This release features modules covering the Confluence remote code execution bug CVE-2022-26134 and the hotly-debated CVE-2022-30190, a file format vulnerability in the Windows Operating System accessible through malicious documents. Both have been all over the news, and we’re very happy to bring them to you so that you can verify mitigations and patches in your infrastructure. If you’d like to read more about these vulnerabilities, Rapid7 has AttackerKB analyses and blogs covering both Confluence CVE-2022-26134 (AttackerKB, Rapid7 Blog)and Windows CVE-2022-30190 (AttackKB, Rapid7 Blog).
While we release new content weekly (or in real-time if you are using github), we track milestones as well. This week, we released Metasploit 6.2, and it has a whole host of new functionality, exploits, and fixes
test_vulnerable
methods in the various SQL injection libraries have been updated so that they will now use the specified encoder if one is specified, ensuring that characters are appropriately encoded as needed.auxiliary/server/capture/smb
module no longer stores duplicate Net-NTLM hashes in the database.exploits/multi/http/php_fpm_rce
module has been updated to be compatible with Ruby 3.0 changes.As always, you can update to the latest Metasploit Framework with msfupdate
and you can get more details on the changes since the last blog post from
GitHub:
If you are a git
user, you can clone the Metasploit Framework repo (master branch) for the latest.
To install fresh without using git, you can use the open-source-only Nightly Installers or the
binary installers (which also include the commercial edition).