Mike Frysinger: > On 28 Jul 2016 15:15, Florian Weimer wrote: >> On 03/09/2016 05:30 PM, Mike Frysinger wrote: >>> would it be so terrible to properly marshall this data ? >> >> Ximin Luo and I discussed this and I wonder if it is possible to read >> out the libc.so.6 build ID if it is present. It should indirectly call >> all the layout dependencies and be reasonably easy to access because it >> is in an allocated section (and we might want to print it from an >> libc.so.6 invocation, too). >> >> We still need the time-based approach if the build ID is not available, >> but I expect most distributions will have something like it. >> >> The Debian bug is: >> >> https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=783210 >> >> (Also Cc:ed) > > agreed that build-id should be an acceptable replacement for what the > code is doing today, but in order to pull that off, i guess you'd have > to have to do a configure test to see if build-id is active ? if you > leave the logic to runtime, you'd still need to include the datetime > stamp in the object which would still make the build unreproducible. > > this also doesn't really cover the quoted idea of marshalling the data > between client & server :). > -mike > Hi all, I've written a small program that prints out the Build IDs of all the objects that are dynamically linked to it, plus itself. It works well, although I'm not a C expert so I don't know if it is portable enough. For example, I hard-code some >>2 <<2s in there, along with a uint8_t - I didn't see a corresponding ElfW(xxx) type in elf.h Another downside is it needs to be linked against libdl, which I think is not the case currently with nscd. I'm not sure if this carries extra security risk or whatever. An alternative would be to detect the build-id *at build time* and then monkey-patch it into the binary itself. What do you all think? How shall I proceed? X -- GPG: ed25519/56034877E1F87C35 GPG: rsa4096/1318EFAC5FBBDBCE https://github.com/infinity0/pubkeys.git