On Fri, 2006-12-01 at 17:10 +0100, Arjan van de Ven wrote:
> > I'm just basing this on the history of the patch, which preceeds me, so
> > if this is incorrect, please don't blame me for misinformation :)
> >
> > The original patch claims that hyper-threading opens the user up to some
> > sort of security risk involving hardware limitations in protecting
> > memory across the threads. I can't recall all the details.
> >
> > If this is wrong, I'm more than happy to just drop the whole damn patch.
>
> that is not correct.
> I suspect what is meant is the "attack" on older openssl versions where
> you could in theory get SOME information about a key in use by snooping
> cache patterns in a shared cache situation. By no means is it a "direct"
> leak of any kind, and openssl has since then been fixed to not have as
> many key-dependent execution streams anymore.
>
> I would suggest you drop the patch; openssl has been long fixed, and it
> was only a theoretical attack in the first place...
> I'm not saying the attack isn't something that should be addressed.. but
> it is, and disabling hyperthreading is not the right fix.
Thanks for clearing that up. Patch withdrawn.
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