Date: Thu, 31 Oct 2002 14:13:58 -0800 From: Tim Kientzle <kientzle@acm.org> To: Miguel Mendez <flynn@energyhq.homeip.net> Cc: Wesley Morgan <morganw@chemikals.org>, current@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: libc size Message-ID: <3DC1AB26.5020708@acm.org> References: <3DC17C7F.9020308@acm.org> <20021031140542.W86715-100000@volatile.chemikals.org> <20021031220633.3acd0b53.flynn@energyhq.homeip.net>
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Wesley Morgan <morganw@chemikals.org> wrote: >> ... create a /lib ... that I would *never ever* want to see. Miguel Mendez wrote: > Why? I'd love to hear some real reasons for this. I can think of three concerns: 1) Fragility. Could a naive sysadmin (or a dying disk) break /[s]bin? What if the ldconfig hints files were hosed? Is ld-elf.so truly bulletproof? 2) Security. Can LD_LIBRARY_PATH (or other mechanisms) be used to deliberately subvert any of these programs? (especially the handful of suid/sgid programs here) 3) Upgrade breakage. Will this make upgrades more fragile? A broken or incomplete upgrade could damage ld-elf.so or introduce version skew between /bin and libc.so. (Yes, people do rebuild libc without rebuilding world.) I am certain these concerns could be addressed, and a dynamic /bin could be made workable, but it would require a lot of care. > christine: {16} uname -srnm > NetBSD christine.energyhq.tk 1.6J i386 > christine: {17} du -h /bin /sbin /lib > 999K /bin > 1.7M /sbin > 2.0M /lib That's impressive; FreeBSD's /bin is over 7M by itself right now. I would be curious to see the results from ls -l /bin on your NetBSD system as well. > ... a knob in /etc/mk.conf to get the old behaviour, > how about something like that? Knobs are dangerous because you have to test all of the settings. Tim Kientzle To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message
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