favorite browser to get started!
Use the -i
and -p
arguments to modify the interface and port to listen on.
# Run GraphSpy on http://192.168.0.10
graphspy -i 192.168.0.10 -p 80
# Run GraphSpy on port 8080 on all interfaces
graphspy -i 0.0.0.0 -p 8080
For detailed instructions and other command line arguments, please refer to the Execution page on the wiki.
Please refer to the GitHub Wiki for full usage details.
For a quick feature overview, check out the official release blog post.
Store your access and refresh tokens for multiple users and scopes in one location.
Easily switch between them or request new access tokens from any page.
Easily create and poll multiple device codes at once. If a user used the device code to authenticate, GraphSpy will automatically store the access and refresh token in its database.
View, modify and create MFA methods linked to the account of the user.
The following MFA methods can be added from GraphSpy to set up persistance:
- Microsoft Authenticator App
- Custom OTP App, or use GraphSpy as OTP app to generate TOTP codes on the fly!
- FIDO Security Keys!
- Alternative email address
- Mobile/Office/Alternative Phones (SMS or call)
Browse through files and folders in the user's OneDrive or any accessible SharePoint site through an intuitive file explorer interface.
Of course, files can also be directly downloaded, or new files can be uploaded.
Additionally, list the user's recently accessed files or files shared with the user.
Open the user's Outlook with a single click using just an Outlook access token (FOCI)!
Read and send messages using the Microsoft Teams module with a FOCI access token of the skype API (https://api.spaces.skype.com/).
Search for keywords through all Microsoft 365 applications using the Microsoft Search API.
For instance, use this to search for any files or emails containing keywords such as "password", "secret", ...
Perform custom API requests towards any endpoint using access tokens stored in GraphSpy.
Custom request templates with variables can be stored in the database to allow easy reuse of common custom API requests.
GraphSpy supports multiple databases. This is useful when working on multiple assessments at once to keep your tokens and device codes organized.
Use the dark mode by default, or switch to light mode.
Refer to the Release Notes page on the GitHub Wiki
- Rename files and create folders
- More authentication options
- Password, ESTSAuth Cookie, PRT, ...
- Automatic Access Token Refreshing
- Improve Microsoft Teams Module
- Download authenticated files
- Upload files and images
- Entra ID
- List Users, Groups, Applications, Devices, Conditional Access Policies, ...
- Cleaner exception handling
- While this should not have any direct impact on the user, edge cases might currently throw exceptions to the GraphSpy output instead of handling them in a cleaner way.
The main motivation for creating GraphSpy was the lack of an easy to use way to perform post-compromise activities targetting Office365 applications (such as Outlook, Microsoft Teams, OneDrive, SharePoint, ...) with just an access token.
While several command-line tools existed which provided some basic functionality, none of them came close to the intuitive interactive experience which the original applications provide (such as the file explorer-like interface of OneDrive and SharePoint).
However, a lot of previous research was done by countless other persons (specifically regarding Device Code Phishing, which lead to the initial requirement for such a tool in the first place).
- Acknowledgements
- TokenTactics and TokenTacticsV2
- AADInternals
- Introducing a new phishing technique for compromising Office 365 accounts
- The Art of the Device Code Phish
- GraphRunner is a PowerShell tool with a lot of similar features, which was released while GraphSpy was already in development. Regardless, both tools still have their distinguishing factors.
- Assets
- UIcons by Flaticon