heap-exploitation
sc
heap-exploitation | sc | |
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1 | 17 | |
1,228 | 2,171 | |
- | - | |
10.0 | 6.3 | |
over 1 year ago | about 1 month ago | |
C | C | |
- | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
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heap-exploitation
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Glibc Dynamic Loader Hit by a Nasty Local Privilege Escalation Vulnerability
Not in a HN news comment, I don't have that level of dedication to this because its definitely non trivial. However you can read about them in use against the glibc allocator are here: https://github.com/DhavalKapil/heap-exploitation/blob/master...
The "house of" attack method are attacks against the allocator, its been a while since I've looked into it, I hope musl have hardened their allocator against this kind of attacks.
sc
- A simple hash table in C
- Advice for bigger c projects?
- sc - Common libraries and data structures for C
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Hacker News top posts: May 17, 2022
Common libraries and data structures for C\ (107 comments)
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Common libraries and data structures for C
Can someone tell me what is this line from sc_signal.c:247 in sc/signal/
If the way it is used requires the user to break the abstraction/encapsulation and manually buffer some fields in order not to break the data structure and leak memory, I would call that a bug.
There is one use of sc_array_clear() in the test code [1] which really makes it look as if it is being used in a way that I think (again, I haven't single-stepped this code, only read it) leaks memory.
I agree on the pain of everything being macros, it's more pain than it's worth I think and will likely lead to code duplication (and more pain in debugging, probably).
I would even go so far as to think that this kind of single-file design, where each file is independent of the others, makes it harder and more annoying to implement more complicated data structures.
[1]: https://github.com/tezc/sc/blob/master/array/array_test.c#L3...
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Uthash – C macros for hash tables and more
https://github.com/tezc/sc/tree/master/map
For those who are interested in faster hashmaps, I tried bunch of hashmaps and this one performs better than others. This is for C. Maybe C++ has better hashmaps.