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Date:      Tue, 5 Feb 2002 15:24:10 -0700
From:      Nate Williams <nate@yogotech.com>
To:        Mark Murray <mark@grondar.za>
Cc:        "Andrey A. Chernov" <ache@nagual.pp.ru>, des@FreeBSD.org, cvs-committers@FreeBSD.org, cvs-all@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: cvs commit: src/lib/libpam/modules/pam_unix pam_unix.c 
Message-ID:  <15456.23434.738687.902455@caddis.yogotech.com>
In-Reply-To: <200202052219.g15MJhs32408@greenpeace.grondar.org>
References:  <20020205214703.GA8579@nagual.pp.ru> <200202052219.g15MJhs32408@greenpeace.grondar.org>

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> > > It is OK at this point, but broken _after_ PAM called.
> > > Lets imagine srandom(33) produce this hypotetical sequence for random() 
> > > calls:
> > 
> > To see the bug, run following test application with "call_pam" set to 1 
> > and 0
> 
> The bug is doing userland stuff before the authentication IMO.

Naw, I agree with Andrey.  Library calls like PAM shouldn't dictate the
order you do things.

Based on what I'm hearying, your change is ill-conceived and should be
backed out.



Nate

> 
> > #include <stdlib.h>
> > 
> > int call_pam = 0;
> > 
> > main()
> > {
> > srandom(33);
> > random();
> > random();
> > if (call_pam) libpam_steals_N_randoms();
> > printf("%d\n", random());
> > }
> 
> Should look like
> 
> #include <stdlib.h>
> 
> int call_pam = 0;
> 
> main()
> {
> if (call_pam) libpam_steals_N_randoms();
> srandom(33);
> random();
> random();
> printf("%d\n", random());
> }
> 
> M
> -- 
> o       Mark Murray
> \_      FreeBSD Services Limited
> O.\_    Warning: this .sig is umop ap!sdn

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