Since Ruby 2.1, the respond_to? method is more strict because it does
not check protected methods. So when you use send(), clearly you're
ignoring this type of access control. The patch is meant to preserve
this behavior to avoid potential breakage.
Resolve#4507
See #4400. This should be all of them, except for, of course, the module
that targets Redmine itself.
Note that this also updates the README.md with more current information
as well.
Rename UDP_SECRET to just SECRET, as it is used for more than just UDP
Rename and properly document GATEWAY option
Introduce an option to configure what UDP port will be probed
The exploit works with the URLs fixed, installs the APK, but hangs at the Installing...
screen and never actually launches. We tried opening the APK in a setTimeout() intent
URI, but the previously launched intent seemed unresponsive. Andre had the bright
idea of re-opening the previously launched intent with invalid args, crashing it and
allow us to launch the payload.
Minor changes to comments
Updated URLs
Added Fedora ROP, cleaned up
Fixing URLs again, typos
Added support for Archlinux (new target)
Added support for OpenSuse (new target)
Tincd is now a separate file, uses the TCP mixin/REX sockets.
Started ARM exploiting
Style changes, improvements according to egyp7's comments
Style changes according to sane rubocop messages
RSA key length other than 256 supported. Different key lengths for client/server supported.
Drop location for binary can be customized
Refactoring: Replaced pop_inbuffer with slice
Refactoring: fail_with is called, renamed method to send_recv to match other protocol classes,
using rand_text_alpha instead of hardcoded \x90,
Fixed fail command usage
Version exploiting ARM with ASLR brute force
Cleaned up version with nicer program flow
More elegant solution for data too large for modulus
Minor changes in comments only (comment about firewalld)
Correct usage of the TCP mixin
Fixes module option so that the path to drop the binary on the server is not validated against the local filesystem
Added comments
Minor edits
Space removal at EOL according to msftidy
This makes it somewhat easier to use FTP server exploit modules in
somewhat more restrictive networks, where you might only have a few
inbound ports to choose from.