On 09/16/2015 01:29 PM, Paul Koning wrote:
I never had any incentive to look for holes in CDC operating systems, but I still remember a simple hole I found in OS/360, about a month after I first wrote a program for that OS. It allowed anyone to run supervisor mode code with a couple dozen lines of assembler source code. I found it on OS/PCP 19.6, but I noticed in graduate school that it still worked on the university's 370 running OS/MVS 21.7. (The magic? Use the OS service to give a symbolic name to a location in your code, with a well chosen name, then give that name as the name of the "start I/O appendage" in an EXCP style I/O request.) paul
Yup, the classic breakin was you set up an exception handler with SPIE (specify program interrupt exit, I think) and then do a divide by zero. This gives the handler the PSW of the problem program. You turn the P bit of the PSW off and return. The stock OS would actually ALLOW you to DO this, and just return to the user program now in supervisor state! It was a VERY simple fix, you just don't allow any exception handler to change the state of the P bit. But, MANY systems did not do that check.

So MANY other weaknesses could easily be caused by accident. Like, the file that contained valid account numbers was often not protected. Anybody could just print out that file.

Jon

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