Meltdown & Spectre the last Opera 68.0.3618.104 vulnerability
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andrew84 last edited by andrew84
I have the same in latest MS Edge build (Canary), if 128 cache was scanned, then all is fine.
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anastasia-mx last edited by
@leocg said in & Spectre the last Opera 68.0.3618.104 vulnerability:
Did you check with a clean profile?
if you delete all the settings, it will be very bad and I will need to configure a lot from the beginning
@donq said in & Spectre the last Opera 68.0.3618.104 vulnerability:
What offline scanner says? https://www.grc.com/inspectre.htm
Meltdown & Spectre - NO!, NO! updates strongly slow down the system, I do not want to put them, I have hope for the browser itself.
@leocg said in & Spectre the last Opera 68.0.3618.104 vulnerability:
What about other Chromium based browsers?
not used by others Chromium based browsers. I only use Mozilla - everything is fine in it, there is no vulnerability.
any other sites to check for vulnerabilities?
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leocg Moderator Volunteer last edited by
@anastasia-mx Since Opera is a Chromium based browser, you need to also check with other Chromium based browsers to have a valid comparasion.
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leocg Moderator Volunteer last edited by
@anastasia-mx A clean profile would help checking if the problem is not being caused by a broken profile.
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donq last edited by
IIRC at least some (theoretical) browser attacks were based on precision timing in javascript and mitigation was done by randomizing JS timing errors - all such behavior is seated deep inside JS engine and should not be related to broken profile. Well, there likely are some JS flags, which may alter engine behavior - and you may search or ask on chrome/chromium forums, have they changed anything related to spectre or JS timings.
I have not heard about (widespread) real-word exploits, based on spectre (or meltdown). I would think such kind of vulnerabilites can be used for targeted attaks, where every bit of information can be valuable; for generic attakcs (to take PC over) this is a bit hard and unpredictable to use - of course I may be wrong here.
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A Former User last edited by
I found a blog comment from the Opera developers. https://blogs.opera.com/desktop/2018/01/opera-50-0-2762-67-stable-update/
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A Former User last edited by
@leocg I meant the developers' blog comments on this issue. As far as I remember, when a problem with this vulnerability appeared, the developers forcedly disabled
opera://flags/#shared-array-buffer
flag. Now this flag is gone. -
A Former User last edited by A Former User
@andrew84 Please, try enabling the flag
opera://flags/#shared-array-buffer
in the 58th Opera. It is interesting to look at the test result on your system. -
andrew84 last edited by andrew84
@johnd78 with the enabled flag I have the same random result in O58 too, depending oh how many 'caches' were processed.
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A Former User last edited by
@andrew84 Ok, got it. Then try to disable the flag
opera://flags/#enable-webassembly-threads
in the 68th Opera. To pass the test, this should be enough. -
andrew84 last edited by andrew84
@johnd78 said in Meltdown & Spectre the last Opera 68.0.3618.104 vulnerability:
opera://flags/#enable-webassembly-threads
I disabled it, but in my case the result is still random (Portable 68.0.3618.104)
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A Former User last edited by
@andrew84 For me with the
opera://flags/#enable-webassembly-threads
flag Disabled in the 68th it turns out like with theopera://flags/#shared-array-buffer
flag Disabled in the 58th. -
andrew84 last edited by andrew84
@johnd78 I can't comment here, I also tried it in 69 (which is not portable) and all is the same.
.Maybe the test itself is not stable. And my processors can't be called as 'modern' like it is said in the blog post's explanation.
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donq last edited by donq
@andrew84 said in Meltdown & Spectre the last Opera 68.0.3618.104 vulnerability:
Maybe the test itself is not stable. And my processors can't be called as 'modern' like it is said in the blog post's explanation.
The vulnerability itself is not 'stable'
Code in test script is a bit over my understanding, but it could be unstable either.To read protected memory areas CPU cache is cleared, code is tricked to execute speculative read from protected area (which is discarded and thus not giving error - but data is already loaded into cache) and then some other memory addresses are read - read timing depends on cache containig specific data. Some information can be leaked even using somewhat random timing - I think this is exactly what you experience.
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A Former User last edited by
@andrew84 Sorry, my mistake, I forgot something. Try to disable the flag
opera://flags/#enable-webassembly-threads
and start the browser with the key--disable-features=SharedArrayBuffer
. Then it should work. Checked in the 68th and 69th Opera. -
anastasia-mx last edited by
@johnd78 I used the "WebAssembly threads support" = "disabled" flag and started the program opera with the key --disable-features=SharedArrayBuffer as a result, the problem is resolved and the browser is no longer vulnerable.
can you explain what these parameters are and why they were enabled if this leads to a vulnerability?