Read the getting started blog post series
Lithnet Password Protection for Active Directory (LPP) enhances the options available to an organization wanting to ensure that all their Active Directory accounts have strong passwords.
LPP is a module that you install on your Active Directory servers that uses a password filter to inspect passwords as users attempt to change them. Using group policy, you customize the types of checks you want to perform on those passwords and they are either rejected, or approved, and committed to the directory.
LPP gives you the ability to take control of what a good password means to you. Whether you want to adopt the 2018 NIST password recommendations in part, or in full, it provides a rich set of group policy-based controls that allow you to enable any combination of the following checks on attempted password changes.
- Block compromised passwords from being used. We've made it super easy to import the HIBP data set, but you can also import any plain-text passwords or NTLM hashes that you can get your hands on.
- Block passwords based on certain words. Adding a banned word prevents it from being used as the base of a password. For example, adding the word 'password' to the banned word store, prevents not only the use of that word itself, but common variants such as 'P@ssw0rd', 'pa55word!' and 'password123456!'. LPP is aware of common character substitutions and weak obfuscations and prevents their use through a normalization process.
- Define complexity policies based on length. For example, you can require number, symbol, upper and lower for passwords less than 13 characters, but have no special requirements for passwords 13 characters or longer. Reward length, with less complexity.
- Regular expression-based policies. If regular expressions are your thing, you can define a regular expression that the password must match (or not match).
- Points-based complexity. Assign points for the use of certain characters and categories and set a minimum point threshold a password must meet.
It also includes the ability to audit your users' existing passwords against the compromised password list. You'll be able to find the weak and known compromised passwords, and force those users to change their password.
- Full PowerShell support which is used to;
- Manage the compromised password and banned word stores. Add your own banned words and compromised passwords, as well as use popular databases such as the haveibeenpwned.com downloadable password list
- Test passwords and existing hashes against the compromised store
- Check to see if your user's current passwords in AD are found in the compromised password store
- Passwords never leave the domain controller
- Designed for large environments where high performance is required
- Creates detailed event logs
- Uses a DFS-R friendly data store
- No internet access required
- No additional servers required for deployment
- Group policy support
LPP is only supported on x64 editions of Windows
- Windows Server 2008 R2 or higher
- Microsoft Visual C++ Runtime 14 (2017)
- .NET Framework 4.6
- PowerShell 5
- Microsoft Visual C++ Runtime 14 (2017)
Download the installer from the releases page
Read the getting started guide or visit the wiki for the full set of documentation.
- None of this would be possible without Troy Hunt's Have I Been Pwned service. Buy him a beer to say thanks!
- The capability to audit existing user passwords comes from the incredible work Michael Grafnetter has done with his DSInternals tools.
- Contains code from Windows-Protocol-Test-Suites used under the MIT license