kiss
src
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kiss
- Une nouvelle mise à jour de Systemd permettra à Linux de bénéficier de l'infâme "écran bleu de la mort" de Windows, mais la fonctionnalité a reçu un accueil très mitigé
- Ask HN: Linux from Scratch style project with modern twist?
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I Built Linux from Scratch
For something that's more of a prepackaged build-your-own-Linux kit, KISS Linux[0] is also interesting. It's kind of a microdistro with minimal abstraction over the raw guts, and "packages" are just pre-downloaded source code repos that you compile yourself.
The "package manager" is just a shell script. The installation process[1] is entirely manual, so you control every step as you bootstrap up to building your own kernel and installing each subsystem all the way up to compiling and running Firefox. It's pretty neat.
[0] https://kisslinux.org/
[1] https://kisslinux.org/install
- [sowm] My first time on linux in three years!
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[sowm] My first time using linux!
kiss with kiss-xorg, nsxiv, st, dmenu with script, tewi, fet.sh
- What's to a distro apart from its package manager?
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Currently i do not use Gentoo as my main distro, but i will eventually!
kisslinux.org
- what's a lesser know distro that surprised you in a positive way?
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Quick question
A good Bash code to read is some projects from GH user dylanaraps a creator of neofetch and KISS Linux (kiss is a package manager written in POSIX sh) another repo to explore is bashbox (forked from dylanaraps/bareutils) A coreutils written in pure bash.
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Published a new crate - service-manager - to interact with launchd, systemd, sc.exe, and more
See KISS for examples - this is a real desktop system used by some people (including me... hopefully)
src
- OpenBSD 7.3 を 7.4 へ アップグレード
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OpenBSD Upgrade 7.3 to 7.4
The OpenBSD project released 7.4 of their OS on 16 Oct 2023 as their 55th release 💫
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OpenBSD System-Call Pinning
Well since https://www.openbsd.org/ still says
> Only two remote holes in the default install, in a heck of a long time!
I'm assuming not, but I could always be mistaken.
- Project Bluefin: an immutable, developer-focused, Cloud-native Linux
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From Nand to Tetris: Building a Modern Computer from First Principles
> building a cat from scratch
> That would be an interesting project.
Here is the source code of the OpenBSD implementation of cat:
> https://github.com/openbsd/src/blob/master/bin/cat/cat.c
and here of the GNU coreutils implementation:
> https://github.com/coreutils/coreutils/blob/master/src/cat.c
Thus: I don't think building a cat from scratch or creating a tutorial about that topic is particularly hard (even though the HN audience would likely be interested in it). :-)
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OpenBSD – pinning all system calls
> I don't know how they define `MAX`, but I'm guessing it's a typical "a>b?a:b"
Indeed: https://github.com/openbsd/src/blob/master/sys/sys/param.h#L...
> Then `SYS_kbind` seems to be a signed int.
It's an untyped #define: https://github.com/openbsd/src/blob/master/sys/sys/syscall.h...
I believe your whole analysis is correct, that running an elf file with an openbsd.syscalls entry with .sysno > INT_MAX will allow an out-of-bounds write.
- Une nouvelle mise à jour de Systemd permettra à Linux de bénéficier de l'infâme "écran bleu de la mort" de Windows, mais la fonctionnalité a reçu un accueil très mitigé
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tmux causing ANSI color-response garbage on attaching?
I can reproduce it. And this is the commit that causes the issue: https://github.com/openbsd/src/commit/d21788ce70be80e9c4ed0c52c149e01147c4a823
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Sudo-rs' first security audit
This doesn’t really change your conclusion, but I think that’s the wrong file. This is the real doas afaict: https://github.com/openbsd/src/blob/master/usr.bin/doas/doas...
Still just a tidy 1072 lines in that folder though.
I spent 5 minutes staring at your file trying to understand how on earth it does the things in the man page, but of course it doesn’t.
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OpenBSD: Removing syscall(2) from libc and kernel
OpenBSD developers are making serious effort to kill off indirect syscalls, the base system is completely clean, take a look at the work Andrew Fresh did to adapt Perl. He write a complete syscall "dispatcher" or emulator for the Perl syscall function so that it calls the libc stubs.
https://github.com/openbsd/src/commit/312e26c80be876012ae979...
The ports tree is also being cleansed of syscall(2) usage, until they're all gone.
msyscall, pinsyscall, recent mandatory IBT/BTI, xonly. OpenBSD is making waves, but people aren't really seeing them yet.
What are some alternatives?
archweb - Arch Linux website code
cosmopolitan - build-once run-anywhere c library
gearlock - Custom Recovery Replacement for Android-x86
bastille - Bastille is an open-source system for automating deployment and management of containerized applications on FreeBSD.
nix - Nix, the purely functional package manager
buttersink - Buttersink is like rsync for btrfs snapshots
manjarno - Why you shouldn't use Manjaro
PHPT - The PHP Interpreter
oasis - a small statically-linked linux system
Joomla! - Home of the Joomla! Content Management System
void-packages - The Void source packages collection
ctl - The C Template Library