Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 9th Aug 2007 17:02 UTC, submitted by Joe User
Privacy, Security, Encryption University of Cambridge researcher Robert Watson has published a paper at the First USENIX Workshop On Offensive Technology in which he describes serious vulnerabilities in OpenBSD's Systrace, Sudo, Sysjail, the TIS GSWTK framework, and CerbNG. The technique is also effective against many commercially available anti-virus systems. His slides include sample exploit code that bypasses access control, virtualization, and intrusion detection in under 20 lines of C code consisting solely of memcpy() and fork(). Sysjail has now withdrawn their software, recommending against any use, and NetBSD has disabled Systrace by default in their upcoming release.
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Please... enough already..
by BSDfan on Thu 9th Aug 2007 20:59 UTC
BSDfan
Member since:
2007-03-14

"Just so it is clear, systrace is just a tool included in the distribution. It is not used by anything in the base system by default but be wary of using this tool as it stands."

http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article&sid=20070809201304