I think that we are using different measurements. I think you are counting system calls, where as I am looking at key concepts.
Syscalls are in the kernel, POSIX isn't in the kernel. So no, I'm not counting syscalls. The fundamental basis for security in any system is to start from an initial condition where no communication is possible and then add communication authority to the mix selectively and cautiously. Any system that begins with this assumption is fatally flawed from a security perspective. No, it is fatally flawed from _your_ perspective. You want a absurd level of security that is simply not needed for a system that one uses on a daily basis. > I disagree, look at OpenBSD. OpenBSD security is a joke. So prove it. You always claim things without backing them up. _______________________________________________ L4-hurd mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/l4-hurd
