BloodyAD MCP

BloodyAD MCP

Enables Active Directory enumeration and abuse operations through the bloodyAD tool. Supports LDAP queries, user/group management, DNS operations, and security testing directly from AI assistants.

Category
Visit Server

README

<p align="center"> <img alt="bloodyAD_MCP" src="media/logo.png" height="30%" width="30%"> </p>

README (English) | 中文文档 (Chinese) | README en Español

bloodyad-mcp

This project is a wrapper for the excellent bloodyAD tool.

A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server that acts as a wrapper for bloodyAD, allowing flexible and automated Active Directory enumeration and abuse from Claude Desktop, Gemini-CLI, or other MCP frontends.


Purpose

This server exposes bloodyAD commands through simple Python functions, facilitating the enumeration, extraction, and abuse of Active Directory objects directly from your AI assistant or MCP environment, without the need to manually execute the bloodyAD CLI.


Features

Get Operations

  • bloodyad_raw — Executes any bloodyAD command as a string (maximum flexibility, advanced mode).
  • bloodyad_get_object — Retrieves LDAP object attributes, with an option to resolve SD.
  • bloodyad_get_children — Lists children of an object (users, groups, computers, OUs).
  • bloodyad_get_dnsdump — Extracts AD-integrated DNS zones.
  • bloodyad_get_membership — Gets groups to which the target belongs.
  • bloodyad_get_writable — Lists objects over which the authenticated user has write permissions.
  • bloodyad_get_search — Performs advanced searches in the LDAP database.
  • bloodyad_get_trusts — Displays domain trusts in an ASCII tree.

Set Operations

  • bloodyad_set_object — Adds/Replaces/Deletes attributes of an object.
  • bloodyad_set_owner — Changes the ownership of an object.
  • bloodyad_set_password — Changes the password of a user/computer.
  • bloodyad_set_restore — Restores a deleted object.

Add Operations

  • bloodyad_add_computer — Adds a new computer.
  • bloodyad_add_dcsync — Adds the DCSync right to a trustee in the domain.
  • bloodyad_add_dnsRecord — Adds a new DNS record.
  • bloodyad_add_genericAll — Grants full control (GenericAll) to a trustee over an object.
  • bloodyad_add_groupMember — Adds a member (user, group, computer) to a group.
  • bloodyad_add_rbcd — Adds Resource Based Constrained Delegation (RBCD) for a service on an object.
  • bloodyad_add_shadowCredentials — Adds Key Credentials (Shadow Credentials) to an object.
  • bloodyad_add_uac — Adds User Account Control (UAC) flags to an object.
  • bloodyad_add_user — Adds a new user.

Remove Operations

  • bloodyad_remove_dcsync — Removes the DCSync right for a trustee.
  • bloodyad_remove_dnsRecord — Removes a DNS record from an AD environment.
  • bloodyad_remove_genericAll — Removes full control (GenericAll) of a trustee over an object.
  • bloodyad_remove_groupMember — Removes a member from a group.
  • bloodyad_remove_object — Removes an object (user, group, computer, organizational unit, etc.).
  • bloodyad_remove_rbcd — Removes Resource Based Constrained Delegation (RBCD) for a service.
  • bloodyad_remove_shadowCredentials — Removes Key Credentials (Shadow Credentials) from an object.
  • bloodyad_remove_uac — Removes User Account Control (UAC) flags from an object.

Prerequisites

Before you begin, ensure you have the following:

  • Docker Desktop: Installed and running on your system.
  • MCP Toolkit: Enabled within Docker Desktop.
  • AI Assistant: An AI assistant that supports MCP, such as Gemini-CLI or Claude Desktop.
  • Internet Access: Required during the Docker image build process to clone bloodyAD.
  • VPN/Network Access: To the target Active Directory Domain Controller (DC).
  • jq (for Linux users): A lightweight and flexible command-line JSON processor. If you are on Linux, you might need to install it:
    • Debian/Ubuntu: sudo apt-get install jq
    • Fedora: sudo dnf install jq
    • Arch Linux: sudo pacman -S jq

Installation and Setup

<p align="center"> <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kqtTcQAe1CQ"> <img src="media/video.png" alt="Video Tutorial"> </a> <br> <em>Click on the image to watch the installation tutorial video.</em> </p>

Follow these steps to set up and run the bloodyad-mcp server:

  1. Clone the Repository:

    git clone https://github.com/dcollaoa/bloodyad_mcp.git
    cd bloodyad-mcp
    
  2. Run the Setup Script: Execute the appropriate script for your operating system. These scripts will build the Docker image, configure the MCP catalog, and update your Gemini settings.

    • For Windows Users:

      .\run.ps1
      

      This script will guide you through the Docker image build, MCP configuration, and Gemini settings.json update.

    • For Linux (or WSL) Users:

      chmod +x run.sh
      ./run.sh
      

      This script will perform the same setup steps as the PowerShell script. Remember to make it executable first.

    • For macOS Users:

      chmod +x run_macos.sh
      ./run_macos.sh
      

      This script will perform the same setup steps as the PowerShell script, adapted for macOS. Remember to make it executable first.


Usage Examples

You can launch in Claude Desktop, Gemini-CLI, etc.:

# Get bloodyAD help
print(default_api.bloodyad_raw(cli_args="-h"))

# Get object attributes (e.g., objectSid of the domain)
print(default_api.bloodyad_get_object(target='DC=fluffy,DC=htb', attr='objectSid', user='fluffy.htb\svc_mssql', password='MssqlService01!', host='dc01.fluffy.htb'))

# List child objects of a domain
print(default_api.bloodyad_get_children(target='DC=fluffy,DC=htb', otype='domain', user='fluffy.htb\svc_mssql', password='MssqlService01!', host='dc01.fluffy.htb'))

# Dump DNS records for a zone
print(default_api.bloodyad_get_dnsdump(zone='fluffy.htb', user='fluffy.htb\svc_mssql', password='MssqlService01!', host='dc01.fluffy.htb'))

# Get group memberships for a user
print(default_api.bloodyad_get_membership(target='svc_mssql', user='fluffy.htb\svc_mssql', password='MssqlService01!', host='dc01.fluffy.htb'))

# List writable objects for the authenticated user
print(default_api.bloodyad_get_writable(user='fluffy.htb\svc_mssql', password='MssqlService01!', host='dc01.fluffy.htb'))

# Perform an advanced LDAP search
print(default_api.bloodyad_get_search(base='DC=fluffy,DC=htb', filter='(objectClass=user)', attr='sAMAccountName', user='fluffy.htb\svc_mssql', password='MssqlService01!', host='dc01.fluffy.htb'))

# Change a user's password
print(default_api.bloodyad_set_password(target='CN=TestUser,CN=Users,DC=fluffy,DC=htb', newpass='NewSecurePassword123!', user='fluffy.htb\svc_mssql', password='MssqlService01!', host='dc01.fluffy.htb'))

# Add a new user
print(default_api.bloodyad_add_user(samAccountName='NewUser', newpass='NewUserPass123!', user='fluffy.htb\svc_mssql', password='MssqlService01!', host='dc01.fluffy.htb'))

Architecture

AI Assistant (Gemini-CLI/Claude Desktop) → MCP Gateway → bloodyad-mcp → bloodyAD CLI (Kali)

Troubleshooting

  • If tools do not appear: check the build, logs, YAML files (custom.yaml, registry.yaml), and restart your AI Assistant.
  • If bloodyAD commands fail: check arguments (host, domain, user, password), VPN, reachability to the target machine, and bloodyAD version.

Security Considerations

  • Credentials are passed with each command, not stored or logged.
  • The server runs as a non-root user in Docker.
  • Output is plain text, identical to bloodyAD's, without emojis or additional markdown formatting.

License

MIT License

Recommended Servers

playwright-mcp

playwright-mcp

A Model Context Protocol server that enables LLMs to interact with web pages through structured accessibility snapshots without requiring vision models or screenshots.

Official
Featured
TypeScript
Magic Component Platform (MCP)

Magic Component Platform (MCP)

An AI-powered tool that generates modern UI components from natural language descriptions, integrating with popular IDEs to streamline UI development workflow.

Official
Featured
Local
TypeScript
Audiense Insights MCP Server

Audiense Insights MCP Server

Enables interaction with Audiense Insights accounts via the Model Context Protocol, facilitating the extraction and analysis of marketing insights and audience data including demographics, behavior, and influencer engagement.

Official
Featured
Local
TypeScript
VeyraX MCP

VeyraX MCP

Single MCP tool to connect all your favorite tools: Gmail, Calendar and 40 more.

Official
Featured
Local
graphlit-mcp-server

graphlit-mcp-server

The Model Context Protocol (MCP) Server enables integration between MCP clients and the Graphlit service. Ingest anything from Slack to Gmail to podcast feeds, in addition to web crawling, into a Graphlit project - and then retrieve relevant contents from the MCP client.

Official
Featured
TypeScript
Kagi MCP Server

Kagi MCP Server

An MCP server that integrates Kagi search capabilities with Claude AI, enabling Claude to perform real-time web searches when answering questions that require up-to-date information.

Official
Featured
Python
E2B

E2B

Using MCP to run code via e2b.

Official
Featured
Neon Database

Neon Database

MCP server for interacting with Neon Management API and databases

Official
Featured
Exa Search

Exa Search

A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server lets AI assistants like Claude use the Exa AI Search API for web searches. This setup allows AI models to get real-time web information in a safe and controlled way.

Official
Featured
Qdrant Server

Qdrant Server

This repository is an example of how to create a MCP server for Qdrant, a vector search engine.

Official
Featured