On 07/12/2020 05:41, Jordan Geoghegan wrote:
Hello again,
I was playing around with ksh array syntax and its behaviour when set
as read-only. In my testing I noticed that ksh will allow you to
overwrite the first element of a read-only array. Example snippet:
#!/bin/ksh
arr[0]=val1
arr[1]=
For me, this is a definite bug. I've opted my students to fix this
bug, so unless there's a hurry, there must be a fix till the end of
December. :)
пн, 7 дек. 2020 г. в 07:43, Jordan Geoghegan :
>
> Hello again,
>
> I was playing around with ksh array syntax and its behaviour when set as
> read-on
Yep.
It is possible we need a better strategy --- like placing *all* original
argv in the [priv] title.
trondd wrote:
> Stuart Henderson wrote:
>
> > On 2020-12-07, Harald Dunkel wrote:
> > > About the PIDs: Maybe a systctl like
> > >
> > > kernel.pid_max = 4194303
> > >
> > > known from o
Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2020-12-07, Harald Dunkel wrote:
> > About the PIDs: Maybe a systctl like
> >
> > kernel.pid_max = 4194303
> >
> > known from other OSes could help to reduce the risk for PID conflicts.
>
> This doesn't help if you actually want reliability, rather than just
> "
Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2020-12-07, Harald Dunkel wrote:
> > About the PIDs: Maybe a systctl like
> >
> > kernel.pid_max = 4194303
> >
> > known from other OSes could help to reduce the risk for PID conflicts.
>
> This doesn't help if you actually want reliability, rather than just
> "
On 05/12/2020, Patrick Wildt wrote:
>
> -s doesn't exist anymore.
>
... and other replies...
You've all proved what I guess I already knew.
I don't live in the world anymore. It just passes me by.
On 2020-12-07, Harald Dunkel wrote:
> About the PIDs: Maybe a systctl like
>
> kernel.pid_max = 4194303
>
> known from other OSes could help to reduce the risk for PID conflicts.
This doesn't help if you actually want reliability, rather than just
"reliable most of the time".
There were al
On 12/7/20 7:43 AM, Theo de Raadt wrote:
We've put some work into making programs not damage their argv. If you
provide a strong set of arguments to the programs you start, you may be
able to pkill with a more fullsize pattern, increasing the accuracy.
AFAICS pflogd rewrites the command line
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