From SUSE Linux Enterprise Server v11 for System z Security Technical Implementation Guide
Part of GEN003510
Associated with: CCI-000366
Kernel core dumps may contain the full contents of system memory at the time of the crash. Kernel core dumps may consume a considerable amount of disk space and may result in denial of service by exhausting the available space on the target file system. The kernel core dump process may increase the amount of time a system is unavailable due to a crash. Kernel core dumps can be useful for kernel debugging.
Check that the dumpconf service is not running. # /etc/init.d/dumpconf status If a status of “running" is returned, this is a finding.
Disable dumpconf. # /etc/init.d/dumpconf stop # insserv –r dumpconf
Lavender hyperlinks in small type off to the right (of CSS
class id
, if you view the page source) point to
globally unique URIs for each document and item. Copy the
link location and paste anywhere you need to talk
unambiguously about these things.
You can obtain data about documents and items in other
formats. Simply provide an HTTP header Accept:
text/turtle
or
Accept: application/rdf+xml
.
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