'Moss-covered Tortoise' 2.0.40 Linux Kernel 19
An anonymous reader writes "KernelTrap reports that David Weinehall has released the 2.0.40 stable Linux kernel, calling it the "Moss-covered Tortoise". It earned this name by being released over 3 years after its predecessor, 2.0.39. Those still using the 2.0 kernel are recommended to upgrade for numerous reasons, including fixes to local exploits and remote information leaks. View the changelog and download the new kernel from a kernel.org mirror."
Re:hahaha (Score:3, Funny)
Re:local root (Score:3, Informative)
Re:local root (Score:5, Informative)
Well, I released patch-2.0.40-pre1 (the first pre-patch for the 2.0.40-kernel) very soon after I first got to know about the exploit (in 2001), so no, I don't feel particularly guilty about this. People who still use 2.0-kernels for their machines shouldn't use them for multi-user purposes in a hostile environment (and firewall them _very_ carefully if they dare to connect them to the Internet), something I have stated publicly several times.
Of course I still include fixes for this kind of bugs when I get reports about them, but I won't rush a new 2.0-kernel when a new exploit surfaces, just a new pre-patch with the fix. If I had a broad user-base that could test every pre-patch thoroughly and provide me with feedback, the situation might've been different.
Regards: David Weinehall
Re:local root (Score:2)
And why not exactly? If it was good enough for this purpose 3 years ago why isn't it good enough now? And if its got so many exploits how about
you get them fixed? If you can't be bothered then let someone else do your job!
Re:local root (Score:3, Informative)
The reason I recommend people not to use 2.0 in a hostile multi-user environment, is because the feedback I receive for every new release (or pre-release) of 2.0 is virtually non-existing; I think the record feedback for a release is somewhere in the vicinity of 10 users. Furthermore, no large distribution runs the 2.0-kernel any longer, thus no active auditing takes place.
Also, since any large code-rewrites is out of the question for the 2.0-series, so some things are not fixable at all.
I never said th
They took it! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:They took it! (Score:3, Funny)
I'm not dead yet! (Score:2, Interesting)
FYI: The local root exploits were fixed in various
Way to give it a kick in the ass!
Hey that's nothing... (Score:3, Interesting)
This guy is still maintining the Linux 0.02 branch [google.com], and STILL hasn't released an update in over 13 years!
Re:Hey that's nothing... (Score:2)
"Hurd will be out in a year (or two, or next month, who knows)"
I think Duke Nuke'em Forever has some catching up to do
2.0 can still have its uses (Score:5, Informative)
All of a sudden QNX has another competition. Who knows the next Spirit or Opportunity might run Linux (although I'd strongly recommend them to use IBM microdrive and use kernel 2.4).
Re:2.0 can still have its uses (Score:1)
hard drives are not reliable enough for these purposes. And what's the point now that 1gb flash disks exist ? Even a normal linux distro would fit.
BTW, I think that spirit is using vxworks and not QNX.
Re:2.0 can still have its uses (Score:1)
Advantages of 2.0 over 2.2? (Score:4, Interesting)