On 9/7/14, Vladimir Panteleev via Digitalmars-d-announce
digitalmars-d-announce@puremagic.com wrote:
Thanks to recent advances in DMD (-betterC and -m32mscoff), I
could get a Hello, world program on Win32 down to just 438
bytes when compiled. This is without assembly, linker scripts,
custom
On Monday, 8 September 2014 at 07:01:19 UTC, Andrej Mitrovic via
Digitalmars-d-announce wrote:
On 9/7/14, Vladimir Panteleev via Digitalmars-d-announce
digitalmars-d-announce@puremagic.com wrote:
I guess this is great news for virus writers. :P
A std.virus or core.virus module? ;;)
Nothing
On Monday, 8 September 2014 at 07:01:19 UTC, Andrej Mitrovic via
Digitalmars-d-announce wrote:
I guess this is great news for virus writers. :P
Why? Modern viruses are bloatware:
https://www.virustotal.com/en/file/73559b15d1f55a9f08a5674fd4320a7ba9ff4e98f0949a1b2a756ec8eafd5caf/analysis/
On Sunday, 7 September 2014 at 21:03:17 UTC, Vladimir Panteleev
wrote:
The 438-byte Hello, world program is achieved using Crinkler,
which is a COFF linker with aggressive compression and header
optimization. It was created for compressing 4K demos.
Pretty cool! Up to now D had little
On Sunday, 7 September 2014 at 21:03:17 UTC, Vladimir Panteleev
wrote:
The 438-byte Hello, world program is achieved using Crinkler,
which is a COFF linker with aggressive compression and header
optimization. It was created for compressing 4K demos.
Pretty nice! Is the format correct too, or
On Monday, 8 September 2014 at 07:59:37 UTC, Ola Fosheim Grøstad
wrote:
«Smallest PE file that downloads a file over WebDAV and
executes it: 133 bytes»
http://www.phreedom.org/research/tinype/
But that downloaded file is bloatware, because it has to
implement functionality, which is not
On Monday, 8 September 2014 at 08:08:23 UTC, Kagamin wrote:
But that downloaded file is bloatware, because it has to
implement functionality, which is not provided by the system.
That tiny pe file doesn't download anything, it's completely
done by the system.
Yeah…
On Monday, 8 September 2014 at 08:06:37 UTC, Ola Fosheim Grøstad
wrote:
On Sunday, 7 September 2014 at 21:03:17 UTC, Vladimir Panteleev
wrote:
The 438-byte Hello, world program is achieved using
Crinkler, which is a COFF linker with aggressive compression
and header optimization. It was