The 'common' library has been removed. The only project that actually
used it was metsrv, so the code that metsrv required from common is now
directly compiled in as part of that project.
The common folder now contains files that are importanta cross all of
the projects, with a primary focus on the new "API" style function. What
this means is that MetSrv has an API that it exposes through a function
pointer that is passed to the extension when it's initialised. This
pointer references a structure with all the API functions wired in. This
means that:
* Extensions don't need to know anything about metsrv at compile time.
* The delay loading code can be removed, which was one of the last
instances of "metsrv.dll" as a string.
* Metsrv.dll no longer exports any functions.
More to come.
Added /MP for parallel builds, and removed precompiled headers as /Yc
isn't compat with /MP.
Not enabled for the Powershell extension because of it's .NET-ness.
This was a bit of a pain, but was well worth it. Had to add a couple of
hacks to make it all work, but this is a nicer solution than having to
depend on OpenSSL and its horrendous build experience.
Warnings as errors, builds clean. Had to do some horrible hacks:
1) Include custom implementation of a lib function just so we could
link against stuff built with older VS.
2) Include legacy symbols for old io for the same reason.
This commit includes code that was missing from the original Python PR which adds support for the multiprocessing module in Python. I have no idea why this was missed, but it was. The code also includes adjustments to the loader which attempts to resolve modules appropriately based on name. This is a bit of a kludge thanks to the way that Python module resolution hooks work, as it's not clear exactly which namespace the module is intended to be loaded from at runtime as it's not passed to the resolver. Down the track we may need to get smarter with the resolver so that we have a per-module resolver (ie. a tree of resolvers).
The debug builds of Meterpreter compiled fine, but the resulting binaries were never functional. No debugging is really ever done with the debug builds anyway, so instead of carry them forward, this commit removes both `debug` and `r7_debug` from the source.