* Exploit in 2.6 kernels @ 2005-04-12 9:34 John M Collins 2005-04-12 12:24 ` Baruch Even 0 siblings, 1 reply; 34+ messages in thread From: John M Collins @ 2005-04-12 9:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux Kernel Mailing List Please CC any reply to jmc AT xisl.com as I'm not subscribed - thanks We had 5 machines broken into last night all but one with kernel 2.6.8 and found a binary "krad-no-longer-private.c" had been downloaded It contains the string: k-rad.c - linux 2.6.* CPL 0 kernel exploit Discovered Jan 2005 by sd <sd@fucksheep.org> If you want to look at it, I've copied it (with mode set to 444 of course) to www.xisl.com/hack Hope that is helpful -- John Collins Xi Software Ltd www.xisl.com Tel: +44 (0)1707 886110 (Direct) +44 (0)7799 113162 (Mobile) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-12 9:34 Exploit in 2.6 kernels John M Collins @ 2005-04-12 12:24 ` Baruch Even 2005-04-12 15:00 ` John M Collins 0 siblings, 1 reply; 34+ messages in thread From: Baruch Even @ 2005-04-12 12:24 UTC (permalink / raw) To: John M Collins; +Cc: Linux Kernel Mailing List You can find the source at http://www.securiteam.com/exploits/5VP0N0UF5U.html The fix: http://linux.bkbits.net:8080/linux-2.6/cset@422dd06a1p5PsyFhoGAJseinjEq3ew?nav=index.html|ChangeSet@-1d CAN: http://www.cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CAN-2005-0736 John M Collins wrote: > Please CC any reply to jmc AT xisl.com as I'm not subscribed - thanks > > We had 5 machines broken into last night all but one with kernel 2.6.8 > and found a binary "krad-no-longer-private.c" had been downloaded > > It contains the string: > > k-rad.c - linux 2.6.* CPL 0 kernel exploit > Discovered Jan 2005 by sd <sd@fucksheep.org> > > If you want to look at it, I've copied it (with mode set to 444 of > course) to www.xisl.com/hack > > Hope that is helpful > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-12 12:24 ` Baruch Even @ 2005-04-12 15:00 ` John M Collins 2005-04-12 21:08 ` Chris Wright 2005-05-09 18:37 ` Alessandro Salvatori 0 siblings, 2 replies; 34+ messages in thread From: John M Collins @ 2005-04-12 15:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux Kernel Mailing List Thanks to everyone for the pointers on this one I've rebuilt the kernels and we'll see what happens. Seems like they got in because on most of the machines I had an ancient sshd_config which allowed Protocol 1. When I installed newer sshds the newer sshd_config got stuck in as a ".rpmnew" file. >From what I can make out the "visitor" was from Interbusiness.it if anyone is interested. John Collins Xi Software Ltd www.xisl.com Tel: +44 (0)1707 886110 (Direct) +44 (0)7799 113162 (Mobile) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-12 15:00 ` John M Collins @ 2005-04-12 21:08 ` Chris Wright 2005-04-12 21:32 ` John M Collins 2005-05-09 18:37 ` Alessandro Salvatori 1 sibling, 1 reply; 34+ messages in thread From: Chris Wright @ 2005-04-12 21:08 UTC (permalink / raw) To: John M Collins; +Cc: Linux Kernel Mailing List * John M Collins (jmc@xisl.com) wrote: > Thanks to everyone for the pointers on this one I've rebuilt the kernels > and we'll see what happens. BTW, I'd recommend updating to 2.6.11.7 so that you're protected from another local root exploit. thanks, -chris ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-12 21:08 ` Chris Wright @ 2005-04-12 21:32 ` John M Collins 2005-04-13 5:28 ` Valdis.Kletnieks ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 34+ messages in thread From: John M Collins @ 2005-04-12 21:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Chris Wright; +Cc: Linux Kernel Mailing List On Tue, 2005-04-12 at 14:08 -0700, Chris Wright wrote: > * John M Collins (jmc@xisl.com) wrote: > > Thanks to everyone for the pointers on this one I've rebuilt the kernels > > and we'll see what happens. > > BTW, I'd recommend updating to 2.6.11.7 so that you're protected from > another local root exploit. I'll do that - trouble is round where I am they dish out Nvidia cards like confetti, I've got them in the machine I use most and another 2 and you have to do all that gyrating with running the script to FTP down and build the secret module before you can run X. This is a big disincentive when it comes to installing new kernels. I wish some kind soul would speak nicely to Nvidia and get them to see reason on the point but I suspect I'm not the first person to wish that. (Or is there a sneaky way of patching the modules so they'll work in another kernel without tainting it?). John Collins Xi Software Ltd www.xisl.com Tel: +44 (0)1707 886110 (Direct) +44 (0)7799 113162 (Mobile) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-12 21:32 ` John M Collins @ 2005-04-13 5:28 ` Valdis.Kletnieks 2005-04-13 9:47 ` Helge Hafting 2005-04-13 13:02 ` Lennart Sorensen 2 siblings, 0 replies; 34+ messages in thread From: Valdis.Kletnieks @ 2005-04-13 5:28 UTC (permalink / raw) To: John M Collins; +Cc: Chris Wright, Linux Kernel Mailing List [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 863 bytes --] On Tue, 12 Apr 2005 22:32:59 BST, John M Collins said: > I wish some kind soul would speak nicely to Nvidia and get them to see > reason on the point but I suspect I'm not the first person to wish that. NVidia is aware, and they're doing the best they can under the circumstances (no, they can't opensource it all, there's other people's intellectual property in there that they licensed...) > (Or is there a sneaky way of patching the modules so they'll work in > another kernel without tainting it?). Patching it so it won't taint is a one-line patch. However, it's so morally bankrupt that I'm not giving any more hints. Much trickier is doing it so the same module will insmod into multiple kernels without screwing the pooch. If you look around in nv-linux.h and nv.c, there's a number of checks of KERNEL_VERSION, and they're all there for a reason. [-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 226 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-12 21:32 ` John M Collins 2005-04-13 5:28 ` Valdis.Kletnieks @ 2005-04-13 9:47 ` Helge Hafting 2005-04-13 12:59 ` Lennart Sorensen 2005-04-13 13:02 ` Lennart Sorensen 2 siblings, 1 reply; 34+ messages in thread From: Helge Hafting @ 2005-04-13 9:47 UTC (permalink / raw) To: John M Collins; +Cc: Linux Kernel Mailing List John M Collins wrote: >On Tue, 2005-04-12 at 14:08 -0700, Chris Wright wrote: > > >>* John M Collins (jmc@xisl.com) wrote: >> >> >>>Thanks to everyone for the pointers on this one I've rebuilt the kernels >>>and we'll see what happens. >>> >>> >>BTW, I'd recommend updating to 2.6.11.7 so that you're protected from >>another local root exploit. >> >> > >I'll do that - trouble is round where I am they dish out Nvidia cards >like confetti, I've got them in the machine I use most and another 2 and >you have to do all that gyrating with running the script to FTP down and >build the secret module before you can run X. This is a big disincentive >when it comes to installing new kernels. > >I wish some kind soul would speak nicely to Nvidia and get them to see >reason on the point but I suspect I'm not the first person to wish that. > > You're not. Complain to nvidia - using both email and snailmail. If everybody with such problems did that, chances are they see the light someday. Oh, and complain to the guy handing out nvidia cards like confetti, state your preference for some other card. Perhaps that is easier to achieve. >(Or is there a sneaky way of patching the modules so they'll work in >another kernel without tainting it?). > > Whats wrong with tainting? It is just a message, telling you that the kernel is unsupported. In this case because you're running a closed-source module. The tainting message itself does not do anything bad. There is a way - which is to write an open nvidia driver. To do that, you'll need to get the specs out of nvidia or figure it out by reverse-engineering some other nvidia driver. Either approach is hard, so people generally find it cheaper to just buy a supported card. Helge Hafting ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-13 9:47 ` Helge Hafting @ 2005-04-13 12:59 ` Lennart Sorensen 2005-04-13 13:06 ` Lars Marowsky-Bree 2005-04-14 12:46 ` Helge Hafting 0 siblings, 2 replies; 34+ messages in thread From: Lennart Sorensen @ 2005-04-13 12:59 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Helge Hafting; +Cc: John M Collins, Linux Kernel Mailing List On Wed, Apr 13, 2005 at 11:47:46AM +0200, Helge Hafting wrote: > You're not. Complain to nvidia - using both email and snailmail. > If everybody with such problems did that, chances are they see > the light someday. Oh, and complain to the guy handing out > nvidia cards like confetti, state your preference for some other > card. Perhaps that is easier to achieve. What card would you recomend to people? > Whats wrong with tainting? It is just a message, telling you that > the kernel is unsupported. In this case because you're running a > closed-source module. The tainting message itself does not do > anything bad. There is a way - which is to write an open nvidia > driver. To do that, you'll need to get the specs out of nvidia or > figure it out by reverse-engineering some other nvidia driver. Either > approach is hard, so people generally find it cheaper to just buy > a supported card. It is becoming harder and harder to find supported cards it seems. Finding a card with decent 2D drivers for X can still be done, but 3D is just not really an option it seems. Even 2D seems to be a problem on many cards if you don't use a binary only driver. Len Sorensen ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-13 12:59 ` Lennart Sorensen @ 2005-04-13 13:06 ` Lars Marowsky-Bree 2005-04-13 13:23 ` Lennart Sorensen 2005-04-14 12:46 ` Helge Hafting 1 sibling, 1 reply; 34+ messages in thread From: Lars Marowsky-Bree @ 2005-04-13 13:06 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Lennart Sorensen, Helge Hafting; +Cc: John M Collins, Linux Kernel Mailing List On 2005-04-13T08:59:21, Lennart Sorensen <lsorense@csclub.uwaterloo.ca> wrote: > It is becoming harder and harder to find supported cards it seems. > Finding a card with decent 2D drivers for X can still be done, but 3D is > just not really an option it seems. Even 2D seems to be a problem on > many cards if you don't use a binary only driver. You are confusing the cause with the symptom. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-13 13:06 ` Lars Marowsky-Bree @ 2005-04-13 13:23 ` Lennart Sorensen 2005-04-13 14:01 ` John M Collins ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 34+ messages in thread From: Lennart Sorensen @ 2005-04-13 13:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Lars Marowsky-Bree Cc: Helge Hafting, John M Collins, Linux Kernel Mailing List On Wed, Apr 13, 2005 at 03:06:46PM +0200, Lars Marowsky-Bree wrote: > On 2005-04-13T08:59:21, Lennart Sorensen <lsorense@csclub.uwaterloo.ca> wrote: > > > It is becoming harder and harder to find supported cards it seems. > > Finding a card with decent 2D drivers for X can still be done, but 3D is > > just not really an option it seems. Even 2D seems to be a problem on > > many cards if you don't use a binary only driver. > > You are confusing the cause with the symptom. Graphics card companies don't realize they are hardware companies not software companies and that it is hardware they make their money from? Oh and they have too many lawyers? It seems to me that 2D graphics are a done deal, with no new inovation taking place. Releasing programing specs for that part should be a no brainer. If the nifty 3D routines are so important to keep secret from the other guys then well keep those. Release the 2D programing specs! Len Sorensen ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-13 13:23 ` Lennart Sorensen @ 2005-04-13 14:01 ` John M Collins 2005-04-16 2:32 ` Adrian Bunk 2005-04-13 15:22 ` Chris Friesen 2005-04-15 15:00 ` Exploit in 2.6 kernels Alan Cox 2 siblings, 1 reply; 34+ messages in thread From: John M Collins @ 2005-04-13 14:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Lennart Sorensen Cc: Lars Marowsky-Bree, Helge Hafting, Linux Kernel Mailing List On Wed, 2005-04-13 at 09:23 -0400, Lennart Sorensen wrote: > Graphics card companies don't realize they are hardware companies not > software companies and that it is hardware they make their money from? > Oh and they have too many lawyers? > > It seems to me that 2D graphics are a done deal, with no new inovation > taking place. Releasing programing specs for that part should be a no > brainer. If the nifty 3D routines are so important to keep secret from > the other guys then well keep those. Release the 2D programing specs! Where I am (in the UK) you more or less have to buy computers in bits and put them together if you want (like I do) to shuffle bits of hardware between different machines to suit varying needs or bolt on extra bits and pieces of new hardware and above all not pay M$ tax. The nvidia card seems the only one with reasonable performance at a reasonable price that fits on most motherboards that I can find.in these parts. > m-a is module-assistant which is used on debian to build a module If I ask nicely can I download it from anywhere? I've just finished building 2.6.11.7 and it might be nice to try it. Could I possibly make a suggestion for "make xconfig" in the kernel tree (and make other-kinds-of-config I suppose)? I currently routinely copy the ".config" out of the previous kernel tree before I start to save working through questions about sound cards I never heard of and so forth. Could it perhaps optionally initialise most of the settings to fit the current machine and/or grab the last lot of settings from /proc/config.gz? John Collins Xi Software Ltd www.xisl.com Tel: +44 (0)1707 886110 (Direct) +44 (0)7799 113162 (Mobile) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-13 14:01 ` John M Collins @ 2005-04-16 2:32 ` Adrian Bunk 0 siblings, 0 replies; 34+ messages in thread From: Adrian Bunk @ 2005-04-16 2:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: John M Collins Cc: Lennart Sorensen, Lars Marowsky-Bree, Helge Hafting, Linux Kernel Mailing List On Wed, Apr 13, 2005 at 03:01:46PM +0100, John M Collins wrote: >... > Could I possibly make a suggestion for "make xconfig" in the kernel tree > (and make other-kinds-of-config I suppose)? > > I currently routinely copy the ".config" out of the previous kernel tree > before I start to save working through questions about sound cards I > never heard of and so forth. > > Could it perhaps optionally initialise most of the settings to fit the > current machine and/or grab the last lot of settings > from /proc/config.gz? zcat /proc/config.gz > .config cu Adrian -- "Is there not promise of rain?" Ling Tan asked suddenly out of the darkness. There had been need of rain for many days. "Only a promise," Lao Er said. Pearl S. Buck - Dragon Seed ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-13 13:23 ` Lennart Sorensen 2005-04-13 14:01 ` John M Collins @ 2005-04-13 15:22 ` Chris Friesen 2005-04-14 14:01 ` Helge Hafting 2005-04-15 15:00 ` Exploit in 2.6 kernels Alan Cox 2 siblings, 1 reply; 34+ messages in thread From: Chris Friesen @ 2005-04-13 15:22 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Lennart Sorensen Cc: Lars Marowsky-Bree, Helge Hafting, John M Collins, Linux Kernel Mailing List Lennart Sorensen wrote: > Graphics card companies don't realize they are hardware companies not > software companies and that it is hardware they make their money from? > Oh and they have too many lawyers? This has been mentioned before, but I'll say it again. Nvidia has intellectual property from *other companies* in their drivers/hardware. They are *not allowed* to make the specs public due to their agreements with those other companies. It's that simple. Chris ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-13 15:22 ` Chris Friesen @ 2005-04-14 14:01 ` Helge Hafting 2005-04-20 18:17 ` nVidia stuff again Doug Ledford 0 siblings, 1 reply; 34+ messages in thread From: Helge Hafting @ 2005-04-14 14:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Chris Friesen; +Cc: linux-kernel Chris Friesen wrote: > Lennart Sorensen wrote: > >> Graphics card companies don't realize they are hardware companies not >> software companies and that it is hardware they make their money from? >> Oh and they have too many lawyers? > > > This has been mentioned before, but I'll say it again. > > Nvidia has intellectual property from *other companies* in their > drivers/hardware. > > They are *not allowed* to make the specs public due to their > agreements with those other companies. > > It's that simple. That argument isn't very good. It'd be quite bad if all the "intellectual property" was Nvidia's own. Then we'd complain that they could simply release the specs instead of keeping them secret for no good reason. Of course my argument applies equally well when there is several companies invloved. Why can't they give us specs instead of keeping them secret for no good reason??? The fact that nvidia isn't free to do this _on their own_ doesn't change anything. The companies can act together and release necessary information for the drm people. Nvidia can, for example, tell their "ip"-partners that the specs is wanted ant try to get a licence for handing out what's needed. Or the other way around - the "other companies" may want more sales of their stuff and tell nvidia they want specs released to open-source developers. Or simply release information about "their own" part of the card. And for those that want to keep some things secret - they may not have to open up all information - only enough to get a driver made. For example: "write this sequence of magic bytes to these registers in order to set up some pipeline." It tells how to get things done, but not every detail. A driver based on such information might not be the best, but it could possible be enough - and certainly better than nothing. Helge Hafting ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: nVidia stuff again 2005-04-14 14:01 ` Helge Hafting @ 2005-04-20 18:17 ` Doug Ledford 2005-04-20 23:12 ` Dave Airlie 0 siblings, 1 reply; 34+ messages in thread From: Doug Ledford @ 2005-04-20 18:17 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Helge Hafting; +Cc: Chris Friesen, linux-kernel On Thu, 2005-04-14 at 16:01 +0200, Helge Hafting wrote: > instead of keeping them secret for no > good reason. But *that's* the point people keep ignoring: the specs for programming the hardware, in some cases, reveals details about the hardware's implementation that nVidia does *not* want to release (in addition to suggesting their software tricks). Why is it that people *assume* that just the programming docs tells a person nothing about the hardware? We already know that knowing the registers of a card and what those registers do tells you implicit information about the card's design and also reveals implicit information about the design of software that works with the card. How complex the card's registers and programming interface is determines how much you can infer, and the more RISC like or simple the card is and the more that is handled in the driver, the more obviously the design can be inferred just from the programming specs. The aic7xxx chips are a perfect example of this exact same thing. If you know how to program the registers on that card, then you know almost everything about the hardware. It's that simple (and that's a big part of what makes it very fast, lots of room for driver optimizations and enhanced feature support). -- Doug Ledford <dledford@redhat.com> http://people.redhat.com/dledford ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: nVidia stuff again 2005-04-20 18:17 ` nVidia stuff again Doug Ledford @ 2005-04-20 23:12 ` Dave Airlie 2005-04-21 11:23 ` Helge Hafting 2005-04-21 12:15 ` Doug Ledford 0 siblings, 2 replies; 34+ messages in thread From: Dave Airlie @ 2005-04-20 23:12 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Doug Ledford; +Cc: Helge Hafting, Chris Friesen, linux-kernel > But *that's* the point people keep ignoring: the specs for programming > the hardware, in some cases, reveals details about the hardware's > implementation that nVidia does *not* want to release (in addition to > suggesting their software tricks). Why is it that people *assume* that > just the programming docs tells a person nothing about the hardware? We > already know that knowing the registers of a card and what those > registers do tells you implicit information about the card's design and > also reveals implicit information about the design of software that > works with the card. How complex the card's registers and programming > interface is determines how much you can infer, and the more RISC like > or simple the card is and the more that is handled in the driver, the > more obviously the design can be inferred just from the programming > specs. I think the programming specs for a 3D graphics card can tell you very little about it, the R200 specs are very good but I doubt anyone would have a clue how to design the internals of the card just from looking at them, and now that GPUs are getting more like CPUs in terms of shaders and programming languages the specs are getting less and less useful to tell what is actually going on.... The main reasons they don't like open source is from where I'm standing, their IP lawyers and probably not being able to do sneaky hacks in the driver because people can see them.. Dave. > > The aic7xxx chips are a perfect example of this exact same thing. If > you know how to program the registers on that card, then you know almost > everything about the hardware. It's that simple (and that's a big part > of what makes it very fast, lots of room for driver optimizations and > enhanced feature support). > > -- > Doug Ledford <dledford@redhat.com> > http://people.redhat.com/dledford > > - > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html > Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/ > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: nVidia stuff again 2005-04-20 23:12 ` Dave Airlie @ 2005-04-21 11:23 ` Helge Hafting 2005-04-21 12:15 ` Doug Ledford 1 sibling, 0 replies; 34+ messages in thread From: Helge Hafting @ 2005-04-21 11:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Dave Airlie; +Cc: Doug Ledford, Chris Friesen, linux-kernel Dave Airlie wrote: >The main reasons they don't like open source is from where I'm >standing, their IP lawyers and probably not being able to do sneaky >hacks in the driver because people can see them.. > > > Well . . . if *that* is a reason for disliking open source then the problem is solved. We don't really need the source for their driver with the sneaky hacks exposed. They could keep a proprietary driver with nasty hacks, and release a simplified one (basically the same code with those hacks removed) along with the specs. Open source developers can then add their own hacks if need be. Helge Hafting ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: nVidia stuff again 2005-04-20 23:12 ` Dave Airlie 2005-04-21 11:23 ` Helge Hafting @ 2005-04-21 12:15 ` Doug Ledford 2005-04-21 12:54 ` Dave Airlie 2005-04-21 13:35 ` Lennart Sorensen 1 sibling, 2 replies; 34+ messages in thread From: Doug Ledford @ 2005-04-21 12:15 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Dave Airlie; +Cc: Helge Hafting, Chris Friesen, linux-kernel On Thu, 2005-04-21 at 09:12 +1000, Dave Airlie wrote: > > But *that's* the point people keep ignoring: the specs for programming > > the hardware, in some cases, reveals details about the hardware's > > implementation that nVidia does *not* want to release (in addition to > > suggesting their software tricks). Why is it that people *assume* that > > just the programming docs tells a person nothing about the hardware? We > > already know that knowing the registers of a card and what those > > registers do tells you implicit information about the card's design and > > also reveals implicit information about the design of software that > > works with the card. How complex the card's registers and programming > > interface is determines how much you can infer, and the more RISC like > > or simple the card is and the more that is handled in the driver, the > > more obviously the design can be inferred just from the programming > > specs. > > I think the programming specs for a 3D graphics card can tell you > very little about it, the R200 specs are very good but I doubt anyone > would have a clue how to design the internals of the card just from > looking at them, and now that GPUs are getting more like CPUs in terms > of shaders and programming languages the specs are getting less and > less useful to tell what is actually going on.... Ha! That's the whole damn point Dave. Use your head. Just because ATI is getting more complex with their GPU does *not* mean nVidia is. Go back to my original example of the aic7xxx cards. The alternative to their simple hardware design is something like the BusLogic or QLogic cards that are far more complex. Your assuming that because the ATI cards are getting more complex and people are less able to discern their makeup just by reading the specs that the nVidia cards are doing the same, nVidia is telling you otherwise, and you are just blowing that off as though you know more about their cards than they do. Reality is that they *could* be telling the truth and the fact that their card is a more simplistic card than ATIs may be the very reason that ATI has ponied up specs and they haven't. Therefore, you can reliably discern absolutely *zero* information about the nVidia cards from a reference to ATI specs. > The main reasons they don't like open source is from where I'm > standing, their IP lawyers and probably not being able to do sneaky > hacks in the driver because people can see them.. "It's what you know, not what you think you know, that matters." I don't know why nVidia keeps their specs secret. All I know is what they tell the world. But what I do know is that it's *possible* they could be telling the truth, and I have no proof otherwise, regardless of any suspicions. -- Doug Ledford <dledford@redhat.com> http://people.redhat.com/dledford ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: nVidia stuff again 2005-04-21 12:15 ` Doug Ledford @ 2005-04-21 12:54 ` Dave Airlie 2005-04-21 13:35 ` Lennart Sorensen 1 sibling, 0 replies; 34+ messages in thread From: Dave Airlie @ 2005-04-21 12:54 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Doug Ledford; +Cc: Helge Hafting, Chris Friesen, linux-kernel > > Ha! That's the whole damn point Dave. Use your head. Just because ATI > is getting more complex with their GPU does *not* mean nVidia is. Go No I rely on things I read from hardware review websites and from the GPU manufacturers to wonder what they are doing, unless putting more transistors onto their chips is making them less complex, both ATI and Nvidia are implementing chips primarily to implement DirectX features (the biggest market), this means they are both heading toward the same thing, with 3D graphics doing things on the GPU vs doing them in the driver is going to be quite noticable you end up doing as much as possible in the hardware, also things like SLI are certainly more complex not less.. ATI are making their chips less "complex" from a programming point of view, the R300 for example has no fixed-function pipelines, for modern apps, the shader language is translated to the GPU by the driver, for older apps using the fixed-function pipeline the driver emulates it on top of the programmable interface.. what this comes down to in the end is that the register interfaces are probably converging, there are only so many ways you can send instructions to a GPU via DMA.. > specs and they haven't. Therefore, you can reliably discern absolutely > *zero* information about the nVidia cards from a reference to ATI specs. But we have some lowlevel knowledge for the Nvidia cards as well.. not detailed but you can pick directions from the presentations they make and marketing literature they release.... > "It's what you know, not what you think you know, that matters." I > don't know why nVidia keeps their specs secret. All I know is what they > tell the world. But what I do know is that it's *possible* they could > be telling the truth, and I have no proof otherwise, regardless of any > suspicions. Well when previously asked for the specs by other developers the answer before has been IP issues, it may not be totally true now, I think now they just don't want to support open source because they don't believe there is any money in it... ATI didn't release full specs for r200 because they were being nice, the Weather Channel said we won't use your chips unless we have an open source driver and one can only persume proceeded to purchase a lot of chips i.e. it made monetary sense to ATI at the time.. since then it hasn't ... The IP reasons come from the fact that the specs they did release didn't contain any information on how to program a lot of ATI proprietary features.. Also it is peculiar that ATI release 2D programming specs for their newer cards and give support to the 2D ATI driver in X, Nvidia support the 2D NV driver in X, why not the 3D?, Intel won't give out specs for their latest chipsets but they do provide an open source 2D and 3D driver via Tungsten Graphics... I'm thinking of doing up a bit of a presentation for KS on 3D drivers and the technical issues they bring to the kernel (without even mentioning licensing and derived works..) Dave. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: nVidia stuff again 2005-04-21 12:15 ` Doug Ledford 2005-04-21 12:54 ` Dave Airlie @ 2005-04-21 13:35 ` Lennart Sorensen 2005-04-21 14:43 ` Manu Abraham 1 sibling, 1 reply; 34+ messages in thread From: Lennart Sorensen @ 2005-04-21 13:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Doug Ledford; +Cc: Dave Airlie, Helge Hafting, Chris Friesen, linux-kernel On Thu, Apr 21, 2005 at 08:15:02AM -0400, Doug Ledford wrote: > Ha! That's the whole damn point Dave. Use your head. Just because ATI > is getting more complex with their GPU does *not* mean nVidia is. Go > back to my original example of the aic7xxx cards. The alternative to > their simple hardware design is something like the BusLogic or QLogic > cards that are far more complex. Your assuming that because the ATI > cards are getting more complex and people are less able to discern their > makeup just by reading the specs that the nVidia cards are doing the > same, nVidia is telling you otherwise, and you are just blowing that off > as though you know more about their cards than they do. Reality is that > they *could* be telling the truth and the fact that their card is a more > simplistic card than ATIs may be the very reason that ATI has ponied up > specs and they haven't. Therefore, you can reliably discern absolutely > *zero* information about the nVidia cards from a reference to ATI specs. Certainly possible. Maybe all their real IP is in the code, although if that was true, letting opensource peope ahve the programing spec and have to do their own drivers wouldn't expose that IP. I have no idea. > "It's what you know, not what you think you know, that matters." I > don't know why nVidia keeps their specs secret. All I know is what they > tell the world. But what I do know is that it's *possible* they could > be telling the truth, and I have no proof otherwise, regardless of any > suspicions. At least as far as I have understood things, the 3D hardware in the old SGIs was very simple. Lots and lots of multiple and add units which the drivers then used in clever ways to implement fast 3D. nvidia certainly employs many ex-SGI people, so perhaps internally it is still based on that idea, although I doubt it's quite that simple anymore. Len Sorensen ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: nVidia stuff again 2005-04-21 13:35 ` Lennart Sorensen @ 2005-04-21 14:43 ` Manu Abraham 2005-04-21 21:17 ` J.A. Magallon 0 siblings, 1 reply; 34+ messages in thread From: Manu Abraham @ 2005-04-21 14:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Lennart Sorensen Cc: Doug Ledford, Dave Airlie, Helge Hafting, Chris Friesen, linux-kernel Lennart Sorensen wrote: > On Thu, Apr 21, 2005 at 08:15:02AM -0400, Doug Ledford wrote: > >>Ha! That's the whole damn point Dave. Use your head. Just because ATI >>is getting more complex with their GPU does *not* mean nVidia is. Go >>back to my original example of the aic7xxx cards. The alternative to >>their simple hardware design is something like the BusLogic or QLogic >>cards that are far more complex. Your assuming that because the ATI >>cards are getting more complex and people are less able to discern their >>makeup just by reading the specs that the nVidia cards are doing the >>same, nVidia is telling you otherwise, and you are just blowing that off >>as though you know more about their cards than they do. Reality is that >>they *could* be telling the truth and the fact that their card is a more >>simplistic card than ATIs may be the very reason that ATI has ponied up >>specs and they haven't. Therefore, you can reliably discern absolutely >>*zero* information about the nVidia cards from a reference to ATI specs. > > > Certainly possible. Maybe all their real IP is in the code, although if > that was true, letting opensource peope ahve the programing spec and > have to do their own drivers wouldn't expose that IP. I have no idea. > Even without opening up the code, but with programming specs there are many graphics driver guys out there, given the specs out it would not be too hard to have a decent driver, without the Nvidia IP. In that case there would be no question of IP violation. Or maybe somebody can do a clean room implementation provided Nvidia agrees to some NDA, and the resultant work is acceptable to Nvidia provided that it is free of their IP.. Many hardware vendors do resort to these to get their hardware working properly under Linux, and in some cases, the Linux driver has proved to be a better driver than their Windows counterparts, albeit with lesser gimmicks/features. Manu ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: nVidia stuff again 2005-04-21 14:43 ` Manu Abraham @ 2005-04-21 21:17 ` J.A. Magallon 2005-04-22 14:44 ` Arjan van de Ven 0 siblings, 1 reply; 34+ messages in thread From: J.A. Magallon @ 2005-04-21 21:17 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-kernel On 04.21, Manu Abraham wrote: > Lennart Sorensen wrote: > > On Thu, Apr 21, 2005 at 08:15:02AM -0400, Doug Ledford wrote: > > > >>Ha! That's the whole damn point Dave. Use your head. Just because ATI > >>is getting more complex with their GPU does *not* mean nVidia is. Go > >>back to my original example of the aic7xxx cards. The alternative to > >>their simple hardware design is something like the BusLogic or QLogic > >>cards that are far more complex. Your assuming that because the ATI > >>cards are getting more complex and people are less able to discern their > >>makeup just by reading the specs that the nVidia cards are doing the > >>same, nVidia is telling you otherwise, and you are just blowing that off > >>as though you know more about their cards than they do. Reality is that > >>they *could* be telling the truth and the fact that their card is a more > >>simplistic card than ATIs may be the very reason that ATI has ponied up > >>specs and they haven't. Therefore, you can reliably discern absolutely > >>*zero* information about the nVidia cards from a reference to ATI specs. > > > > > > Certainly possible. Maybe all their real IP is in the code, although if > > that was true, letting opensource peope ahve the programing spec and > > have to do their own drivers wouldn't expose that IP. I have no idea. > > > > Even without opening up the code, but with programming specs there are > many graphics driver guys out there, given the specs out it would not be > too hard to have a decent driver, without the Nvidia IP. In that case > there would be no question of IP violation. > > Or maybe somebody can do a clean room implementation provided Nvidia > agrees to some NDA, and the resultant work is acceptable to Nvidia > provided that it is free of their IP.. Many hardware vendors do resort > to these to get their hardware working properly under Linux, and in some > cases, the Linux driver has proved to be a better driver than their > Windows counterparts, albeit with lesser gimmicks/features. > But the problem is like comparing CISC and RISC processors/code. If you see the CISC assembler you do not see anything. If you look at RISC code you can know many things about how the processor pipelines are organized (you see interleaved float/int ops), you see how much pipelines are there, what they do, and so on. Compare (hypothetically) an ATI engine with 2 matrix-vector-multiply units and an nVidia with 8 dot product units. Perhaps ATI thought about doing matrices in parallel, but never thought on doing rows in parallel. You could know that looking at the code. Or at the programming specs ('load each row of your transform in registers r0..r3 ....' ) I do not know how big are the ATI drivers, but looking at the nVidia ones, werewolf:/lib/modules/2.6.11-jam14/kernel/drivers/video# ll -rw-rw-r-- 1 root root 4402072 Apr 14 23:18 nvidia.ko werewolf:/usr/X11R6/lib# ll /usr/X11R6/lib/*7174* -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 485260 Apr 11 01:12 /usr/X11R6/lib/libGL.so.1.0.7174* -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 7626156 Apr 11 01:12 /usr/X11R6/lib/libGLcore.so.1.0.7174* 12 Mb of code is too much for a wrapper that just loads the hardware and calls a rom ;) What is there ? Runtime loadable microcode ? Specially optimized code for sending data to 2 pipes on a GeForce2 and 8 on a 6800 ? Who knows. But sure the driver does _many_ things. -- J.A. Magallon <jamagallon()able!es> \ Software is like sex: werewolf!able!es \ It's better when it's free Mandriva Linux release 2006.0 (Cooker) for i586 Linux 2.6.11-jam14 (gcc 3.4.3 (Mandrakelinux 10.2 3.4.3-7mdk)) #5 ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: nVidia stuff again 2005-04-21 21:17 ` J.A. Magallon @ 2005-04-22 14:44 ` Arjan van de Ven 0 siblings, 0 replies; 34+ messages in thread From: Arjan van de Ven @ 2005-04-22 14:44 UTC (permalink / raw) To: J.A. Magallon; +Cc: linux-kernel > werewolf:/lib/modules/2.6.11-jam14/kernel/drivers/video# ll > -rw-rw-r-- 1 root root 4402072 Apr 14 23:18 nvidia.ko > werewolf:/usr/X11R6/lib# ll /usr/X11R6/lib/*7174* > -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 485260 Apr 11 01:12 /usr/X11R6/lib/libGL.so.1.0.7174* > -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 7626156 Apr 11 01:12 /usr/X11R6/lib/libGLcore.so.1.0.7174* > > 12 Mb of code is too much for a wrapper that just loads the hardware and > calls a rom ;) What is there ? Runtime loadable microcode ? Specially > optimized code for sending data to 2 pipes on a GeForce2 and 8 on a 6800 ? > Who knows. But sure the driver does _many_ things. this is because they put the entire openGL layer in the kernel (unlike most open source drivers where the gl layer is in userspace and only the hw part is in the kernel) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-13 13:23 ` Lennart Sorensen 2005-04-13 14:01 ` John M Collins 2005-04-13 15:22 ` Chris Friesen @ 2005-04-15 15:00 ` Alan Cox 2005-04-15 16:06 ` Dave Airlie 2 siblings, 1 reply; 34+ messages in thread From: Alan Cox @ 2005-04-15 15:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Lennart Sorensen Cc: Lars Marowsky-Bree, Helge Hafting, John M Collins, Linux Kernel Mailing List On Mer, 2005-04-13 at 14:23, Lennart Sorensen wrote: > On Wed, Apr 13, 2005 at 03:06:46PM +0200, Lars Marowsky-Bree wrote: > Graphics card companies don't realize they are hardware companies not > software companies and that it is hardware they make their money from? > Oh and they have too many lawyers? Actually they are both. 3D performance is a combination of clever driver technology -and- clever hardware. Alan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-15 15:00 ` Exploit in 2.6 kernels Alan Cox @ 2005-04-15 16:06 ` Dave Airlie 2005-04-15 16:19 ` Duncan Sands 0 siblings, 1 reply; 34+ messages in thread From: Dave Airlie @ 2005-04-15 16:06 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Alan Cox Cc: Lennart Sorensen, Lars Marowsky-Bree, Helge Hafting, John M Collins, Linux Kernel Mailing List On 4/16/05, Alan Cox <alan@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk> wrote: > On Mer, 2005-04-13 at 14:23, Lennart Sorensen wrote: > > On Wed, Apr 13, 2005 at 03:06:46PM +0200, Lars Marowsky-Bree wrote: > > Graphics card companies don't realize they are hardware companies not > > software companies and that it is hardware they make their money from? > > Oh and they have too many lawyers? > > Actually they are both. 3D performance is a combination of clever driver > technology -and- clever hardware. Not to disagree too much, most of those "clever" driver technologies are dirty hacks that boost performance in the quake/doom3 type cases... but if they ever open sourced it those hardware review sites would be over them like a bad rash... I still don't think they would lose out by much.. I've just being trying to RE the ATI Mpeg2 IDCT/MC hardware, ATI know this, I know this, they are only wasting my time and my employers money (we still are going to buy their chips... no choice..) will they give out specs .. no .. why? cause of lawyers.. they use MPEG2 decoders for DVD decode and some lawyer told them this is a major secret despite the fact that everyone knows how to decode Mpeg2 and DVDs at this stage.. same story with VIA who persist on giving out a binary only blob for MPEG2 hardware despite the fact that it was RE'ed over two years ago.. the secret is out... Dave. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-15 16:06 ` Dave Airlie @ 2005-04-15 16:19 ` Duncan Sands 0 siblings, 0 replies; 34+ messages in thread From: Duncan Sands @ 2005-04-15 16:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Dave Airlie Cc: Alan Cox, Lennart Sorensen, Lars Marowsky-Bree, Helge Hafting, John M Collins, Linux Kernel Mailing List > I still don't think they would lose out by much.. I've just being > trying to RE the ATI Mpeg2 IDCT/MC hardware, ATI know this, I know > this, they are only wasting my time and my employers money (we still > are going to buy their chips... no choice..) will they give out specs > .. no .. why? cause of lawyers.. they use MPEG2 decoders for DVD > decode and some lawyer told them this is a major secret despite the > fact that everyone knows how to decode Mpeg2 and DVDs at this stage.. > > same story with VIA who persist on giving out a binary only blob for > MPEG2 hardware despite the fact that it was RE'ed over two years ago.. > the secret is out... When I was RE the ATI IDCT stuff a few years ago, someone at ATI told me that the problem was that the company they licensed the IDCT stuff from wouldn't let them give out any specs. I may be remembering this wrong since it was a long time ago... Duncan. PS: At some point I changed hardware, and didn't need the IDCT anymore. I just tried to find my notes on it, but there only seems to be some stuff about the tv tuner... ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-13 12:59 ` Lennart Sorensen 2005-04-13 13:06 ` Lars Marowsky-Bree @ 2005-04-14 12:46 ` Helge Hafting 2005-05-05 22:00 ` Olaf Titz 1 sibling, 1 reply; 34+ messages in thread From: Helge Hafting @ 2005-04-14 12:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Lennart Sorensen; +Cc: John M Collins, Linux Kernel Mailing List Lennart Sorensen wrote: >On Wed, Apr 13, 2005 at 11:47:46AM +0200, Helge Hafting wrote: > > >>You're not. Complain to nvidia - using both email and snailmail. >>If everybody with such problems did that, chances are they see >>the light someday. Oh, and complain to the guy handing out >>nvidia cards like confetti, state your preference for some other >>card. Perhaps that is easier to achieve. >> >> > >What card would you recomend to people? > > If all else fail - an *old* card. This wasn't a problem before, therefore it doesn't have to be now. Unless you want to run very new software that won't perform on those older cards. Todays faster cpus may help though. Look to http://dri.freedesktop.org/wiki/ for information about which cards have open drivers and how well they work. Some cards have specs available, others are reverse-engineered to the extent that a driver have been written. > > >>Whats wrong with tainting? It is just a message, telling you that >>the kernel is unsupported. In this case because you're running a >>closed-source module. The tainting message itself does not do >>anything bad. There is a way - which is to write an open nvidia >>driver. To do that, you'll need to get the specs out of nvidia or >>figure it out by reverse-engineering some other nvidia driver. Either >>approach is hard, so people generally find it cheaper to just buy >>a supported card. >> >> > >It is becoming harder and harder to find supported cards it seems. >Finding a card with decent 2D drivers for X can still be done, but 3D is >just not really an option it seems. Even 2D seems to be a problem on >many cards if you don't use a binary only driver. > > I have the impression that 2D is fine with ATI cards, even those that doesn't have open 3D drivers. And even a really old low-end card performs fine for 2D work. Even the unaccelerated framebuffer drivers seems to have enough performance for 2D in most cases. The cpu is fast these days. :-) Helge Hafting ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-14 12:46 ` Helge Hafting @ 2005-05-05 22:00 ` Olaf Titz 0 siblings, 0 replies; 34+ messages in thread From: Olaf Titz @ 2005-05-05 22:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-kernel > I have the impression that 2D is fine with ATI cards, even those > that doesn't have open 3D drivers. And even a really old low-end > card performs fine for 2D work. Even the unaccelerated > framebuffer drivers seems to have enough performance > for 2D in most cases. The cpu is fast these days. :-) Not quite. The _perceived_ difference e.g. between unaccelerated fbdev and mga driver is dramatic when you scroll around much in your windows (of eclipse, mozilla...) even on 3 GHz CPUs. (I know very well since I had to live with fbdev on a G550 for some time...) And for video acceleration, there's always the point where it makes the difference between stuttering and no stuttering. I won't use any non-accelerated basic X11 and non-accelerated Xv any more, no matter how fast the CPUs get. (The fact that it was always worse n years ago for bigger n doesn't count...) Olaf PS. The most important feature of any graphics card for me? No fan. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-12 21:32 ` John M Collins 2005-04-13 5:28 ` Valdis.Kletnieks 2005-04-13 9:47 ` Helge Hafting @ 2005-04-13 13:02 ` Lennart Sorensen 2005-04-13 14:26 ` Eric Rannaud 2 siblings, 1 reply; 34+ messages in thread From: Lennart Sorensen @ 2005-04-13 13:02 UTC (permalink / raw) To: John M Collins; +Cc: Chris Wright, Linux Kernel Mailing List On Tue, Apr 12, 2005 at 10:32:59PM +0100, John M Collins wrote: > I'll do that - trouble is round where I am they dish out Nvidia cards > like confetti, I've got them in the machine I use most and another 2 and > you have to do all that gyrating with running the script to FTP down and > build the secret module before you can run X. This is a big disincentive > when it comes to installing new kernels. > > I wish some kind soul would speak nicely to Nvidia and get them to see > reason on the point but I suspect I'm not the first person to wish that. > (Or is there a sneaky way of patching the modules so they'll work in > another kernel without tainting it?). Well on my ssytem I can do something as simple as this in a script at boot (before starting X) and it should nicely take care of it: modprobe nvidia || m-a -t prepare nvidia && m-a -t build nvidia && m-a -t install nvidia && modprobe nvidia Most likely I will have a working loaded nvidia driver at that point and X will start successfully. m-a is module-assistant which is used on debian to build a module mathcing the running kernel (assuming it has access to either the source of the running kernel or the headers of the running kernel) using the sources from in this case nvidia-kernel-source package. I don't know if anything other than debian has anything like this, but it makes dealing with nvidia's binary drivers fairly tolerable. Len Sorensen ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-13 13:02 ` Lennart Sorensen @ 2005-04-13 14:26 ` Eric Rannaud 2005-04-13 14:41 ` Lennart Sorensen 0 siblings, 1 reply; 34+ messages in thread From: Eric Rannaud @ 2005-04-13 14:26 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Lennart Sorensen; +Cc: John M Collins, Linux Kernel Mailing List On Wed, 2005-04-13 at 09:02 -0400, Lennart Sorensen wrote: > modprobe nvidia || m-a -t prepare nvidia && m-a -t build nvidia && m-a -t install nvidia && modprobe nvidia Something along the lines of: modprobe nvidia || sh NVIDIA-Linux-x86-1.0-6629-pkg1.run -s -f --no-network && modprobe nvidia should work on any distribution (it runs NVIDIA installer silently). (see sh NVIDIA-Linux-x86-1.0-6629-pkg1.run --advanced-options) /er. -- http://www.eleves.ens.fr/home/rannaud/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-13 14:26 ` Eric Rannaud @ 2005-04-13 14:41 ` Lennart Sorensen 2005-04-14 20:02 ` Greg Folkert 0 siblings, 1 reply; 34+ messages in thread From: Lennart Sorensen @ 2005-04-13 14:41 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eric Rannaud; +Cc: John M Collins, Linux Kernel Mailing List On Wed, Apr 13, 2005 at 09:26:28AM -0500, Eric Rannaud wrote: > On Wed, 2005-04-13 at 09:02 -0400, Lennart Sorensen wrote: > > modprobe nvidia || m-a -t prepare nvidia && m-a -t build nvidia && m-a -t install nvidia && modprobe nvidia > > Something along the lines of: > modprobe nvidia || sh NVIDIA-Linux-x86-1.0-6629-pkg1.run -s -f --no-network && modprobe nvidia > > should work on any distribution (it runs NVIDIA installer silently). > (see sh NVIDIA-Linux-x86-1.0-6629-pkg1.run --advanced-options) It will work on most. Some don't like where the nvidia installer dumps it files in some cases. Certainly doesn't work on every amd64 system since they can't agree where 64bit libs should go yet. It also violates my principles more than using binary only drivers does. All files in /usr (except /usr/local) _must_ be installed by one package management tool. No excaptions allowed. I haven't had to reinstall for 6 years, so I am sticking with my principles. Len Sorensen ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-13 14:41 ` Lennart Sorensen @ 2005-04-14 20:02 ` Greg Folkert 2005-04-14 22:27 ` John M Collins 0 siblings, 1 reply; 34+ messages in thread From: Greg Folkert @ 2005-04-14 20:02 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Lennart Sorensen; +Cc: Eric Rannaud, John M Collins, Linux Kernel Mailing List [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1581 bytes --] On Wed, 2005-04-13 at 10:41 -0400, Lennart Sorensen wrote: > On Wed, Apr 13, 2005 at 09:26:28AM -0500, Eric Rannaud wrote: > > On Wed, 2005-04-13 at 09:02 -0400, Lennart Sorensen wrote: > > > modprobe nvidia || m-a -t prepare nvidia && m-a -t build nvidia && m-a -t install nvidia && modprobe nvidia > > > > Something along the lines of: > > modprobe nvidia || sh NVIDIA-Linux-x86-1.0-6629-pkg1.run -s -f --no-network && modprobe nvidia > > > > should work on any distribution (it runs NVIDIA installer silently). > > (see sh NVIDIA-Linux-x86-1.0-6629-pkg1.run --advanced-options) > > It will work on most. Some don't like where the nvidia installer dumps > it files in some cases. Certainly doesn't work on every amd64 system > since they can't agree where 64bit libs should go yet. > > It also violates my principles more than using binary only drivers does. > All files in /usr (except /usr/local) _must_ be installed by one package > management tool. No excaptions allowed. I haven't had to reinstall for > 6 years, so I am sticking with my principles. A-Freakin'-MEN me droogy. Hehehe, either a slow system, or you know how to transfer a working setup to another machine. My current image I use(d) for all of my machines was Built a long time ago, I think slink was what I used to build it. On a Pentium-90. Currently on an Athlon XP3200+ with bells and whistles not even thought of then. Moved through about 12 machines since the beginning. -- greg, greg@gregfolkert.net The technology that is Stronger, better, faster: Linux [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-14 20:02 ` Greg Folkert @ 2005-04-14 22:27 ` John M Collins 0 siblings, 0 replies; 34+ messages in thread From: John M Collins @ 2005-04-14 22:27 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Greg Folkert; +Cc: Lennart Sorensen, Eric Rannaud, Linux Kernel Mailing List On Thu, 2005-04-14 at 16:02 -0400, Greg Folkert wrote: > A-Freakin'-MEN me droogy. > > Hehehe, either a slow system, or you know how to transfer a working > setup to another machine. > > My current image I use(d) for all of my machines was Built a long time > ago, I think slink was what I used to build it. On a Pentium-90. > > Currently on an Athlon XP3200+ with bells and whistles not even thought > of then. Moved through about 12 machines since the beginning. Just to say thanks again for your help - got 2.6.11.7 going everywhere without hitches. Of course I just called the kernels 2.6.11.7 everywhere so one version of the nvidia module fitted all. I also stuck it on a Dell laptop I've got - a Latitude 100L - and at last I've got ACPI working so I can see the battery level before it dies. Maybe our "visitor" did us a favour. (Sort of). -- John Collins Xi Software Ltd www.xisl.com Tel: +44 (0)1707 886110 (Direct) +44 (0)7799 113162 (Mobile) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
* Re: Exploit in 2.6 kernels 2005-04-12 15:00 ` John M Collins 2005-04-12 21:08 ` Chris Wright @ 2005-05-09 18:37 ` Alessandro Salvatori 1 sibling, 0 replies; 34+ messages in thread From: Alessandro Salvatori @ 2005-05-09 18:37 UTC (permalink / raw) To: John M Collins, Linux Kernel Mailing List [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 392 bytes --] On Tue, 12 Apr 2005 16:00:34 +0100 John M Collins <jmc@xisl.com> wrote: > >From what I can make out the "visitor" was from Interbusiness.it if > anyone is interested. it is as meaningful as telling that you had visits from italy... interbusiness is the main commercial italian backbone afaik... most telecom italia's adsl users have a reverse .interbusiness.it cheers alessandro [-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 198 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 34+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2005-05-09 18:39 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 34+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2005-04-12 9:34 Exploit in 2.6 kernels John M Collins 2005-04-12 12:24 ` Baruch Even 2005-04-12 15:00 ` John M Collins 2005-04-12 21:08 ` Chris Wright 2005-04-12 21:32 ` John M Collins 2005-04-13 5:28 ` Valdis.Kletnieks 2005-04-13 9:47 ` Helge Hafting 2005-04-13 12:59 ` Lennart Sorensen 2005-04-13 13:06 ` Lars Marowsky-Bree 2005-04-13 13:23 ` Lennart Sorensen 2005-04-13 14:01 ` John M Collins 2005-04-16 2:32 ` Adrian Bunk 2005-04-13 15:22 ` Chris Friesen 2005-04-14 14:01 ` Helge Hafting 2005-04-20 18:17 ` nVidia stuff again Doug Ledford 2005-04-20 23:12 ` Dave Airlie 2005-04-21 11:23 ` Helge Hafting 2005-04-21 12:15 ` Doug Ledford 2005-04-21 12:54 ` Dave Airlie 2005-04-21 13:35 ` Lennart Sorensen 2005-04-21 14:43 ` Manu Abraham 2005-04-21 21:17 ` J.A. Magallon 2005-04-22 14:44 ` Arjan van de Ven 2005-04-15 15:00 ` Exploit in 2.6 kernels Alan Cox 2005-04-15 16:06 ` Dave Airlie 2005-04-15 16:19 ` Duncan Sands 2005-04-14 12:46 ` Helge Hafting 2005-05-05 22:00 ` Olaf Titz 2005-04-13 13:02 ` Lennart Sorensen 2005-04-13 14:26 ` Eric Rannaud 2005-04-13 14:41 ` Lennart Sorensen 2005-04-14 20:02 ` Greg Folkert 2005-04-14 22:27 ` John M Collins 2005-05-09 18:37 ` Alessandro Salvatori
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