Same here for the USE flags.

I'm also starting to get used to these kinds of problems with mod_php & apache.

On Sun, 31 Jul 2005, Jared Lindsay wrote:

Date: Sun, 31 Jul 2005 11:46:59 -0700
From: Jared Lindsay <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org
To: gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org
Subject: Re: [gentoo-amd64] Re: Re: x86_64 optimization patches for glibc.

Yeah, netcat, hehe.

emerge -pv netcat
...
[ebuild  N    ] net-analyzer/netcat
[110-r8]                       -GAPING_SECURITY_HOLE +crypt -ipv6
-static 107 kB

I would be interested in a USE flag for this glibc patch.

On 7/31/05, Ben Skeggs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Duncan wrote:

Brian Hall posted <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, excerpted
below,  on Sun, 31 Jul 2005 08:56:00 -0600:



Perhaps a USE flag could be created to enable the glibc patches, then a
emerge --newuse could recompile glibc and the problem apps (or
everything); maybe a mini-howto document would also be helpful.

I would certainly like an easy way to enable any "free" performance
boost I can get!



Something like USE=dangerous-amd64-hack? <g>

(Seriously, there at least used to be a local use flag
USE=frickin-big-security-hole, or some such, on some app I can't remember
at the moment.  Turns out a teacher was using that app in his class as a
an example or something, so the dev left the ability to create it there,
but with a USE flag nobody in their right mind would normally enable.  I
wish I could remember what it was, but grepping use.local.desc for
anything that might be related doesn't seem to bring it up.  Perhaps the
app, or anyway the USE flag, has now been removed from portage?)

The use.local.desc description could point to the bug, which is IIRC what
the one above did, for those wanting more information about just why such
a USE flag exists, and just why someone might be persuaded to enable it.



Are you talking about GAPING_SECURITY_HOLE?  If so, this flag is still
in use by the net-analyzer/netcat package.  It enables the "-E" (iirc)
switch
which allows you to do something like:
       nc -l -p 12345 -E /bin/bash

This(or something close to it) would cause netcat to listen on port 12345,
and forward the person who connects to it a nice bash shell.

Ben.
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