On Tue, Jun 15, 2004 at 09:01:13PM +0200, Dag-Erling Sm?rgrav wrote: > I've already told you that there is no such threat, since the attack > you describe can only be initiated by someone who already has > unrestricted access. Please stop wasting everybody's time. You are wrong. Unrestricted access means _really unrestricted_ and kernel securelevel restricts access to certain places even to root. IMHO, it's dagerous bug, because some administrators can think "...hmm, I've enabled the hardest securelevel and even if a hacker would break into my host with r00t privileges he will be restricted in certain ways. The only thing he can do is to change /etc/rc.conf (for example) and _reboot_ my host. But I will notice the reboot." So, for certain people the following formulae may hold: Hardest securelevel + no reboots = good security. But this bug changes things. One can lower securelevel, do some nasty things and raise it again _without reboots_. So, as I've already noted, you are wrong. The bug _gives_ you almost unrestricted access. rea