On Mon, 6 Jul 2015, Liam O'Toole wrote:

On 2015-07-05, Gordon Messmer > <[email protected]> wrote:
On 07/05/2015 04:51 AM, Liam O'Toole wrote:

At this point, I don't think it's even possible to set
ForwardX11Trusted=no any more.  The X SECURITY extension was replaced
with "X Access Control Extension" several years ago.

The perceived difference was a general impression on my part, and not
measured scientifically. Moreover, it was formed years ago, and on a
variety of Linux systems. I concede that it may well be obsolete.

EL6:

ssh -X -o ForwardX11Trusted=no somehost xterm
<select some text in the window>

X Error of failed request:  BadAccess (attempt to access private resource 
denied)

ssh -Y -o ForwardX11Trusted=no somehost xterm
<select some text in the window>

All well.

ssh -X -o ForwardX11Trusted=yes somehost xterm
<select some text in the window>

All well (unsurprising really, seeing as it means the same thing).

-X/-Y/ForwardX11Trusted still do exactly what they've always done, no?

You're trusting the remote host to not misbehave if you use -Y or
ForwardX11Trusted=yes since at the very least you're opening up a fairly large
information leakage to the remote host.  That's fine if you do trust it, but
it really isn't if you don't, surely?

jh
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