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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Anybody want to talk about Dirty Cow? Post 302984409 by wisecracker on Tuesday 25th of October 2016 03:49:40 PM
Old 10-25-2016
The thing is that according to RedHat the attacker has to be a local user, which implies that you know the local user, with unprivileged access. It does not say whether that user is allowed to execute code loaded from an external source, e.g. USB memory stick...
As I am not a professional I must assume that standard users are NOT allowed only admin' staff.

CVE-2016-5195 - Red Hat Customer Portal

However, and to me this is a big however, the Rowhammer _bug_ is much more serious as it can be buried inside a """free""" app' that could be DLed from so-called reputable sources and be stealthily called or installed inside what looks like a _cool_ app'. NASTY!

As we all know race conditions occur all the time in both HW and/or SW.
I had the condition(s) on both the AMIGA1200 and PC parallel ports when accessing HW I built many years ago so I am aware of situations like this. Obviously these were not OS crippling events but they taught me a lot and to research more about the situation.

Current technology is frighteningly quick compared to those units of yesteryear so even nanoseconds can be the breakpoint of today's HW...

I can't find any test code for Rowhammer though to see how it works... ;o(

...But I could guess though and probably be close enough without any said test code.
 

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pam_xauth(8)						   System Administrator's Manual					      pam_xauth(8)

NAME
pam_xauth - forward xauth keys between users SYNOPSIS
session optional /lib/security/pam_xauth.so arguments DESCRIPTION
pam_xauth.so is designed to forward xauth keys (sometimes referred to as "cookies") between users. Without pam_xauth, when xauth is enabled and a user uses the su command to assume another user's priviledges, that user is no longer able to access the original user's X display because the new user does not have the key needed to access the display. pam_xauth solves the problem by forwarding the key from the user running su (the source user) to the user whose identity the source user is assuming (the target user) when the session is created, and destroying the key when the session is torn down. This means, for example, that when you run su from an xterm sesssion, you will be able to run X programs without explicitly dealing with the xauth command or ~/.Xauthority files. pam_xauth will only forward keys if xauth can list a key connected to the $DISPLAY environment variable. Primitive access control is provided by ~/.xauth/export in the invoking user's home directory and ~/.xauth/import in the target user's home directory. If a user has a ~/.xauth/import file, the user will only receive cookies from users listed in the file. If there is no ~/.xauth/import file, the user will accept cookies from any other user. If a user has a .xauth/export file, the user will only forward cookies to users listed in the file. If there is no ~/.xauth/export file, and the invoking user is not root, the user will forward cookies to any other user. If there is no ~/.xauth/export file, and the invoking user is root, the user will not forward cookies to other users. Both the import and export files support wildcards (such as *). Both the import and export files can be empty, signifying that no users are allowed. ARGUMENTS
debug Turns on debugging messages sent to syslog. xauthpath=/usr/X11R6/bin/xauth Specify the path the xauth program (the default is /usr/X11R6/bin/xauth). IMPLEMENTATION DETAILS
pam_xauth will work only if it is used from a setuid application in which the getuid() call returns the id of the user running the applica- tion, and for which PAM can supply the name of the account that the user is attempting to assume. The typical application of this type is su. The application must call both pam_open_session() and pam_close_session() with the ruid set to the uid of the calling user and the euid set to root, and must have provided as the PAM_USER item the name of the target user. pam_xauth calls xauth as the source user to extract the key for $DISPLAY, then calls xauth as the target user to merge the key into the a temporary database and later remove the database. pam_xauth cannot be told not to remove the keys when the session is closed. SEE ALSO
/usr/share/doc/pam*/html/index.html FILES
~/.xauth/import ~/.xauth/export BUGS
Let's hope not, but if you find any, please report them via the "Bug Track" link at http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/ AUTHOR
Nalin Dahyabhai <nalin@redhat.com>, based on original version by Michael K. Johnson <johnsonm@redhat.com> Red Hat Linux 2001/9/27 pam_xauth(8)
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