Comment Re:So where does Win8 / Ubuntu dual boot stand now (Score 1) 178
Wubi doesn't support UEFI. Once it does, it can use the same signed bootloader that Ubuntu currently uses.
Wubi doesn't support UEFI. Once it does, it can use the same signed bootloader that Ubuntu currently uses.
I'm sorry, you're right - I was under the impression that overcommit_memory defaulted to permissive rather than heuristic allocation. However, overcommit_ratio is also ignored by default.
"Setup mode" is part of the UEFI specification. You can add any keys you want to while you're in it.
You can malloc() as much as you want until you run out of address space. That's 3GB on 32-bit systems, no matter how much RAM you have. Things will only go wrong if you attempt to use it for anything.
Removing the CMOS battery didn't recover this system, which is pretty much what I'd expect - UEFI variables are typically stored in the same hardware as the firmware itself, and unplugging batteries doesn't kill your firmware.
The system doesn't fail to boot. The system doesn't even complete its power-on self checks. The screen is never turned on. It never responds to keyboard input. It's bricked. This machine's not coming back to life without an SPI programmer.
Unfortunately not in this case.
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Yes, but Windows requires signed drivers.
Disabling secure boot means you can easily lie to the OS about whether or not secure boot is enabled.
If it were an anti-piracy measure then there wouldn't be a requirement for you to be able to disable it.
The kernel can execute ring 0 instructions. Your initrd can't. The difference is that you could construct an appropriately modified hibernation image that booted an arbitrary kernel - or even an entirely separate OS. In that scenario, your kernel is effectively a new bootloader, except unlike the signed bootloaders it'll happily boot an entirely unsigned OS. That's unlikely to end well.
But, conceptually, you're right. Secure Boot doesn't magically make a system secure, but it *is* a vital part of system security - if you can't trust your kernel, any other security you attempt to build is pretty much pointless.
You don't need an exploit or a kernel patch. You just need to replace the firmware's function pointer to GetVariable(), which is a thing you can do because you're running untrusted code in the firmware context. The OS has no way of knowing that you're doing that.
"The GetVariable() call returns a decryption key that the hardware calculated"
No it doesn't. It returns a 1 if the firmware claims to have booted securely, and a 0 if not. You're thinking of Measured Boot, not Secure Boot.
Please describe how Windows can accurately determine whether it was booted in Secure Boot mode or not. For an encore, describe how Trusted Computing can limit the code you can boot. As far as I know, single machine local attestation is an unsolved problem.
How does Windows know whether it was booted in secure mode? It makes the EFI GetVariable() call. Which is a function pointer handed to it by the firmware. Which you can modify if you're running untrusted code. So, no, Windows can't tell.
"The one charm of marriage is that it makes a life of deception a neccessity." - Oscar Wilde