>
>
> On Mon, 13 May 1996, Theodore Ts'o wrote:
>
> > The original reason I didn't provide a CONFIG_RANDOM was because I
> > wanted security-oriented applications (i.e., Netscape, PGP, Kerberos,
> > etc.) to be able to assume that if they were on Linux, /dev/linux would
> > always be present. Good, secure numbers are absolutely vital for
>
> Do You really think that they will be aware of such an Linux *SPECIFIC*
> animal?
>
> > The random driver also isn't all that big, and the overhead of the
> > add_XXX_randomness() calls were designed to be as small as possible.
>
> That's compleatly wrong!! It is now about 16KBytes. More than the floppy
> driver, more that the ide driver, more than the CD-ROM drivers....
> This is compleatly inacceptable for such an arcane FEATURE like this
> (IMHO).
>
> Marcin
The IDE/scsi/floppy controllers are transparent and handle hardware. No
program depends on scsi or ide specifically. /dev/random and /dev/urandom
are system services; they're not really comparable.
BTW, are they really specific to linux?
__kmb203@psu.edu_________________________Debian__1.1___Linux__1.99.3___
The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men
of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding.
-- Justice Louis D. Brandeis