> BloodHound is a single page Javascript web application, built on top of [Linkurious](http://linkurio.us), compiled with [Electron](http://electron.atom.io), with a [Neo4j](https://neo4j.com)database fed by a PowerShell ingestor.
> BloodHound uses graph theory to reveal the hidden and often unintended relationships within an Active Directory environment. Attackers can use BloodHound to easily identify highly complex attack paths that would otherwise be impossible to quickly identify. Defenders can use BloodHound to identify and eliminate those same attack paths. Both blue and red teams can use BloodHound to easily gain a deeper understanding of privilege relationships in an Active Directory environment.
> BloodHound is developed by [@\_wald0](https://www.twitter.com/\_wald0), [@CptJesus](https://twitter.com/CptJesus), and [@harmj0y](https://twitter.com/harmj0y).
> From [https://github.com/BloodHoundAD/BloodHound](https://github.com/BloodHoundAD/BloodHound)
So, [Bloodhound ](https://github.com/BloodHoundAD/BloodHound)is an amazing tool which can enumerate a domain automatically, save all the information, find possible privilege escalation paths and show all the information using graphs.
The **visualisation application uses neo4j** to show how all the information is related and to show different ways to escalate privileges in the domain.
The first time that you start this database you will need to access [http://localhost:7474/browser/](http://localhost:7474/browser/). You will be asked default credentials (neo4j:neo4j) and you will be **required to change the password**, so change it and don't forget it.
They have several options but if you want to run SharpHound from a PC joined to the domain, using your current user and extract all the information you can do:
> You can read more about **CollectionMethod** and loop session [here](https://bloodhound.readthedocs.io/en/latest/data-collection/sharphound-all-flags.html)
[**Learn more about Bloodhound in ired.team.**](https://ired.team/offensive-security-experiments/active-directory-kerberos-abuse/abusing-active-directory-with-bloodhound-on-kali-linux)