but it expects a factory object not a string, when setting :proxy => datastore['Proxies'] user got:
"Auxiliary failed: NoMethodError private method `open' called for \"socks4:localhost:1080\":String."
VALID_OPTIONS in ssh.rb now takes :proxies option which is passed to the Rex socket in
Net::SSH::Transport::Session.new.
Testing: block all outgoing to SSH server, try to connect with a proxy. Try with :proxy option,
then merge this pull request and try again.
auxiliary/fuzzers/wifi/fuzz_beacon offers ADDR_DST option, probably
copy-pasted from some other wifi modules, but does not use it, likely
because beacons are meant to be sent to broadcast address only. Since
this is a fuzzer, changing the destination address may be desirable.
Used the option in building the frame to be sent.
auxiliary/scanner/http/glassfish_login offers URI option to set the path
where Glassfish is installed, but it doesn't work. Replaced it with
TARGETURI and call target_uri.path to get a base path.
post/windows/manage/persistence incorrectly checked the STARTUP option
to set the payload, which meant it was always the default (reverse_tcp).
Changed to check PAYLOAD_TYPE instead, as intended.
This includes 2 bug fixes:
1) Returning a handle with execute
2) Bug in process_channel_read that caused the following to always
return nil or a single byte:
p = client.sys.process.execute("id", "-u", "Channelized"=>true)
p.channel.read
[SeeRM #7005][See #681]
Fixes client.sys.process.execute for posix, which previously (since
2010!) would always return nil, or a single byte. This makes sense
considering the value of bytesRead would always be either 0 or 1 because
it was being assigned the result of the comparison instead of the return
value of read().
[Fixes#681]
Fixes some TypeError exceptions when attempting most operations on
spawned processes, e.g.:
p = client.sys.process.execute("/bin/sh", nil, "Channelized"=>true)
p.close
# raises TypeError: can't convert nil into Integer
[FIXRM #7005]
Based off my `Keyjacker` script this module runs through an account's
keychains and returns internet accounts associated.
Setting the GETPASS option to true will return both many plain text
passwords given that the user allows their system to use the keychain
when prompted.
This uses a default MySQL admin credential to write a php file to
the web directory, extracts our malicious executable, and then
finally execute it. We get SYSTEM.