curl https://some-url | sh

I see this all over the place nowadays, even in communities that, I would think, should be security conscious. How is that safe? What’s stopping the downloaded script from wiping my home directory? If you use this, how can you feel comfortable?

I understand that we have the same problems with the installed application, even if it was downloaded and installed manually. But I feel the bar for making a mistake in a shell script is much lower than in whatever language the main application is written. Don’t we have something better than “sh” for this? Something with less power to do harm?

    • thomask@lemmy.sdf.org
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      21 hours ago

      So tell me: if I download and run a bash script over https, or a .deb file over https and then install it, why is the former a “security nightmare” and the latter not?

      • jagged_circle@feddit.nl
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        10 hours ago

        Both are a security nightmare, if you’re not verifying the signature.

        You should verify the signature of all things you download before running it. Be it a bash script or a .deb file or a .AppImage or to-be-compiled sourcecode.

        Best thing is to just use your Repo’s package manager. Apt will not run anything that isn’t properly signed by a package team members release PGP key.

        • thomask@lemmy.sdf.org
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          2 hours ago

          I have to assume that we’re in this situation because because the app does not exist in our distro’s repo (or homebrew or whatever else). So how do you go about this verification? You need a trusted public key, right? You wouldn’t happen to be downloading that from the same website that you’re worried might be sending you compromised scripts or binaries? You wouldn’t happen to be downloading the key from a public keyserver and assuming it belongs to the person whose name is on it?

          This is such a ridiculously high bar to avert a “security nightmare”. Regular users will be better off ignoring such esoteric suggestions and just looking for lots of stars on GitHub.

        • FizzyOrange@programming.dev
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          4 hours ago

          Hilarious, but not a security issue. Just shitty Bash coding.

          And I agree it’s easier to make these mistakes in Bash, but I don’t think anyone here is really making the argument that curl | bash is bad because Bash is a shitty error-prone language (it is).

          Definitely the most valid point I’ve read in this thread though. I wish we had a viable alternative. Maybe the Linux community could work on that instead of moaning about it.

      • jagged_circle@feddit.nl
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        10 hours ago

        You’re telling me that you dont verify the signatures of the binaries you download before running them too?!? God help you.

        I download my binaries with apt, which will refuse to install the binary if the signature doesn’t match.

        • FizzyOrange@programming.dev
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          4 hours ago

          No because there’s very little point. Checking signatures only makes sense if the signatures are distributed in a more secure channel than the actual software. Basically the only time that happens is when software is distributed via untrusted mirror services.

          Most software I install via curl | bash is first-party hosted and signatures don’t add any security.

      • easily3667@lemmus.org
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        11 hours ago

        By definition nothing

        The point you appear to be making is “everything is insecure so nothing is” and the point others are making is “everything is insecure so everything is”

        • FizzyOrange@programming.dev
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          4 hours ago

          No, the point I am making is there are no additional security implications from executing a Bash script that someone sends you over executing a binary that they send you. I don’t know how to make that clearer.