This is mitigated through the automatic restart of cupsd after its termination. By issuing a maliciously crafted get-printer-jobs request, an attacker may cause a remote denial of service. Impact: A remote attacker may cause an unexpected application termination of cupsdĭescription: A use after free issue exists in cupsd. Credit to Adrian 'pagvac' Pastor of GNUCITIZEN, and Tim Starling for reporting this issue. This issue is addressed by requiring web form submissions to include a randomized session token. Visiting a maliciously crafted website while logged into the CUPS web interface as an administrator may allow CUPS settings to be changed. Impact: Visiting a maliciously crafted website while logged into the CUPS web interface as an administrator may allow CUPS settings to be changedĭescription: A cross-site request forgery issue exists in the CUPS web interface.
Security Update 2010-004 / Mac OS X v10.6.4Īvailable for: Mac OS X v10.5.8, Mac OS X Server v10.5.8, Mac OS X v10.6 through v10.6.3, Mac OS X Server v10.6 through v10.6.3
includes Safari 5.0 for more information about Safari 5.0, see this webpage.
Might I encounter any problems upgrading to 10.9 given my hardware configuration? Any hardware I should upgrade in the process? I have upped my RAM to 8 GB since the build was completed, but other than that the specs are identical to the link above.Īnd, assuming I do screw this up miserably, how exactly would I restore from my cloned drive? My hardware build is one of TonyMac's blessed builds from 2010, specifically build number two here: Is this true? Is that the best way to make the migration? Feel free to just point me toward pre-existing articles that you feel adequately illustrate the steps and the potential pitfalls.
Once I've got a stable clone, what's my process? I've read that I should upgrade to 10.6.8 first in order to access the App Store and then I can download a free upgrade to 10.9. Carbon Copy Cloner? Some other method? Does the drive I'm cloning to need to be the same size as the current start up disc? I understand that prior to 10.6.8 you can't boot off of a Time Machine backup so I'd need to clone my current start up drive some other way. I would imagine I should start off by cloning my current start up drive so that I have something to fall back on in case I botch things horribly. I've read some good articles but also gotten a decent amount of conflicting information, so I thought I'd ask all of you. I've been doing a lot of reading trying to nail down the best way to make the transition from 10.6.4 to 10.9 and my head is swimming. Building a CustoMac Hackintosh: Buyer's Guide