curl https://some-url | sh

I see this all over the place nowadays, even in communities that, I would think, should be security conscious. How is that safe? What’s stopping the downloaded script from wiping my home directory? If you use this, how can you feel comfortable?

I understand that we have the same problems with the installed application, even if it was downloaded and installed manually. But I feel the bar for making a mistake in a shell script is much lower than in whatever language the main application is written. Don’t we have something better than “sh” for this? Something with less power to do harm?

  • @jagged_circle@feddit.nl
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    1 month ago

    You’re telling me that you dont verify the signatures of the binaries you download before running them too?!? God help you.

    I download my binaries with apt, which will refuse to install the binary if the signature doesn’t match.

    • @FizzyOrange@programming.dev
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      01 month ago

      No because there’s very little point. Checking signatures only makes sense if the signatures are distributed in a more secure channel than the actual software. Basically the only time that happens is when software is distributed via untrusted mirror services.

      Most software I install via curl | bash is first-party hosted and signatures don’t add any security.

      • @jagged_circle@feddit.nl
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        11 month ago

        All publishing infrastructure shouldn’t be trusted. Theres countless historical examples of this.

        Use crypto. It works.

        • @FizzyOrange@programming.dev
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          01 month ago

          Crypto is used. It is called TLS.

          You have to have some trust of publishing infrastructure, otherwise how do you know your signatures are correct?

          • @jagged_circle@feddit.nl
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            01 month ago

            TLS is a joke because of X.509.

            We dont need to trust any publishing infrastructure because the PGP private keys don’t live on the publishing infrastructure. We solved this issue in the 90s