This Metasploit module exploits a directory traversal vulnerability (CVE-2015-1830) in Apache ActiveMQ versions 5.x before 5.11.2 for Windows. The module tries to upload a JSP payload to the /admin directory via the traversal path /fileserver/..\\admin\\ using an HTTP PUT request with the default ActiveMQ credentials admin:admin (or other credentials provided by the user). It then issues an HTTP GET request to /admin/<payload>.jsp on the target in order to trigger the payload and obtain a shell.
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Apache ActiveMQ versions 5.11.1 and 5.13.2 suffer from command execution and directory traversal vulnerabilities.
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Grandstream GXV3275 ships with a default root SSH key which could be used a backdoor. It also suffers from an issue where restricted commands can be leveraged to break out into a full shell.
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Apache Standard Taglibs version 1.2.1 suffers from XXE and remote command execution vulnerabilities via the XSL extension in JSTL XML tags.
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The Apache Camel XSLT component allows XSL stylesheets to perform calls to external Java methods. A remote attacker able to submit messages to an xslt Camel route could use this flaw to perform arbitrary remote code execution in the context of the Camel server process.
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The Apache Camel XSLT component will resolve entities in XML messages when transforming them using an xslt route. A remote attacker able to submit messages to an xslt route could use this flaw to read files accessible to the running application server and potentially perform other more advanced XXE attacks. Versions affected include Camel 2.11.0 to 2.11.3 and Camel 2.12.0 to 2.12.2.
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Apache Commons Compress versions 1.0 through 1.4 and Apache Ant versions 1.5 through 1.8.3 suffer from a denial of service vulnerability. The bzip2 compressing streams in Apache Commons Compress and Apache Ant internally use sorting algorithms with unacceptable worst-case performance on very repetitive inputs. A specially crafted input to Compress' BZip2CompressorOutputStream or Ant's <bzip2> task can be used to make the process spend a very long time while using up all available processing time effectively leading to a denial of service.
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