Book Image

Mastering Metasploit - Fourth Edition

By : Nipun Jaswal
Book Image

Mastering Metasploit - Fourth Edition

By: Nipun Jaswal

Overview of this book

Updated for the latest version of Metasploit, this book will prepare you to face everyday cyberattacks by simulating real-world scenarios. Complete with step-by-step explanations of essential concepts and practical examples, Mastering Metasploit will help you gain insights into programming Metasploit modules and carrying out exploitation, as well as building and porting various kinds of exploits in Metasploit. Giving you the ability to perform tests on different services, including databases, IoT, and mobile, this Metasploit book will help you get to grips with real-world, sophisticated scenarios where performing penetration tests is a challenge. You'll then learn a variety of methods and techniques to evade security controls deployed at a target's endpoint. As you advance, you’ll script automated attacks using CORTANA and Armitage to aid penetration testing by developing virtual bots and discover how you can add custom functionalities in Armitage. Following real-world case studies, this book will take you on a journey through client-side attacks using Metasploit and various scripts built on the Metasploit 5.0 framework. By the end of the book, you’ll have developed the skills you need to work confidently with efficient exploitation techniques
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
1
Section 1 – Preparation and Development
6
Section 2 – The Attack Phase
10
Section 3 – Post-Exploitation and Evasion

Advanced multi-OS extended features of Metasploit

Throughout this chapter, we've covered a lot of post-exploitation. Now, let's talk about some of the advanced multi-OS features of Metasploit.

Using the pushm and popm commands

Metasploit offers two great commands, pushm and popm. The pushm command pushes the current module onto the module stack, while popm pops the pushed module from the top of the module stack; however, this is not the standard stack available to processes. Instead, it is the utilization of the same concept by Metasploit, but it's otherwise unrelated. The advantage of using these commands is speedy operations, which saves a lot of time and effort.

Let's consider a scenario where we are testing an internal server with multiple vulnerabilities. We have two exploitable services running on every system on the internal network. To exploit both services on every machine, we require a fast-switching mechanism between modules for both vulnerabilities...