tomcat_enum requires the admin web app package for it to work, but
by default many Apache Tomcat don't actually have this. The module
should check that first before trying usernames.
[FixRM 6264], see:
http://dev.metasploit.com/redmine/issues/6264
I also made changes to do_login in order to verify successful/bad
attempts more specific.
Added code to check successful conn first, so now if there is no connectivity on target port, script aborts run.
New check to ensure 'set-cookie' is set by the app as expected, before any further fingerprinting & b-f starts.
If the app is not Ironport, 'set-cookie' will not be set & remains null, and so script aborts run.
De-registered 'TARGETURI.'
Registered 'username' and 'password' with default value.
Changed some run messages.
And lastly, changed the csrf key piece cos I miss a cold beer right now.
There was a disaster of a merge at 6f37cf22eb that is particularly
difficult to untangle (it was a bad merge from a long-running local
branch).
What this commit does is simulate a hard reset, by doing thing:
git checkout -b reset-hard-ohmu
git reset --hard 593363c5f9
git checkout upstream-master
git checkout -b revert-via-diff
git diff --no-prefix upstream-master..reset-hard-ohmy > patch
patch -p0 < patch
Since there was one binary change, also did this:
git checkout upstream-master data/exploits/CVE-2012-1535/Main.swf
Now we have one commit that puts everything back. It screws up
file-level history a little, but it's at least at a point where we can
move on with our lives. Sorry.
[SeeRM:#1233] - This is an upgrade based on ringt's code in PR #2017.
As a pentester, it's useful to obtain additional information such as
device type, access rights, folders, and files, etc when doing a share
enumeration. I have also enhanced exception handling to avoid shutting
errors up, which is better for debugging purposes.