Hello All, I am trying to experience buffer overflows first hand. I have glanced at a number of articles and have decided to focus on "Smashing the Stack for Fun and Profit" from Phrack Issue 49. I am trying out the examples from the text and when I get to example 3 (which is the first real overflow example) it doesn't quite work and I'm having a little trouble figuring it out. The following example should bypass the "x=1" statement and print the original value of "x" which is 0 (zero). Here's the code. -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= void function(int a, int b, int c) { char buffer1[5]; char buffer2[10]; int *ret; ret = buffer1 + 12; (*ret) += 8; } void main() { int x; x=0; function(1,2,3); x=1; printf("%d\n",x); } -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= When I compile and execute this code it displays one and exits. I have tryed this on RedHat 7.3 and Debian 2.2r6, both giving me the same result. Does anyone have any insight into why this wouldn't work? After looking into the assembly behind it, I think it has something to do with the "word size", but can't seem to find any information as to what the "word size" is in Debian or RedHat. Any and All comments/suggestions are more than welcome. Also if anyone knows of some other good text files/documents that talk about buffer overflows I would be happy to receive links. Leonard Leblanc ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- This list is provided by the SecurityFocus Security Intelligence Alert (SIA) Service. For more information on SecurityFocus' SIA service which automatically alerts you to the latest security vulnerabilities please see: https://alerts.securityfocus.com/
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