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| 2009-10-01T19:01:00+00:00 Updated Slash Repo on SF.net |
| The public Slash repo has not been updated in awhile. We've moved to git and long story short, it took us some time to make it available. We hope to update the public repo weekly. It is available on slashcode.git.sourceforge.net, and there's basic instructions available for getting started with the git repo. The old CVS repo will remain there, but for now, it is ... old. So don't use it unless you want to look at ancient history. There's no plans for any tarballs or official releases. If this is of value to you, I suggest you consider doing your own releases of it. Talk to me about it if you're interested in moving forward. Read more of this story at Slashcode. |
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| 2009-11-04T13:51:00+00:00 Bug In Most Linuxes Can Give Untrusted Users Root |
| Red Midnight and other readers brought to our attention a bug in most deployed versions of Linux that could result in untrusted users getting root access. The bug was found by Brad Spengler last month. "The null pointer dereference flaw was only fixed in the upcoming 2.6.32 release candidate of the Linux kernel, making virtually all production versions in use at the moment vulnerable. While attacks can be prevented by implementing a common feature known as mmap_min_addr, the RHEL distribution... doesn't properly implement that protection... The... bug is mitigated by default on most Linux distributions, thanks to their correct implementation of the mmap_min_addr feature. ... [Spengler] said many other Linux users are also vulnerable because they run older versions or are forced to turn off [mmap_min_addr] to run certain types of applications." The register reprints a dialog from the OpenBSD-misc mailing list in which Theo De Raadt says, "For the record, this particular problem was resolved in OpenBSD a while back, in 2008. We are not super proud of the solution, but it is what seems best faced with a stupid Intel architectural choice. However, it seems that everyone else is slowly coming around to the same solution." 
Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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