46
This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.
At first I thought this might be something neat and then i realized its a local exploit and totally lame.
Yeah, I looked at this and that was exactly my thoughts.
"WHAT THE FUCK PURPOSE CAN THIS SERVE?!"
Local priviledge escalation is not cool, especially on Windows.
Windows overwrites LILO with it's own startup, so it's easier to install Linux last.Install Windows first. One partition 98GB for Windows (should be enough). Another partition 100GB for Slackware (this much isn't needed, but tis nice to have) and then 2gb of linux-swap.
It doesn't matter which one he installs first. Windows XP installation can partition unallocated space without damaging the already allocated partitions.
I program directly on my webserver, so I know about parse errors in about 2 seconds, no fussing with FTP or anything. Plus, vim will tell you if you're missing a bracket or if you spelled a function name wrong, which is all I really need.
bash-3.00$ javaop uname -a
Linux darkside 2.4.29 #6 Thu Jan 20 16:30:37 PST 2005 i686 unknown unknown GNU/Linux
bash-3.00$ javaop id
uid=1009(tmp) gid=100(users) groups=100(users)
bash-3.00$
bash-3.00$ javaop
Linux 2.4.29.
Drink Canada Dry! You might not succeed, but it *is* fun trying.
tmp@darkside:~$
That is, sentences that have every instance of each letter replaced with another letter
I wonder: would it be possible to make this faster by creating a database, hashing each word by-letter, and then doing a word lookup by the smaller result subset?
bash-3.00$ time puzzle.sh adegln
Using anagram: adegln
Sorting adegln alphabetically... adegln
Scanning database...
Found 1 result(s):
angled
Found 2 result(s):
dangle
real 0m0.343s
bash-3.00$ locate README.mouse
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/doc/README.mouse
Fuck CISSP, yah, that's you Richard Johnson
#include "isock.h"
int main (void) {
//Socket filehandle
int bnetsock;
//Declare main bnet sockaddr_in structure/socket
struct sockaddr_in bnets;
//Declare server/port
char *server = "useast.battle.net";
int port = 6667;
//Create instance of sockaddr_in socket
create_socket (&bnets, &bnetsock, sport, sserver)
//Connect the socket
irc_connect(bnetsock, bnets)
printf("TCP stream initiated on %s:%d.\n", sserver, sport);
send(bnetsock, "\x1", 1, 0);
}
Set your home directory to a very long stringFixed.
How about a...... format string vuln?Fixed.
Type "%08X-%08X-%08X-%08X-%08X-%08X-%08X- ****%s**** -%08X-%08X-%08X" into the chat window, then press left. :-o!
Also, I can't seem to read the hashfiles unless I have write access to them.Should work fine now.
Finally, is there some way to put the hashfiles in a different folder? I'd like to try this on my school's computer, but I don't have root, so I can't make folders in /usr/local.
Since we're assigning to a dereferenced int*, the value needs to be cast as a value and not just a pointer. If you forgot to dereference it, you'd probably end up with "blah" in the return address, which would likely crash you.
(*ret) = shellcode;