ghost? you don't need ghost. =)
what you need is dd, netcat and a few hours to setup some scripts to rename systems.
(meanwhile, i'm fighting with creating ghost diskettes right now)
you say: You're trusting the same organisation that told us that the Apache bug wasn't exploitable on x86 Linux (and we later found out it was), that this is a trustable workaround?
and
No thanks, I'll upgrade my servers and enable priviledge separation.
so you don't trust them for one thing, but another?
ghost? you don't need ghost. =) what you need is dd, netcat and a few hours to setup some scripts to rename systems. (meanwhile, i'm fighting with creating ghost diskettes right now)
eg, sendmail.com vs sendmail.org
you say:
You're trusting the same organisation that told us that the Apache bug wasn't exploitable on x86 Linux (and we later found out it was), that this is a trustable workaround?
and
No thanks, I'll upgrade my servers and enable priviledge separation. so you don't trust them for one thing, but another?
yea. the /. lameness filter pulled out the header. this will work:
#include <stdio.h>
int main(){
printf("FP for the CLIT\n"); return 0;
}
yea, the /. lameness filter removed the header. this should work:
#include <stdio.h>
int main(){
printf("FP for the CLIT\n"); return 0;
}
by not doing this #!/bin/sh ./$0
#include <stdio.h>
int main(){
printf("I installed 2.2.4 %d days ago!\n", 4);
return 0;
}
#include int main(){ printf("FP for the CLIT\n"); return 0; }