Sponsored Content
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Meltdown and Spectre CPU bugs Post 303010900 by dodona on Tuesday 9th of January 2018 05:31:29 PM
Old 01-09-2018
Quote:
Originally Posted by Neo
Smilie

It's not that serious yet. However, it might get serious after hackers, now knowing about, this write exploit code as they will.

There are no known exploits to date and no know malicious code to exploit.
thats it. A ridiculous theoretical problem will become a real problem by communicating it to the world. Meltdown is IT's biggest idiocy of all times.
 

5 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Filesystems, Disks and Memory

hard disk meltdown

I had an issue with a second hard disk in my machine. I have a sparc station running solaris 7. It was working fine but now it wont mount on boot up and when you try to mount it manually it gives an I/O error. I tried a different disk as a control which was fine. What I want to know is if my... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Henrik
3 Replies

2. Solaris

Bugs with clock()

Hi there!!! Need your help in solving some tricky problems. Since clock() as such is buggy on SUN OS 5 we have started using gettimeofday() in our RTOS applications based on Solaris 9. The problems we actually encountered previously were - the applications kind of freeze/hang eternally on... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: smanu
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Bugs in my new Ubuntu installation

I recently bought a new HP Spectre x360 laptop and installed Linux (Ubuntu 16.04 LTS 64 bit) for the first time. I am seeing various bugs. I don't know if the problems are due to: (a) Hardware problems with the new laptop. (b) Software issues, i.e. Ubuntu not working with the other... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: twelth_hour
7 Replies

4. War Stories

Linus Torvalds reply about Meltdown and Spectre.

Apologies if this is the wrong forum but... ...This is hard hitting stuff. LKML: Linus Torvalds: Re: x86/enter: Create macros to restrict/unrestrict Indirect Branch Speculation (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: wisecracker
5 Replies

5. AIX

AIX 6.1, POWER5 and Spectre/Meltdown

Apologies for this newbie question. We have inherited an IBM p5 520 (9111-520) running AIX 6.1.0.0 which seems to be the base install and no further patches installed. Is this vulnerable to the Spectre/Meltdown threat? Are patches available? Looks like AIX 6.1.0.0 went 'end of support' in... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: the_garbage
8 Replies
vga_init(3)							Svgalib User Manual						       vga_init(3)

NAME
vga_init - initialize svgalib library SYNOPSIS
#include <vga.h> int vga_init(void); DESCRIPTION
It detects the chipset and gives up supervisor rights. This is the recommended first line of any program that uses svgalib. vga_setchipset(3) can be called before it to avoid detection. Svgalib catches a bunch of signals that usually kill your program to restore textmode. If you catch signal's before calling vga_init() svgalib will restore textmode and prepare for shutdown and then call your handler routine. If you don't want this, catch the signal after calling vga_init and do not daisychain to svgalib's original handler. WARNING! svgalib needs two signals for it's own purposes (that is managing console switches). To avoid problems it uses the otherwise unused signals SIGUSR1 and SIGUSR2. However, this means that you cannot use them in your program by any means. They are setup by vga_init() as everything else is. Since version 1.2.11 vga_init() includes code to hunt for a free virtual console on its own in case you are not starting the program from one (but instead over a network or modem login, from within 'screen' or an 'xterm'). Provided there is a free console, this succeeds if you are root or if the svgalib calling user own the current console. This is to avoid people not using the console being able to fiddle with it. On graceful exit the program returns to the console from which it was started. Otherwise it remains in text mode at the VC which svgalib allocated to allow you to see any error messages. In any case, any I/O the svgalib makes in text mode (after calling vga_init) will also take place at this new console. Alas, some games misuse their suid root priviledge and run as full root process. svgalib cannot detect this and allows Joe Blow User to open a new VC on the console. If this annoys you ROOT_VC_SHORTCUT in Makefile.cfg allows you to disable allocating a new VC for root (except when he owns the current console) when compiling svgalib. This is the default (disabling the allocation for root). vga_init() returns a non-zero value in case of errors. As of this writing it will return -1 if it is unable to allocate a graphical con- sole. Otherwise, 0 is returned. BUGS
Svgalib versions prior to 1.2.11 had a security hole where it would be possible to regain root priviledges even after a vga_init() call. This is not necessarily a problem, but if your program is vulnerable to buffer overflows and other attacks, an attacker may exploit this. However, prior to your call, your program will need to run setuid root, so you should be very careful. The ioperm library by Olaf Titz will allow svgalib programs to run not setuid root. However, it gives all programs unlimited access to the hardware. Again, a malicious person can exploit this (albeit a bit more difficult) too. Thus, in general, make your svgalib programs as secure as any setuid root program. Some programs may (accidently) rely on the old behaviour (which was probably due to the author not knowing about saved uids (which might actually even not have existed in Linux at that time)). A line: security compat in the configuration file /etc/vga/libvga.conf will reinstate the old behaviour whereas security revoke-all-privs enables the (currently default) action. SEE ALSO
svgalib(7), vga_setmode(3), mouse_init(3), vga_claimvideomemory(3), vga_ext_set(3), vga_fillblt(3), vga_getcurrentchipset(3), vga_getde- faultmode(3), vga_getgraphmem(3), vga_runinbackground(3), vga_runinbackground_version(3), vga_safety_fork(3), vga_setchipset(3), vga_setchipsetandfeatures(3), vgagl(7), libvga.config(5), AUTHOR
This manual page was edited by Michael Weller <eowmob@exp-math.uni-essen.de>. The exact source of the referenced function as well as of the original documentation is unknown. It is very likely that both are at least to some extent are due to Harm Hanemaayer <H.Hanemaayer@inter.nl.net>. Occasionally this might be wrong. I hereby asked to be excused by the original author and will happily accept any additions or corrections to this first version of the svgalib manual. Svgalib (>;= 1.2.11) 27 July 1997 vga_init(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:58 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy