Lecture 25 Outline
Reading: §23*
Assignments: Homework 4, due Nov. 18; Lab 4, due Nov. 18
- MULTICS ring mechanism
- Rings, gates, ring-crossing faults
- Used for both data and procedures; rights are REWA
(b1, b2) access bracket—can access freely; (b3, b4) call bracket—can call segment through gate; so if a’s access bracket is (32, 35) and its call bracket is (36, 39), then assuming permission mode (REWA) allows access, a procedure in:
rings 0–31: can access a, but ring-crossing fault occurs
rings 32–35: can access a, no ring-crossing fault
rings 36–39: can access a, provided a valid gate is used as an entry point
rings 40–63: cannot access a
- If the procedure is accessing a data segment d, no call bracket allowed; given the above, assuming permission mode (REWA) allows access, a procedure in:
rings 0–32: can access d
rings 33–35: can access d, but cannot write to it (W or A)
rings 36–63: cannot access d
- Malware, malicious logic
- Trojan horse
- Rootkits
- Replicating Trojan horse
- Thompson’s compiler-based replicating Trojan horse
- Computer virus
- Boot sector infector
- Executable infector
- Multipartite
- TSR (terminate and stay resident)
- Stealth
- Encrypted
- Polymorphic
- Metamorphic
- Macro
- Computer worm
- Bots, botnets
- Bacterium, rabbit
- Logic bomb
- Adware, spyware
- Ransomware
- Phishing