"The only other downside of these pens is that they seem to remember every mistake I have ever made. But, surely that is to be expected in "pens for her" well done BIC "
I have got Cent-Os and When I have checked my /tmp directory I have found that a lot php** files are there and they are of also big size.More interesting thing is that they are updated every-day (I got it from Last Modified date).
I found by googling "tmpwatch" can solve it but the problem is ho...
where's the attack vector in all this ? you cannot give it the title timing attack, then say most people don't recognize the attack and then fail to mention the attack ...
@JoeWatkins the attack is in comparing hashed/encrypted string lengths. If the execution time is bijective with the hashed/encrypted string length/structure, you can build timing attacks that allow you to inspect how long a system takes to process a request
it's mitigated by network and such, but it's still possible to use them
... being located on almost exactly the opposite side of the globe thus affected by a lot of network issues (not to mention NZ by itself has the worst internet quality)
you sound convinced this is a problem and appear to know more about it than me ... so I guess it's a problem ... I do wonder why I never heard of it in the last 10 years tho, I don't have anything much to do with security, but you'd think someone would have mentioned it ...
so I think I get it, during a brute force this just saves cycles, right ?? if you know after a certain amount os ms that your hash isn't match you don't have to wait ?? is that it ??
@JoeWatkins kinda. I'd rather say that you bomb a server with strings and then find out which hashes get nearest to the timing you want. Then lookup a rainbow table
That reduces the number of possible hashes by A LOT
@zerkms I saw that ... I don't get it ... I don't get why we bow to any of this nonsense, it's not that they object to the sale for some sane reason, when questioned they would have to lay out their ridiculous beliefs and it would pretty soon become obvious they have no valid reason to refuse other than they are whining bastards ...
@zerkms I wouldn't mind understanding and all that with that M&S & Muslim thing, just wish those understood that If I was to do that same in their country, would I be treated as fairly
@JoeWatkins not entirely similar but I was angry when my wife and her young looking friend was refused to sell a bottle of wine explaining that my wife is likely to buy it for her under 18 friend. It makes me thinking they have no brains - if that was true they wouldn't walk together presumably
so then the next question has to be, how does this rfc change that ?? it appears to introduce a user function, presumably it has to be used to avoid anything, so everything is still open to this kind of thing until they switch to the new function, which isn't very likely ?
then I'm simply not up for adding a pointless function, I am up for doing something about some security vulnerability, but this doesn't actually do that ...
@Patrick the information they get back is skewed is the point ...
if they only are working on hashes that take the longest for a server to refuse, and that server is skewing that time information, then whatever they get back is pointless
everything is being refused, we assume, the refusal time is generated by comparing the md5 char by char, the longer it takes to refuse, the closer it is to the one required ...
because comparison stops at the first difference ...
"Rubbish and recycling are not collected on Christmas Day, New Year's Day and Good Friday. Instead, the collection is moved to the Saturday that follows." --- guys, does "Sat that follows" mean the next Sat after a holiday or previous?
@Patrick where is it most common for php to be compromised ??
(it's shared hosting)
surely, over the wire would make a difference, but I would say we're more vulnerable on the shared hosting anyway ... and if you are doing it over the wire and know what you are doing you are adjusting for that anyway ...
@zerkms I think that only matters if your collection day falls on one of those holidays, sat that follows means the one after the holiday that effects your collection ...
yeah, for no actual reason, just because he's got some sort of obsession
Since the general feeling here seems to be that if someone is willing to promote their own pet project then so be it, perhaps now is the time to take advantage of DVCS and start promoting a 'simple PHP' project based on a time before 'e_strict'
and again
But I believe
that many of you now understand that anything not rewritten to be e_strict
@Fabien this guy is broken, he became obsessed with the decision to introduce E_STRICT more than a year ago, and now he's like a broken record ... it's apparently not occured to him, he could have fixed his obviously crap code (that breaks E_STRICT rules) about 40 times over in the time it's taken him to write several hundred essays to internals about E_RUDDY_STRICT ...
he really does say crazy things ...
> I will ask once again that PHP5.6 is shelved in favour of PHP6 to allow > those of us who were happy with the stability that PHP used to provide > to stabilise it once again with a version that we at least stand a > chance of catching up with.
do you know I'm not sure if he's actually involved like that ... the only input I'm aware of from his direction is mailing list noise
I see 0 commits under his name, I think just mailing list noise, and possibly web stuff, dunno ... all I can think about is all the noise, so it doesn't really matter what else he does, he's drowning it out with his own whining ...
I replied to the ml thread, it's not completely pointless, but the way the rfc is written and function is named is poor, he should have taken the time to explain that it's nothing to do with normal string comparison, that his function is only for hash comparisons, and would be better named password_compare or hash_compare or whatever ...
@iroegbu Generally with OOP you'll want to use a MVC framework that takes advantage of Dependency Injection. And follow certain good coding practice such as Don't Repeat Yourself. You might also look up the gang of four on design patterns vs bad design patterns (anti-patterns).
ah yes, but in the context of the current discussion where this timing attack vector does appear to be a possible risk, wouldn't it be better to have this done where we can ensure safety, rather than guess at it in userland ?
I mean it's a tiny risk, but a risk nontheless ... I don't see how userland code could be reliable enough you can say "risk avoided" ... I do see how C can do that ...
no that function does apparently deal with this vulnerability only it does it by accepting the actual password and there's no way to pass in two hashes and have them compared in the same security sensitive way as the bare password ...
291 /* We're using this method instead of == in order to provide
292 * resistence towards timing attacks. This is a constant time
293 * equality check that will always check every byte of both
294 * values. */
we already do it, there should be no argument, it's a completion of the API and should have just been ruddy committed ...
@Ocramius php doesn't only make it difficult to find the vector but close it too, is what I'm saying, if you cannot get a reliable way in from php without taking some extra steps, then it's sensless to try and solve it in PHP. if we write it in C we know for sure the vector is avoided, there's no way to say that if we are talking about php ...
plus this really is just a completion of the API, it makes sense to be able to use the password_verify logic on two hashes I think ...
E.g. Python is using a C implementation for it, because they had concerns about leaking timing information due to compiler optimizations for ASCII vs Unicode code points
I dunno much about this, and after the article @Ocramius posted about the crazy microphone attack thing the other day, in my heart of hearts all is lost if you can hack shit with a mobile phone at four meters ...
that article was really quite scary to read, you read the first bit and are expecting some kind of april fools joke, but by the second paragraph you're overwhelmed with a sinking feeling ...