Secretly Monopolizing the CPU Without Being Root
An anonymous reader writes "This year's
Usenix security symposium
includes a
paper
that implements a "cheat" utility, which allows any non-privileged user to
run his/her program, e.g., like so 'cheat 99% program'
thereby insuring that the programs would get 99% of the CPU
cycles, regardless of the presence of any other applications in the
system, and in some cases (like Linux), in a way that keeps the program
invisible from CPU monitoring tools (like 'top'). The utility exclusively
uses standard interfaces and can be trivially implemented by any
beginner non-privileged programmer. Recent efforts to improve the
support for multimedia applications make systems more susceptible to
the attack.
All prevalent operating systems but Mac OS X are vulnerable, though by
this kerneltrap story,
it appears that the new CFS Linux scheduler attempts to address the
problem that were raised by the paper."
If you reply, do so only to what I explicitly wrote. If I didn't write it, don't assume or infer it.
You gun-toting marxist redneck zealot astroturfers make me sick!
it run when OS not looking