similar to: In A UEFI World, "rm -rf /" Can Brick Your System

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 20000 matches similar to: "In A UEFI World, "rm -rf /" Can Brick Your System"

2016 Feb 01
0
In A UEFI World, "rm -rf /" Can Brick Your System
On Mon, February 1, 2016 1:33 pm, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote: > Excerpt: > Running rm -rf / on any UEFI Linux distribution can potentially > perma-brick your system. Yes, I kind of like "rm -rf /". If my memory doesn't fail me, long ago it was one of the tricky questions in sysadmin exam (not that anymore if I read what you, Michael, write further correctly...). Anyway,
2016 Feb 01
5
In A UEFI World, "rm -rf /" Can Brick Your System
On Mon, February 1, 2016 1:56 pm, Valeri Galtsev wrote: > > On Mon, February 1, 2016 1:33 pm, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote: >> Excerpt: >> Running rm -rf / on any UEFI Linux distribution can potentially >> perma-brick your system. > > Yes, I kind of like "rm -rf /". If my memory doesn't fail me, long ago it > was one of the tricky questions in sysadmin
2016 Feb 01
2
In A UEFI World, "rm -rf /" Can Brick Your System
On 02/01/2016 01:59 PM, John R Pierce wrote: > would deleting the inode /sys/(whatever) actually modify UEFI memory? Yes. That is how the UEFI management interface works.
2016 Feb 01
0
In A UEFI World, "rm -rf /" Can Brick Your System
Once upon a time, m.roth at 5-cent.us <m.roth at 5-cent.us> said: > Excerpt: > Running rm -rf / on any UEFI Linux distribution can potentially > perma-brick your system. Did someone think running "rm -rf /" is a good idea? > Ok, *now* tell me why we shouldn't hate systemd? This has zero to do with systemd. This is a by-product of how the kernel driver and
2016 Feb 02
2
In A UEFI World, "rm -rf /" Can Brick Your System
In article <75D47FDC6A99F24F87A6465BAF326D5018C50F69 at COLUMBA02.user.uu.se>, Sorin Srbu <Sorin.Srbu at orgfarm.uu.se> wrote: > > -----Original Message----- > > From: centos-bounces at centos.org [mailto:centos-bounces at centos.org] On > > Behalf Of m.roth at 5-cent.us > > Sent: den 1 februari 2016 20:34 > > To: CentOS > > Subject: [CentOS] In A
2016 Feb 01
3
In A UEFI World, "rm -rf /" Can Brick Your System
John R Pierce wrote: > wait. would deleting the inode /sys/(whatever) actually modify UEFI > memory? sure, writing to those inodes could do all sorts of harm, but > deleting the inodes in the /sys filesystem, I'm not so sure this isn't a > tempest in a teapot so to speak. It's going to get /boot. And under there, it'll get /boot/EFI. mark
2016 Feb 01
2
In A UEFI World, "rm -rf /" Can Brick Your System
On Mon, 1 Feb 2016 13:44:48 -0600 Chris Adams wrote: > Did someone think running "rm -rf /" is a good idea? Quote from one of the people who commented on that article: QUOTE: You have this in a script: rm -rf "${DIRECTORY}"/ Now, you have a bug in the script and ${DIRECTORY} is not initialized. You then get rm -rf / executed. One should always ensure that DIRECTORY is
2016 Feb 01
0
In A UEFI World, "rm -rf /" Can Brick Your System
On Mon, February 1, 2016 4:24 pm, Gordon Messmer wrote: > On 02/01/2016 01:59 PM, John R Pierce wrote: >> would deleting the inode /sys/(whatever) actually modify UEFI memory? > > Yes. That is how the UEFI management interface works. Will doing rm -rf / actually delete anything in /sys? IMHO, not. The above command first will get to removing /dev, and it will delete /dev/sda1 or
2016 Feb 02
0
In A UEFI World, "rm -rf /" Can Brick Your System
> -----Original Message----- > From: centos-bounces at centos.org [mailto:centos-bounces at centos.org] On > Behalf Of m.roth at 5-cent.us > Sent: den 1 februari 2016 20:34 > To: CentOS > Subject: [CentOS] In A UEFI World, "rm -rf /" Can Brick Your System > > As a public service announcement, recursively removing all of your files > from / is no longer
2016 Feb 01
0
In A UEFI World, "rm -rf /" Can Brick Your System
On 2/1/2016 2:07 PM, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote: > John R Pierce wrote: >> >wait. would deleting the inode/sys/(whatever) actually modify UEFI >> >memory? sure, writing to those inodes could do all sorts of harm, but >> >deleting the inodes in the /sys filesystem, I'm not so sure this isn't a >> >tempest in a teapot so to speak. > It's
2016 Feb 01
0
In A UEFI World, "rm -rf /" Can Brick Your System
wait. would deleting the inode /sys/(whatever) actually modify UEFI memory? sure, writing to those inodes could do all sorts of harm, but deleting the inodes in the /sys filesystem, I'm not so sure this isn't a tempest in a teapot so to speak. -- john r pierce, recycling bits in santa cruz
2016 Feb 02
0
In A UEFI World, "rm -rf /" Can Brick Your System
On Tue, 2 Feb 2016 10:18:09 +0000 (UTC) Tony Mountifield wrote: > killing the UEFI stuff stops you ever being able to do a re-install on that box. Is that correct? Apparently so. > Is there no way to do a factory reset of the BIOS? Apparently not. -- MELVILLE THEATRE ~ Real D 3D Digital Cinema ~ www.melvilletheatre.com
2016 Feb 01
0
In A UEFI World, "rm -rf /" Can Brick Your System
On 02/01/2016 01:48 PM, Valeri Galtsev wrote: > I just discovered that I couldn't even re-cite alphabet correctly today: > it is /bin that you loose, but /etc alphabetically goes after /dev, so > will not even loose your /etc, I'm pretty sure none of that is correct. Once "rm" launches, all of the libraries and files that it needs are memory mapped and reference
2016 Feb 01
1
In A UEFI World, "rm -rf /" Can Brick Your System
On Mon, February 1, 2016 4:23 pm, Gordon Messmer wrote: > On 02/01/2016 01:48 PM, Valeri Galtsev wrote: >> I just discovered that I couldn't even re-cite alphabet correctly today: >> it is /bin that you loose, but /etc alphabetically goes after /dev, so >> will not even loose your /etc, > > I'm pretty sure none of that is correct. Once "rm" launches,
2016 Feb 03
4
How bad is "rm -rf /" ?
Dear All, Suppose I executed the command rm -rf / on my CentOS 7 box. After it did what it could, how much damage will be done to what I have (or _had_ rather ;-) on my hard drive? I'm going to describe simple experiment which was prompted in another thread. I need to say a few words before I do it, however. First of all, that other thread was about doing the same thing on UEFI machine.
2016 Feb 06
1
How bad is "rm -rf /" ?
On 02/05/16 14:55, Nathan Duehr wrote: > >> On Feb 2, 2016, at 17:57, Valeri Galtsev <galtsev at kicp.uchicago.edu> wrote: >> >> Dear All, >> >> Suppose I executed the command >> >> rm -rf / > > There was also this article recently that pointed out that if the box boots via UEFI, you may brick the machine, depending on setup. > >
2016 Feb 05
0
How bad is "rm -rf /" ?
> On Feb 2, 2016, at 17:57, Valeri Galtsev <galtsev at kicp.uchicago.edu> wrote: > > Dear All, > > Suppose I executed the command > > rm -rf / There was also this article recently that pointed out that if the box boots via UEFI, you may brick the machine, depending on setup. http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=UEFI-rm-root-directory ? Nate
2020 May 15
1
[PATCH] v2v: fix UEFI bootloader for linux guests
Not all UEFI guests can survive conversion, because of lost bootloader information in UEFI NVRAM. But some guest can cope with this because they have a fallback bootloader and use UEFI Removable Media Boot Behavior. (see https://uefi.org/sites/default/files/resources/UEFI_Spec_2_8_A_Feb14.pdf 3.5.1.1 Removable Media Boot Behavior) to load. If UEFI firmware can't find a bootloader in its
2006 Oct 31
0
6361469 tsufs hang on rm -rf command
Author: swilcox Repository: /hg/zfs-crypto/gate Revision: 89bb7eb80bb8cb92f0071ea0085e6aa3d116f7f6 Log message: 6361469 tsufs hang on rm -rf command Files: update: usr/src/cmd/fs.d/ufs/mkfs/mkfs.c
2010 Apr 08
2
ENOTEMPTY on "rm -rf" for snapshot and subvolume
Hi Everyone, Recently i created a snapshot of an existing volume which had some amount of data. Now that after creating the snapshot i have tried deleting the same snapshot. But i am getting ENOTEMPTY for "rmdir". But when i see the actual files inside are deleted not the parent directory. From the code it looks like if (inode->i_size >