That one can write a program that uses arbitrarily large amounts of memory is totally expected. In python, one can do:
L=[0] while True: L.extend(L) it's really the responsibility of the operating system to decide if the relevant user should have the privilege to grind the system to a halt. In a unix environment where you want to protect against runaway jobs, this can be done with per-process resource limits. This would fall under that category. If you also want to protect against DOS by multiple processes, nowadays you'd probably give the person a VM with intentionally limited memory and swap. The ticket is probably still a bug so it's worth solving, but it doesn't have particular security status in my opinion. On Monday, 2 August 2021 at 05:24:18 UTC-7 emanuel.c...@gmail.com wrote: > This ticket <https://trac.sagemath.org/ticket/32325>, result from this > ask.sagemath question > <https://ask.sagemath.org/question/58202/system-eqs-eq-with-abs-then-solve-kills-the-kernel/>, > > may be worth some special attention : it shows a way for Sage to grab all > available memory, and possibly take the whole system down by memory > starvation. > > HTH, > > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "sage-devel" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to sage-devel+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sage-devel/4ce529cc-ccfa-4c63-aaad-622336b0d9c5n%40googlegroups.com.