On 06/23/2017 12:28 PM, Anthony G. Basile wrote: > Hi everyone, > > Since late April, grsecurity upstream has stop making their patches > available publicly. Without going into details, the reason for their > decision revolves around disputes about how their patches were being > (ab)used. > > Since the grsecurity patch formed the main core of our hardened-sources > kernel, their decision has serious repercussions for the Hardened Gentoo > project. I will no longer be able to support hardened-sources and will > have to eventually mask and remove it from the tree. > > Hardened Gentoo has two sides to it, kernel hardening (done via > hardened-sources) and toolchain/executable hardening. The two are > interrelated but independent enough that toolchain hardening can > continue on its own. The hardened kernel, however, provided PaX > protection for executables and this will be lost. We did a lot of work > to properly maintain PaX markings in our package management system and > there was no part of Gentoo that wasn't touched by issues stemming from > PaX support. > > I waited two months before saying anything because the reasons were more > of a political nature than some technical issue. At this point, I think > its time to let the community know about the state of affairs with > hardened-sources. > > I can no longer get into the #grsecurity/OFTC channel (nothing personal, > they kicked everyone), and so I have not spoken to spengler or pipacs. > I don't know if they will ever release grsecurity patches again. > > My plan then is as follows. I'll wait one more month and then send out > a news item and later mask hardened-sources for removal. I don't > recommend we remove any of the machinery from Gentoo that deals with PaX > markings. > > I welcome feedback. > Thoughts on using this [1] unofficial fork? At the moment, looks like it is up to date with the 4.9.x branch (ported up to 4.9.33, last official release is 4.9.24). It should be noted, however, that the maintainer has stated that the intention is forward porting and bug-fixing, not new feature development. Is it worth contacting the maintainer to find out whether the intention is to support other branches in the future? Obviously using an unofficial fork should come with a big warning, but I think it is worth considering keeping an option available to those that want it. There may be other forks but that's the only one I've come across since upstream stopped publishing publicly. As a personal aside, I think our support of grsec in the past has been a major asset for the distro, and I'd prefer to see us maintain that asset via an unofficial port, if possible. On a slightly more off topic note, I must say, from my reading of changelogs, bug reports, and forum posts, I think it is a shame that we've been cut off with no real special consideration, given how much it appears that Gentoo was involved in the feedback and improvement process for grsec. -- NP-Hardass [1] https://github.com/minipli/linux-unofficial_grsec/