Is 16 layers of 256-bit encryption and 12 passwords overdoing database protection a bit, or is that the kind of protection that is necessary to protect confidential databases these days?
AES encryption to be specific
I also use RSA to negotiate a secure connection
I'm using an IC80 Virtual Secure Filesystem to store the data.
Is that enough protection; or should I use more, or less?
Mainstream algorithms with key sizes that large (almost?) exclusively use block ciphers with far lower key sizes and only use the extra key spaces for IV permutation
If an attacker can break your crypto once, in a meaningful timeframe (i.e. while the person who the data applies to has any living heirs) he can break it 16 times in a similar timeframe.
To me, a secure database:
1. Restricts the services that use it to what they need
2. Separates authentication and authorisation services from the rest of the business logic
3. Encrypts session data in-transit
4. Encrypts the data store on-disk (both ends, if need be)
5. Encrypts user-specific data with user-specific keys
On top of this of course there should be application-level security, like not exposing database object IDs in public APIs, or allowing requests by ID to retrieve them; use session tables to create a map of authorised objects to temporary keys... etc.
Well yeah, if the name of the variable would be a glvalue outside of a return statement why would you need to special case return statements?
12.8 Copying and moving class objects [class.copy] paragraph 32 (n3290) is where it's specified how returning a local variable first attempts moving rather than copying.
Although the audience in the chat rooms of SE sites are generally different from sites like , say, Facebook. You usually just don't chat about unrelated random stuff in SE chat rooms (with the possible exception of Lounge<C++>, that room is awesome!) but still I sometimes do feel the need o...
lol, there are so many acronyms that people don't know about. i could just use some of them without getting flagged, and the other person not getting a clue what I'm talking about.
Some time in the near future, I will begin developing a game engine. One feature that I want to include is having multiple render systems such as directx 9/10/11 and OpenGL. This way, a game using this engine will be able to support more players since if one render system doesn't work, it will re...
good morning guys! one short question. given the copy-swap-idiom, i read that there are several ways to define the swap function, e.g. in some posts, people threat it as a friend void swap(foo&, foo&) or as a class member function void foo::swap(foo&). which of those 2 ways would you prefer and why?
@LucDanton, do you have an example? actually my classes are templated and i even also have a polymorphic hierarchy of classes (meaning that the swap of the derived classes usually call the swap of their parents)
> Rarely, old functionality is actually abandoned, as e.g. has been done with the fixed function pipeline in DirectX 10. This is another reason why I'd suggest to rather use OpenGL - it's more backwards compatible and you can more easily support multiple versions.
@CatPlusPlus isn't it fairly normal for merge tools to show conflicts they can't auto resolve? or do you mean poor ones just leave in markers to show where the conflicst are and never resolve them?
@CatPlusPlus afaik, bzr and git does both. Creates copies of the files (named something like foo.LOCAL and foo.REMOTE, and inserts markers into the original file foo
I'd assume hg to do the same. Why don't you check? ;)
but yeah, a sane system developed in this millenium wouldn't force you to ever look at the conflict markers
@TonyTheLion I am sure all the birds think that nesting is great, then they try it. Sure it's fun at first, but then they realise, the other birds where right, nesting sucks all the fun out of life
perhaps I am mistaken, but can you not normally get all the values from a map? is there really need to store a copy of the keys in a vector so that you can loop through said vector getting the values from the map?
@TonyTheLion oh but DI has seen the real hype long after the patterns bubble :) In all likelihood you have seen nothing yet (Unity, StructureMap, AutoFac, ... I'm only naming the ones I see (have been) used at my current workplace
to be fair, this 'department' of code is self depending... it has a a project that is built and run at compile time that generates some text files that the main code depends on
It really seems people believe it is today's silver bullet. I've yet to find a real case where I needed it (I can see the convenience, but I also see the cost of carrying a framework on my back just to get the convenience)
@thecoshman Hardcode the softcode, so that you get the benefits of both hardcode and softcode without any of the penalties!!! Unless it's the other way around!!!!
If I told you what I was working on, you might not be able to relax. Knowing what I know makes me amazed that our society is able to use modern technology
huh... that made it sound more epic then it really is...
@thecoshman that's ok, we're used to taking what you say with some helpings of salt. It helps that we have a warm winter, I don't need it for defrosting :)
Aw. It's not intended too harsh. I'm sort of trying too match your obvious levels of humorous intent. I think it is fair to say "you talk a lot" (as do I, but not as often :))
@FredOverflow > In this presentation, I'll explore how some of the C++11 Standard Library's magic works, including how the Standardization Committee fixed pair's constructors (I bet you think that pair is the simplest type in the world - ha! wrong!) and how I saved a million zillion bytes of memory across all the programs using VC10+'s make_shared<T>().
Let me guess. The pair constructor (because they require exponential constructors just like tuple constructors, which MSVC obviously has many problems supporting because lack of variadics and template limits in general)
And 'I saved a million zillion bytes of memory across all the programs using VC10+'s make_shared<T>()' means that they (finally) optimized std::vector/std::queue class layouts to be about 8 bytes smaller per instance... I think I knew those.
> Oh, and I will also reveal a secret that has never been announced before.
@thecoshman have you ever tried wrapping lines of text? See knuth and typography. Now, try wrapping code without parsing the syntax. That is non-trivial
it might be a spot late to decide this, but my new years resolution is going to be to try to get as much ascii art into the code as possible. table flip all the comments!
@Xeo It is more lenient in that it doesn't require typename/template qualification as much. But it doesn't require it because it it interprets the template prematurely
This will break use-cases like this, which are perfectly ok by the standard