marktext
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marktext | systemd | |
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73 | 510 | |
44,513 | 12,398 | |
1.9% | 1.5% | |
4.9 | 10.0 | |
about 1 month ago | 7 days ago | |
JavaScript | C | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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marktext
- Show HN: I've built open-source, collaborative, WYSIWYG Markdown editor
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Pagkatapos ng pagpapalit-palit ng mga OS, naglipat na ako sa EndeavourOS + GNOME 44
Marktext - A Markdown file editor. How to write in Markdown
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Lightweight minimalistic Markdown editor for OpenSUSE
Well, see comments below but you're wrong. I now huse Marktext and it's simply perfect.
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Which Markdown Editors Have Collapsible Sections?
I tried MarkText, but the collapsibility seemed terribly buggy, and a brief internet search did not increase hope.
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Configuring pen buttons and cursor in Excalidraw
I normally take Markdown notes with quick sketches from time to time with a Wacom tablet. I've used Xournal++ and Marktext to do all this, exporting my sketches into image files and inserting them into Marktext. However, I am starting to feel fatigued with this workflow and I discovered that Obsidian and the Excalidraw plugin could be an all-in-one solution for what I do, instead of having to work between two apps and exporting my sketches manually.
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Writing down what I do – in Obsidian
I have used syncthing + marktext[0] and or ghostwriter[1] depending on the content of my notes. For a daily journal I like to use ghostwriter as it has almost no distraction and it forces me to focus. It just got shifted over to being maintained by the KDE team and I really enjoy it.
I liked marktext over joplin for similar reasons. But I am probably a little overzealous in my search for distraction free note taking. I assume joplin provides more feature sets, I just happened to want less features for what I do on a day to day.
- Looking for a Markdown Editor
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A bit weird, but is there word-processing software (like MS Word) that uses markdown (or similar) ?
I know I am a little late, but I have had great experience with MarkText (FOSS, a bit buggy, but the best at what it does by far), Ghostwriter (FOSS, a good editor, recently absorbed by KDE), Visual Studio Code/VSCodium with [Markdown Editor](andhttps://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=zaaack.markdown-editor) (a WYSISWG markdown editing extention) and Obsidian (which I think you already have heard of).
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Converge ICT outages (no internet access, at Oct 18 12:32 PM). I wonder why?
Written using marktext
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MarkText - free minimalistic desktop markdown editor
And I didn find any software except Typora! Now I restart my research and found MarkText
systemd
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Linux fu: getting started with systemd
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/32028#issuecomment...
There are some very compelling arguments made there if you care to read them
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Ubuntu 24.04 (and Debian) removed libsystemd from SSH server dependencies
Maybe it was because you weren't pointing out anything new?
There was a pull request to stop linking libzma to systemd before the attack even took place
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/31550
This was likely one of many things that pushed the attackers to work faster, and forced them into making mistakes.
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Systemd minimizing required dependencies for libsystemd
The PR for changing compression libraries to use dlopen() was opened several weeks before the xz-utils backdoor was revealed.
- Going in circles without a real-time clock
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The xz sshd backdoor rabbithole goes quite a bit deeper
I find this the most plausible explanation by far:
* The highly professional outfit simply did not see teknoraver's commit to remove liblzma as standard dependency of systemd build scripts coming.
* The race was on between their compromised code and that commit. They had to win it, with as large a window as possible.
* This caused serious errors.
* The performance regression is __not__ big. It's lucky Andres caught it at all. It's also not necessarily all that simple to remove it. It's not simply a bug in a loop or some such.
* The payload of the 'hack' contains fairly easy ways for the xz hackers to update the payload. They actually used it to remove a real issue where their hackery causes issues with valgrind that might lead to discovering it, and they also used it to release 5.6.1 which rewrites significant chunks; I've as yet not read, nor know of any analysis, as to why they changed so much.
Extra info for those who don't know:
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/commit/3fc72d54132151c131...
That's a commit that changes how liblzma is a dependency of systemd. Not because the author of this commit knew anything was wrong with it. But, pretty much entirely by accident (although removing deps was part of the point of that commit), almost entirely eliminates the value of all those 2 years of hard work.
And that was with the finish line in sight for the xz hackers: On 24 feb 2024, the xz hackers release liblzma 5.6.0 which is the first fully operational compromised version. __12 days later systemd merges a commit that means it won't work__.
So now the race is on. Can they get 5.6.0 integrated into stable releases of major OSes _before_ teknoraver's commit that removes liblzma's status as direct dep of systemd?
I find it plausible that they knew about teknoraver's commit _just before_ Feb 24th 2024 (when liblzma v5.6.0 was released, the first backdoored release), and rushed to release ASAP, before doing the testing you describe. Buoyed by their efforts to add ways to update the payload which they indeed used - March 8th (after teknoraver's commit was accepted) it was used to fix the valgrind issue.
So, no, I don't find this weird, and I don't think the amateurish aspects should be taken as some sort of indication that parts of the outfit were amateuristic. As long as it's plausible that the amateuristic aspects were simply due to time pressure, it sounds like a really bad idea to make assumptions in this regard.
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Excellent succinct breakdown of the xz mess, from an OpenBSD developer
sshd is started by systemd.
systemd has several ways of starting programs and waiting until they're "ready" before starting other programs that depend on them: Type=oneshot, simple, exec, forking, dbus, notify, ...
A while back, several distro maintainers found problems with using Type=exec (?) and chose Type=notify instead. When sshd is ready, it notifies systemd. How you do notification is you send a datagram to systemd's unix domain socket. That's about 10 lines of C code. But to make life even simpler, systemd also provides the one-line sd_notify() call, which is in libsystemd.so. This library is so other programmers can easily integrate with systemd.
So the distro maintainers patched sshd to use the sd_notify() function from libsystemd.so
What else is in libsystemd.so? That's right, systemd also does logging. All the logging functions are in there, so user programs can do logging the systemd way. You can even _read_ logs, using the functions in libsystemd.so. For example, sd_journal_open_files().
By the way... systemd supports the environment variable SYSTEMD_JOURNAL_COMPRESS which can be LZ4, XZ or ZSTD, to allow systemd log files to be compressed.
So, if you're a client program, that needs to read systemd logs, you'll call sd_journal_open_files() in libsystemd.so, which may then need liblz4, liblzma or libzstd functions.
These compression libraries could be dynamically loaded, should sd_journal_open_files() need them - which is what https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/31550 submitted on the 29th February this year did. But clearly that's not in common use. No, right now, most libsystemd.so libraries have headers saying "you'll need to load liblz4.so, liblzma.so and libzstd before you can load me!", so liblzma.so gets loaded for the logging functions that sshd doesn't use, so the distro maintainers of sshd can add 1 line instead of 10 to notify systemd that sshd is ready.
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Reflections on Distrusting xz
They just added an example to the documentation[0] of how to implement the sd_notify protocol without linking to libsystemd, so a little bit of discarding systemd (or at least parts of it) does seem to be part of the solution.
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Timeline of the xz open source attack
I think this analysis is more interesting if you consider these two events in particular:
2024-02-29: On GitHub, @teknoraver sends pull request to stop linking liblzma into libsystemd.[1]
2024-03-20: The attacker is now a co-contributor for a patchset proposed to the Linux kernel, with the patchset adding the attacker as a maintainer and mirroring activity with xz-utils.
A theory is that the attacker saw the sshd/libsystemd/xz-utils vector as closing soon with libsystemd removing its dependency on xz-utils. When building a Linux kernel image, the resulting image is compressed by default with gzip [3], but can also be optionally compressed using xz-utils (amongst other compression utilities). There's a lot of distributions of Linux which have chosen xz-utils as the method used to compress kernel images, particularly embedded Linux distributions.[4] xz-utils is even the recommended mode of compression if a small kernel build image is desired.[5] If the attacker can execute code during the process of building a new kernel image, they can cause even more catastrophic impacts than targeting sshd. Targeting sshd was always going to be limited due to targets not exposing sshd over accessible networks, or implementing passive optical taps and real time behavioural analysis, or receiving real time alerts from servers indicative of unusual activity or data transfers. Targeting the Linux kernel would have far worse consequences possible, particularly if the attacker was targeting embedded systems (such as military transport vehicles [6]) where the chance of detection is reduced due to lack of eyeballs looking over it.
[1] https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/31550
[2] https://lkml.org/lkml/2024/3/20/1004
[3] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/lin...
[4] https://github.com/search?q=CONFIG_KERNEL_XZ%3Dy&type=code
[5] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/lin...
[6] https://linuxdevices.org/large-military-truck-runs-embedded-...
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What we know about the xz Utils backdoor that almost infected the world
systemd merged a change to using dlopen for compression libraries recently https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/31550 which is a safer linking method in that sense.
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XZ: A Microcosm of the interactions in Open Source projects
1) Debian includes this downstream patch, also.
2) A potential explanation for "why now" is that systemd DID prevent these dependencies from loading automatically in a patch one month ago, and the patches enabling the backdoor merged a few days later. It could be a total coincidence or it could be that the attacker was trying to catch the window before it was closed on them https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/31550#issuecomment-1...
What are some alternatives?
Zettlr - Your One-Stop Publication Workbench
openrc - The OpenRC init system
ghostwriter - Text editor for Markdown
tini - A tiny but valid `init` for containers
KeenWrite - Free, open-source, cross-platform desktop Markdown text editor with live preview, string interpolation, and math.
inotify-tools - inotify-tools is a C library and a set of command-line programs providing a simple interface to inotify.
markdown-preview.nvim - markdown preview plugin for (neo)vim
s6 - The s6 supervision suite.
Visual Studio Code - Visual Studio Code
earlyoom - earlyoom - Early OOM Daemon for Linux
Trilium Notes - Build your personal knowledge base with Trilium Notes
supervisor - Supervisor process control system for Unix (supervisord)