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jacquesm a day ago

If you are really concerned you should do this and then report back. Otherwise it is just a mild form of concern trolling.

jagrsw a day ago | parent [-]

I checked the the code, reported a bug, and Filip fixed it. Therefore, as I said, I was a little concerned.

jacquesm a day ago | parent [-]

Yes, but instead of remarking solely on the fact that the author has a pretty good turnaround time for fixing bugs (I wished all open source projects were that fast) and listens to input belies the tone of your comment, which makes me come away with a negative view of the project, when in fact the evidence points to the opposite.

It's a 'damning with faint praise' thing and I'm not sure to what degree you are aware of it but I don't think it is a fair way to treat the author and the project. HN has enough of a habit of pissing on other people's accomplishments already. Critics have it easy, playwrights put in the hours.

jagrsw a day ago | parent [-]

I understand your point, and I have the utmost respect for the author who initiated, implemented, and published this project. It's a fantastic piece of work (I reviewed some part of it) that will very likely play an important role in the future - it's simply too good not to.

At the same time, however, the author seems to be operating on the principle: "If I don't make big claims, no one will notice." The statements about the actual security benefits should be independently verified -this hasn't happened yet, but it probably will, as the project is gaining increasing attention.

pizlonator 21 hours ago | parent | next [-]

> "If I don't make big claims, no one will notice."

I am making big claims because there are big claims to be made.

> he statements about the actual security benefits should be independently verified -this hasn't happened yet

I don't know what this means. Folks other than me have independently verified my claims, just not exhaustively. No memory safe language runtime has been exhaustively verified, save maybe Spark. So you're either saying something that isn't true at all, or that could be said for any memory safe language runtime.

jagrsw 21 hours ago | parent [-]

To clarify the position, my concern isn't that the project is bad - it's that security engineering is a two-front war. You have to add new protections (memory safety) without breaking existing contracts (like ld.so behavior).

When a project makes 'big claims' about safety, less technical users might interpret that as 'production ready'. My caution is caused by the fact that modifying the runtime is high-risk territory where regressions can introduce vulns that are distinct from the memory safety issues you are solving.

The goal is to prevent the regression in the first place. I'm looking forward to seeing how the verification matures and rooting for it.

pizlonator 21 hours ago | parent [-]

> without breaking existing contracts (like ld.so behavior)

If you think that Fil-C regresses ld.so then get specific. Otherwise what you’re doing is spreading fear, uncertainty, and doubt for no good reason.

Fil-C has always honored the setuid behavior provided by ld.so. There was a bug - since fixed - that the Fil-C runtime called getenv instead of secure_getenv.

> When a project makes 'big claims' about safety, less technical users might interpret that as 'production ready'.

Fil-C is production ready and already has production users.

jacquesm a day ago | parent | prev [-]

I would suggest you re-read your comment in a week or so to see if by then you are far enough away from writing it to see how others perceive it. If it wasn't your intention to be negative then maybe it is my non-native English capability that is the cause of this but even upon re-reading it that's how I perceive it.

- You start off with commenting that the author has a knack for self promotion and invention. My impression is that he's putting in a status report for a project that is underway.

- you follow this up with something that you can't possibly know and use that to put the project down, whilst at the same time positioning yourself as a higher grade authority because you are apparently able to see something that others do not, effectively doing that which you accuse the author of: self promotion.

- You then double down on this by showing that it was you who pointed out to the author that there was a bug in the software, which in the normal course of open source development is not usually enough to place yourself morally or technically above the authors.

- You then in your more or less official capacity of established critic warn others to hold off putting this project to the test until 'adults' have reviewed it.

- And then finally you suggest they do it anyway, with your permission this time (and of course now amply warned) with the implicit assumption that problems will turn up (most likely this will be the case) and that you hope 'there won't be too many false positives', strongly suggesting that there might be.

And in your comment prior to this reply you do that once again, making statements that put words in the mouth of the author.

jagrsw 21 hours ago | parent [-]

You're right, my tone was off.