> > 3. Break into one of the other machines, use the suided script to
> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> I can't answer your questions - I know too little. Just one remark:
> AFAIK, Linux doesn't support suided shell scripts. At least it didn't do
> that a few years ago when I tried to use a suided script. I haven't
-> use C-code. Does not matter. I can code buffer overflow -proof
routines for this simple stuff. Or just code a suid binary which runs
the script and does nothing else.. An additional security hole there,
though: I basically would have TWO suided programs now though crashing
a program which only runs another should be impossible (unless the init
routines can be crashed).
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| Juha J�ykk�, [EMAIL PROTECTED] |
| home: http://www.utu.fi/~juolja/ |
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