Stef Bon schreef:
Carlos Martín wrote:
On 15/09/06, John Lockman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
However, this does make it extremely good for storing sensitive data
before encryption.
Not really. tmpfs may be pushed to swap space, where it could be
recovered if the attacker has enough interest.
Carlos Martín wrote:
On 15/09/06, John Lockman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
However, this does make it extremely good for storing sensitive data
before encryption.
Not really. tmpfs may be pushed to swap space, where it could be
recovered if the attacker has enough interest. Try running
Muzhmail wrote:
On Thursday 14 September 2006 19:59, Stef Bon wrote:
Hello,
I want to use a temporary filesystem, and I was wondering I could
use /dev/shm. You could say, hey it's your system, so you can use it,
but hey, what's the purpose of /dev/shm. Why is it there?
Thanks in advance,
Muzhmail wrote:
On Thursday 14 September 2006 19:59, Stef Bon wrote:
Hello,
I want to use a temporary filesystem, and I was wondering I could
use /dev/shm. You could say, hey it's your system, so you can use it,
but hey, what's the purpose of /dev/shm. Why is it there?
Thanks in advance,
On 9/14/06, Brandon Peirce [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Muzhmail wrote:
On Thursday 14 September 2006 19:59, Stef Bon wrote:
Hello,
I want to use a temporary filesystem, and I was wondering I could
use /dev/shm. You could say, hey it's your system, so you can use it,
but hey, what's the
On 15/09/06, John Lockman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
However, this does make it extremely good for storing sensitive data
before encryption.
Not really. tmpfs may be pushed to swap space, where it could be
recovered if the attacker has enough interest. Try running gnupg
withoug suid root. It