Hi Bardur,

> Maybe I've missed something reading through this thread, but *assuming*
> (yeah, I know) that packages can't run arbitrary scripts at install time
> (which I think is a valid assumption for pacman),

Is this so? I don't know since I've only scratched the surface of arch until 
now. But I'm not quite sure about this, since, for example, there must be a 
way to add new users like http after installing apache. How should this be 
done without a post-install-script?

> Of course an attacker can still (via the build executables) delete all
> the files you actually care about ($HOME) or install trojans into your
> $HOME/bin (etc.), but still... If you discover such a comprosmise you'd
> "only" have to delete your $HOME and restore from backup[0], whereas a
> root compromise would require a full reinstall of everything.

Even if your assumption about pacman is correct: Just let the malicious 
PKGBUILD write a file into /etc/cron.d/, /etc/systemd or something like that 
and you're doomed. No need for privilege escalation.

Regards,

Roland

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