slovodefinícia
wormhole
(encz)
wormhole,červí díra n: [fyz.]
Wormhole
(gcide)
Wormhole \Worm"hole`\, n.
A burrow made by a worm.
[1913 Webster]
wormhole
(wn)
wormhole
n 1: hole made by a burrowing worm
wormhole
(foldoc)
back door
wormhole

(Or "trap door", "wormhole"). A hole in the
security of a system deliberately left in place by designers
or maintainers. The motivation for such holes is not always
sinister; some operating systems, for example, come out of
the box with privileged accounts intended for use by field
service technicians or the vendor's maintenance programmers.
See also iron box, cracker, worm, logic bomb.

Historically, back doors have often lurked in systems longer
than anyone expected or planned, and a few have become widely
known. The infamous RTM worm of late 1988, for example,
used a back door in the BSD Unix "sendmail(8)" utility.

Ken Thompson's 1983 Turing Award lecture to the ACM
revealed the existence of a back door in early Unix versions
that may have qualified as the most fiendishly clever security
hack of all time. The C compiler contained code that would
recognise when the "login" command was being recompiled and
insert some code recognizing a password chosen by Thompson,
giving him entry to the system whether or not an account had
been created for him.

Normally such a back door could be removed by removing it from
the source code for the compiler and recompiling the compiler.
But to recompile the compiler, you have to *use* the compiler
- so Thompson also arranged that the compiler would *recognise
when it was compiling a version of itself*, and insert into
the recompiled compiler the code to insert into the recompiled
"login" the code to allow Thompson entry - and, of course, the
code to recognise itself and do the whole thing again the next
time around! And having done this once, he was then able to
recompile the compiler from the original sources; the hack
perpetuated itself invisibly, leaving the back door in place
and active but with no trace in the sources.

The talk that revealed this truly moby hack was published as
["Reflections on Trusting Trust", "Communications of the ACM
27", 8 (August 1984), pp. 761--763].

[Jargon File]

(1995-04-25)
wormhole
(jargon)
wormhole
/werm'hohl/, n.

[from the wormhole singularities hypothesized in some versions of General
Relativity theory]

1. [n.,obs.] A location in a monitor which contains the address of a
routine, with the specific intent of making it easy to substitute a
different routine. This term is now obsolescent; modern operating systems
use clusters of wormholes extensively (for modularization of I/O handling
in particular, as in the Unix device-driver organization) but the preferred
techspeak for these clusters is ‘device tables’, ‘jump tables’ or
‘capability tables’.

2. [Amateur Packet Radio] A network path using a commercial satellite link
to join two or more amateur VHF networks. So called because traffic routed
through a wormhole leaves and re-enters the amateur network over great
distances with usually little clue in the message routing header as to how
it got from one relay to the other. Compare gopher hole (sense 2).
podobné slovodefinícia
wormholes
(encz)
wormholes,červí díry n: pl. [fyz.] Zdeněk Brož
Wormhole
(gcide)
Wormhole \Worm"hole`\, n.
A burrow made by a worm.
[1913 Webster]
wormhole routing
(foldoc)
wormhole routing

A property of a message passing system in which
each part of a message is transmitted independently and one
part can be forwarded to the next node before the whole
message has been received. All parts of a single message
follow the same route.

The independent parts are normally small, e.g. one 32-bit
word. This reduces the latency and the storage requirements
on each node when compared with message switching where a
node receives the whole message before it starts to forward it
to the next node. It is more complex than message switching
because each node must keep track of the messages currently
flowing through it.

With cut-through switching, wormhole routing is applied to
packets in a packet switching system so that forwarding of
a packet starts as soon as its destination is known, before
the whole packet had arrived.

(2003-05-15)

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