Book Image

Mastering Metasploit - Second Edition

By : Nipun Jaswal
Book Image

Mastering Metasploit - Second Edition

By: Nipun Jaswal

Overview of this book

Metasploit is a popular penetration testing framework that has one of the largest exploit databases around. This book will show you exactly how to prepare yourself against the attacks you will face every day by simulating real-world possibilities. We start by reminding you about the basic functionalities of Metasploit and its use in the most traditional ways. You’ll get to know about the basics of programming Metasploit modules as a refresher, and then dive into carrying out exploitation as well building and porting exploits of various kinds in Metasploit. In the next section, you’ll develop the ability to perform testing on various services such as SCADA, databases, IoT, mobile, tablets, and many more services. After this training, we jump into real-world sophisticated scenarios where performing penetration tests are a challenge. With real-life case studies, we take you on a journey through client-side attacks using Metasploit and various scripts built on the Metasploit framework. By the end of the book, you will be trained specifically on time-saving techniques using Metasploit.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Mastering Metasploit
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Pacing up development using reload, edit and reload_all commands


During the development phase of a module, we may need to test a module several times. Shutting down Metasploit every time while making changes to the new module is a tedious, tiresome, and time-consuming task. There must be a mechanism to make the module development an easy, short, and fun task. Fortunately, Metasploit provides the reload, edit, and reload_all commands, which make the life of module developers comparatively easy. We can edit any Metasploit module on the fly using the edit command and reload the edited module using the reload command without shutting down Metasploit. If changes are made in multiple modules, we can use the reload_all command to reload all Metasploit modules at once.

Let's look at an example:

In the preceding screenshot, we are editing the freefloatftp_user.rb exploit from the exploit/windows/ftp directory because we issued the edit command. We changed the payload size from 444 to 448 and saved...