Older versions of OpenSSL did not export the OP_NO_COMPRESSION constant,
so users running metasploit on systems with old copies of openssl
would throw a NameError since the constant did not exist.
[SeeRM #823], where Stephen was asking for SSL compression for
Meterpreter -- this isn't that, but it's at least now possible for other
Metasploit functionality.
Added targets for 8 specific targets that I've tested: Cisco WAP4410N,
Honeywell WAP-PL2 IP Camera, Netgear DG834, Netgear DG834G, Netgear
DG834PN, Netgear DGN1000, Netgear DSG835, Netgear WPNT834
Added functionality to the CmdStagerEcho mix-in to support encoding via
octal instead of hex based on the :enc_type option. This is because many
devices would not output hex encoded values properly.
Added options on a per-target basis for the PackFormat (endian pack()
values for communication), UploadPath (because /tmp wasn't always
writable), and PayloadEncode (previously mentioned octal encoding
option)
Note for some reason, some devices communicate over one endianness, but
then require a payload for the other endianess. I'm not sure what's
causing this, but if those specific combinations are not used, the
exploit fails. More research may be required for this.
Migrated the Sercomm module to use the CmdStager mixin to provide
uploading of the ELF binary.
Modified the CmdStagerEcho mixin to allow bypass of the "-en " since in
this case, the device messed up when it was used, and would actually
write the "-en " to the file, from some flaky busybox version of "echo".
The getenv call in sys/config was renamed to getenvs and now uses
the splat operator so that arrays don't have to be passed in. A
new function called getenv was added which takes a single argument
and returns a single value back (for ease of use).
[SeeRM #8729] - This meterpreter command allows the attacker to observe the target at real-time
by turning their webcam live. There is also a HTML-based player provided, which does not require
a plugin or anything, just open it with a browser. The HTML-based player also allows the attacker
to put livestream on the web (evil? yeah, kind of.)