TidBITS#903/05-Nov-07
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/903>

  Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard is still fresh in our minds, for good and ill. 
  Adam examines the revelation that Apple's software license agreement 
  for Leopard Server now allows virtualization, a change that could 
  save significant resources for those running Xserves. In less 
  encouraging news, Rich Mogull finds Leopard's new firewall wanting 
  in multiple ways, and  a Trojan horse called OSX.RSPlug.A is in the 
  wild and targeting Mac OS X (but there's an easy way to avoid it). 
  Even after shipping Leopard, Apple has been busy, releasing minor 
  updates to the MacBook and MacBook Pro, pushing out new versions of 
  iTunes and QuickTime, and preparing for this week's launch of the 
  iPhone in the UK. Elsewhere, Glenn Fleishman relates the (possibly 
  momentary) availability of AppSnapp for installing applications onto 
  the iPhone; Mark Anbinder ponders what IMAP access for Gmail means 
  for Mac and iPhone users; Adam uses GrandPerspective and WhatSize to 
  identify large files on our server and explains why we've had some 
  downtime; and we give away copies of SmileOnMyMac's TextExpander 2. 
  Finally, the jig is up! Crazy Apple Rumors discovered the TidBITS 
  secret agenda, and, yes, it involves killer beavers.

Articles
    Apple Releases Minor MacBook and MacBook Pro Upgrades
    iTunes 7.5 and QuickTime 7.3 Released
    OSX.RSPlug.A Trojan Horse Targets Mac OS X
    Install Applications with iPhone 1.1.1 Software
    O2 Clarifies UK iPhone Data Limits
    Gmail's New IMAP Support a Boon to Mac and iPhone Users
    DealBITS Drawing: Win a Copy of TextExpander 2
    CARS Discovers Our Secret Agenda
    GrandPerspective and WhatSize Identify Disk Pigs
    Explaining Our Recent Server Woes
    Apple to Allow Virtualization of Leopard
    Leopard Firewall Takes One Step Forward, Three Steps Back
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/05-Nov-07


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Apple Releases Minor MacBook and MacBook Pro Upgrades
-----------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9284>

  Apple has quietly updated the MacBook and the MacBook Pro, although 
  the upgrades are so minor that they didn't warrant a press release.

<http://www.apple.com/macbook/macbook.html>
<http://www.apple.com/macbookpro/>

  The MacBook Pro's upgrade is limited to two new build-to-order 
  options for the high-end 15-inch MacBook Pro and the 17-inch MacBook 
  Pro models: a 2.6 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo processor for $250 (up from 
  2.4 GHz) and a 250 GB hard drive running at 5400 rpm for $150. 
  Otherwise, prices remain the same, $1,999 for the low-end 15-inch 
  model, $2,499 for the high-end 15-inch model, and $2,799 for the 
  17-inch model.

  The MacBook's update is slightly more interesting. The mid- and 
  high-end models of the MacBook now come with a 2.2 GHz Intel Core 2 
  Duo processor, up from the 2.16 GHz processor in the previous 
  incarnation. The new models also feature a RAM ceiling of 4 GB, up 
  from 2 GB; a frontside bus of 800 MHz, up from 667 MHz; and a new 
  graphics chip, the Intel GMA X3100 with 144 MB of DDR2 SDRAM shared 
  with main memory that replaces the previous Intel GMA 950 with 64 
  MB. The new MacBook also features new media control keys along the 
  function key row.

<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=306843>

  Although the new MacBook processors are only infinitesimally faster, 
  the faster frontside bus should provide some performance boost, the 
  new graphics chip could help in certain situations (although it also 
  has some compatibility issues with advanced gaming applications), 
  and being able to add more memory is always welcome. Prices remain 
  the same, ranging from $1,099 for the low-end model up to $1,499 for 
  the high-end black unit. The 250 GB hard drive is also available as 
  a build-to-order option.

<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=306764>

  Both the MacBook and MacBook Pro now ship with Mac OS X 10.5 
  Leopard, which is generally a good thing. However, in places like 
  universities and large corporations, where the just-released Leopard 
  has not yet been approved for use, a tech note from Apple about the 
  MacBook is causing some consternation. It states that the new 
  MacBook (which Apple calls "Late 2007") comes with a version of 
  Leopard that can be installed only on this particular model, and 
  that other Mac OS X 10.5 installation disks will not work on this 
  model. It does not comment on compatibility with Mac OS X 10.4.10, 
  but the fact that other 10.5 installation disks won't work implies 
  that 10.4.10 won't either. There's a rumored 10.4.11 that could in 
  theory enable the MacBook (Late 2007) to use Tiger, if and when 
  Apple releases it.

<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=306766>


iTunes 7.5 and QuickTime 7.3 Released
-------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9293>

  In its usual shot across the proverbial TidBITS bow - or so we 
  egomaniacally believe - Apple released updates for QuickTime and 
  iTunes this afternoon. Details on both updates are sparse, which we 
  have come to expect.

  iTunes 7.5 adds the capability to activate an iPhone "wherever 
  service is offered," which is a reference to this week's launch of 
  the iPhone in the UK, and subsequent launches in Germany and France. 
  iTunes 7.5 is available for Mac OS X 10.3.9 or later (41.1 MB) and 
  Windows XP SP2 and Vista (51.8 MB).

<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/itunes75formac.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/itunes75forwindows.html>

  The update vaguely mentions "support for Phase, a new interactive 
  music game" that's meant for the third-generation iPod nano, the 
  iPod classic, and the fifth-generation iPod. I synced a 5G iPod with 
  iTunes 7.5, and saw no game nor a firmware update appear. I have no 
  idea what "support for" means - perhaps an upcoming release on 
  Tuesday, when Apple usually refreshes the iTunes Store content? 
  Maddening.

  Apple also released QuickTime 7.3 for Panther (51.5 MB), Tiger (49.3 
  MB), Leopard (52.6 MB), and Windows (20.3 MB). The update improves 
  creating iPhone-compatible Web content without an explanation of 
  what precisely was improved, works with iTunes 7.5, updates 
  QuickTime plug-in JavaScript support, and fixes security-related 
  bugs. The bugs included several that could allow "arbitrary code 
  execution," which is how an attacker could insert a payload into an 
  attack. 

<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/quicktime73forpanther.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/quicktime73fortiger.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/quicktime73forleopard.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/quicktime73forwindows.html>

  Apple thanks researchers, as usual, but also notes in several cases 
  that researchers were working with one of several projects that pay 
  for zero-day exploits - exploitable flaws that haven't been patched 
  - to avoid those exploits from being weaponized and used by 
  malicious parties. The details of the security updates are detailed 
  on this security update page.

<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=61798>


OSX.RSPlug.A Trojan Horse Targets Mac OS X
------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9278>

  Security software firm Intego is warning Mac OS X users about a 
  Trojan horse that targets the Mac. OSX.RSPlug.A is showing up on 
  pornography sites disguised as a video plug-in. When someone clicks 
  the link to watch certain video clips, a Web page states that a new 
  QuickTime codec must be installed. Opening the disk image that 
  downloads results in the installer asking for an administrator 
  password (which is the first serious sign of trouble); if the option 
  to Open "Safe" Files After Downloading is enabled in Safari, the 
  disk image opens automatically (you should disable that feature in 
  Safari; see "Significant Safari Exploit Discovered," 2007-09-07).

<http://www.intego.com/news/ism0705.asp>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8436>

  Once given root access, the Trojan horse changes the computer's DNS 
  settings to point to phishing sites or ads for other pornography 
  sites. Even if the DNS is reset manually, a background task added by 
  the Trojan horse changes the DNS again automatically.

  Rob Griffiths at Macworld has written up instructions for removing 
  OSX.RSPlug.A manually; Intego's VirusBarrier X4 with updated virus 
  definitions for 31-Oct-07 also identifies and removes the Trojan 
  horse. Griffith writes: "This is really bad. Really. And even though 
  it's targeted at porn surfers today, the malware could easily be 
  associated with anything else, like a new viral video site, or a 
  site that purports to show commercials from the upcoming Super 
  Bowl."

<http://www.macworld.com/2007/10/firstlooks/trojanhorse/>
<http://www.intego.com/virusbarrier/>

  As always, the best defense against such attacks is to avoid 
  installing third-party software with which you're unfamiliar, 
  especially any that requires an administrator password. Although the 
  Mac has proven remarkably resilient to the threat of viruses and 
  other malware, it's not immune.


Install Applications with iPhone 1.1.1 Software
-----------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9286>

  The story around installing third-party applications on the iPhone 
  changes every few days, so we at TidBITS have avoided trying to 
  stick a pin in the process, as it were. But a few days ago, one set 
  of the clever folks working in loosely organized teams produced 
  AppSnapp, a successor to AppTapp (from a different group), which can 
  "jailbreak" the iPhone 1.1.1 software, enabling third-party programs 
  to be installed.

<http://www.jailbreakme.com/>
<http://iphone.nullriver.com/beta/>

  AppSnapp has an even simpler installation process: Just visit the 
  Web site with an iPhone, select the installation options from the 
  Web page, and the software is installed. You can then use the 
  Installer application to choose other packages to install, including 
  the Connect program for automated Wi-Fi hotspot connections that we 
  talked about a few months ago (see "Connect More Easily to Wi-Fi 
  Hotspots with the iPhone," 2007-09-17). I tried the process and it 
  was fast and seamless.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9182>

  Now a word to the wary: AppSnapp makes use of an exploit in the TIFF 
  image format rendering library. A buffer overflow allows a properly 
  crafted TIFF image to install software, essentially. (AppSnapp also 
  patches the exploit, which is rather nice of its developers.)

  This exploit and installer provides unrestricted access to the 
  operating system, which means you should take care in choosing the 
  sources from which you install additional iPhone software.

  Apple is certainly going to fix this flaw in their TIFF 
  interpretation - it's a significant one which could be exploited by 
  any malicious Web site - which will then prevent releases of iPhone 
  software after 1.1.1 from using this vector to install. Early 
  reports from the UK, where Apple starts selling the iPhone via O2 on 
  November 9th at 6 p.m. (actually 6:02 or "six O2"), indicate that a 
  patched 1.1.2 release is installed on those phones.

<http://www.t3.co.uk/news/247/communications/mobile_phone/iphone-firmware-update-2>

  Given the near-term arrival of an iPhone SDK, the motivation to 
  jailbreak an iPhone will wane, unless the SDK turns out to be so 
  lame as to push developers once again into unsupported pathways (see 
  "iPhone Software Development Kit Set for February 2008," 
  2007-10-17).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9247>


O2 Clarifies UK iPhone Data Limits
----------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9289>

  The UK cell carrier O2 will not enforce a "fair usage" policy on 
  iPhone data plans, the British newspaper The Telegraph reports. 
  Although I could never nail down precisely what "fair usage" meant 
  in this context, the Telegraph writes that O2 was planning a 200 MB 
  per month limit (see "iPhone Launch Set for UK and Germany, with 
  Murky Data Plan," 2007-09-20). That limit has now been lifted, and 
  the contract terms on the O2 Web site changed.

<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2007/11/03/cniphone103.xml>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9189>

  The O2 head said, "Customers find 'unlimited with limits' 
  confusing," which shouldn't be a surprise. Verizon Wireless just 
  settled with the Attorney General of New York over the firm's 
  advertising its cell data service as unlimited, while limiting 
  customers to 5 GB per month and restricting permitted activities in 
  certain ways.

<http://www.oag.state.ny.us/press/2007/oct/oct23a_07.html>


Gmail's New IMAP Support a Boon to Mac and iPhone Users
-------------------------------------------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder <mha@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9275>

  Google's announcement last week that its free, Web-based Gmail 
  service would now support IMAP access in addition to the existing 
  POP3 and Web methods is fantastic news for everyone, but especially 
  for Mac and iPhone users. The new feature makes Gmail a great choice 
  for those who want to access email on the road but have never liked 
  webmail solutions.

<http://gmailblog.blogspot.com/2007/10/sync-your-inbox-across-devices-with.html>

  iPhone users in particular will benefit from Gmail's top-notch spam 
  filtering. Since the stripped-down Mail program on the iPhone lacks 
  any spam-handling whatsoever, iPhone users are especially reliant on 
  server-side filtering, which not all providers offer. Some Gmail 
  users thus use it only as a middleman between their existing mail 
  server and mail client, taking advantage of Gmail's settings that 
  let the world see whatever email address you specify for outgoing 
  messages.

  This change makes Gmail a practical email solution for iPhone users. 
  Previously, the options included using Gmail's Web interface, which 
  works in iPhone Safari but is quite cramped; or using Mail as a POP 
  client, which defeats the purpose of Gmail keeping all your mail in 
  one place. Google even features iPhone setup instructions, along 
  with instructions for Mail, Thunderbird, and other clients.

  For Mac users and iPhone users alike, IMAP support also means you 
  can access your "labels" in Gmail as IMAP folders, and take full 
  advantage of the rules-based filtering Gmail offers without losing 
  mobile access to some of your mail.


DealBITS Drawing: Win a Copy of TextExpander 2
----------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9287>

  We've written often about utilities for expanding abbreviations, 
  including SmileOnMyMac's TextExpander, which has just seen an update 
  to version 2. Notable new features in this release include support 
  for grouping abbreviations (which TextExpander calls snippets), the 
  capability to add snippet groups from external files, 
  synchronization of snippet groups via .Mac, AppleScript snippets 
  that expand to the results of the script, updating of snippet groups 
  from URLs or external files, and lots of user interface 
  improvements. Plus, our TidBITS AutoCorrect Dictionary is available 
  for TextExpander users who wish to add a few thousand common 
  typographical errors to their abbreviation lists (see "TidBITS 
  AutoCorrect Dictionary for TextExpander and TypeIt4Me," 2007-09-10).

<http://smileonmymac.com/textexpander/>
<http://www.smileonmymac.com/textexpander/snippets.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9144>

  In this week's DealBITS drawing, you can enter to win one of three 
  copies of TextExpander 2, each worth $29.95. Entrants who aren't 
  among our lucky winners will receive a discount on TextExpander, so 
  be sure to enter at the DealBITS page. All information gathered is 
  covered by our comprehensive privacy policy. Be careful with your 
  spam filters and challenge-response systems, since you must be able 
  to receive email from my address to learn if you've won. Remember 
  too, that if someone you refer to this drawing wins, you'll receive 
  the same prize as a reward for spreading the word.

<http://www.tidbits.com/dealbits/textexpander2/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/about/privacy.html>


CARS Discovers Our Secret Agenda
--------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9280>

  The investigative "reporters" at Crazy Apple Rumors Site have been 
  poking around our corporate dumpster again, and it pains me to admit 
  that they've come across our secret plans for, well, just about 
  everything. Curses! I hope they also stumbled across the carcass 
  left over from last week's roast chicken dinner - it should have 
  been pretty ripe by then.

<http://www.crazyapplerumors.com/?p=962>


GrandPerspective and WhatSize Identify Disk Pigs
------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9233>

  I connected to my Xserve the other day to check on something, only 
  to see the dreaded "The startup disk is almost full" error message. 
  Mac OS X doesn't like running low on disk space, so I immediately 
  went looking for the culprits. I was trying to track a crashing 
  problem in the current Web Crossing build, and it had indeed created 
  a 1.3 GB core dump after a crash, leaving me with only 440 MB free 
  on my 60 GB disk. But even after I archived the core dump to the 
  Xserve's second drive, sent it to the developers, and deleted the 
  core file, I had only 1.8 GB of free space, which is still pretty 
  tight. Curious as to what was chewing up the space, I turned to a 
  pair of free tools I often find myself using in this situation: the 
  open source GrandPerspective and id-design's free WhatSize. 

<http://grandperspectiv.sourceforge.net/>
<http://www.id-design.com/software/whatsize/>

  I like to use GrandPerspective first, because it shows a graphical 
  map of how disk space is being used, with the rectangle size 
  corresponding to file size. So, as you can see, my server's disk has 
  some really large files on it. Unfortunately, I forgot to take the 
  screenshot before deleting files (I had server disk health on my 
  mind at the time, not an article). With GrandPerspective, it's 
  trivial to see when a couple of very large files are responsible for 
  the disk filling up; it's less useful if you have a huge number of 
  smaller files. When you mouse over a rectangle, GrandPerspective 
  shows you its path; if you click a rectangle to select it, you can 
  then click a Reveal button to display the file in the Finder. 
  Filters enable GrandPerspective to limit its view to just files of 
  certain types or sizes, which could be helpful in some situations.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-10/GrandPerspective.png>

  However, when I need to focus on the specific directories and files 
  that can be pruned to recover disk space, I switch over to WhatSize. 
  By default, it uses a Mac OS X-like column view, with files and 
  folders sorted by size, rather than name, although it also offers a 
  number of other views that I don't find useful. You can also move 
  files and folders to the Trash from within WhatSize.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-10/WhatSize.png>

  I'm sure there are plenty of other applications that aim to shine 
  light into the dark corners of your hard disk (including a new one 
  in beta, called Baseline, that promises to show you just the files 
  that have changed since a previous scan was saved), but you won't go 
  wrong with GrandPerspective and WhatSize. Neither is particularly 
  speedy at scanning your disk initially, but otherwise they work as 
  advertised. And since both are free, there's no excuse for not 
  trying them the next time you need to free up some disk space. Oh, 
  and the culprits on my server? Back in August I had repacked the 
  multi-gigabyte Web Crossing database, and to be safe, I had retained 
  all the copies generated during that process. Deleting them freed up 
  about 16 GB of space. Server crisis averted.

<http://www.mildmanneredindustries.com/baseline/>


Explaining Our Recent Server Woes
---------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9290>

  My apologies to anyone who has run into problems accessing the 
  TidBITS and Take Control Web sites over the last few days. We've 
  been experiencing some very weird errors, some of which have caused 
  downtime, and in an attempt to isolate the cause, I've had to reboot 
  the server numerous times and work with the extremely clued-in 
  technicians at digital.forest to run hardware tests. Most notably, 
  the machine was busy running memtest for most of Sunday night. The 
  good news is that the RAM showed no problems across five passes 
  (close to 12 hours of testing) so it can be eliminated as a possible 
  cause; the bad news is that we're still struggling to figure out 
  what might be happening.

<http://forest.net/>
<http://www.memtestosx.org/>

  We've tried to minimize the effect of this testing through four 
  tricks: 

* Since most TidBITS-related article traffic is actually served by 
  Glenn's Web server, which identifies itself as db.tidbits.com, we 
  repointed the DNS settings at easyDNS (which we recommend highly for 
  being easy to use and reliable) for www.tidbits.com to 
  db.tidbits.com. That way, anyone visiting our home page wouldn't see 
  anything out of the ordinary. However, that worked for only the 
  www.tidbits.com home page; other pages further down in the hierarchy 
  just returned an error. 

<http://www.easydns.com/>

* For TidBITS Talk, the Check for Updates links in our ebooks, and 
  other things that use emperor.tidbits.com, we again repointed DNS at 
  Glenn's machine, and he set it so any emperor.tidbits.com request 
  was served a page explaining the situation. Not ideal, but better 
  than a generic error.

* For Take Control, where we didn't want to lock out potential ebook 
  customers, we repointed DNS at Glenn's machine and set it up so any 
  www.takecontrolbooks.com request loaded a custom page that looked 
  much like the normal Take Control home page and made it easy for 
  people to buy our Leopard titles via eSellerate. For other books, I 
  linked to the version of our catalog on the eSellerate site. To 
  judge from the number of orders that came in during the downtime, 
  this approach worked fine.

* Since all of our incoming mail goes through Postini (now owned by 
  Google, though we haven't seen any changes for better or worse since 
  the acquisition) before arriving at our server, I tweaked Postini's 
  settings so it sends email to the IP number of our server, rather 
  than the domain name. That way, when I took our server down, Postini 
  just held onto the mail (since it couldn't contact our server at its 
  IP address) until I brought the server back online. Had I not made 
  that change, Postini would have tried to deliver to Glenn's machine 
  (when it was responding to emperor.tidbits.com). Since Glenn's 
  machine doesn't accept mail for tidbits.com addresses, it would have 
  rejected the messages.

  Alas, we're still unsure as to the cause of the problems, but we 
  have more things to try, all while attempting to minimize downtime. 
  The server has great connectivity at digital.forest, and the 
  technicians are helpful, but it's still difficult to troubleshoot a 
  remote production server that's constantly modifying a 2.5 GB 
  database file. I certainly hope we can fix things without anyone 
  noticing, but if you do have trouble connecting, now you know why. 
  For more detail, check my Twitter page, since I tend to post updates 
  about what's going on even while the machine (and thus my email) is 
  down.

<http://twitter.com/adamengst>


Apple to Allow Virtualization of Leopard
----------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9277>

  In a notable about-face, Apple has changed its stance with regard to 
  allowing Mac OS X Server to be run inside a virtual machine (VM), 
  much as Parallels Desktop and VMware Fusion make it possible to run 
  Windows and other PC-based operating systems on a Mac. Until the 
  release of Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard Server, Apple's software license 
  agreement explicitly forbade running multiple copies of Mac OS X 
  Server on a single Mac, preventing Parallels and VMware from 
  including Mac OS X Server among the operating systems that could be 
  virtualized legally. Apple's Tiger Server software license agreement 
  reads:

<http://www.apple.com/server/macosx/>
<http://images.apple.com/legal/sla/docs/macosxserver104.pdf>

  This License allows you to install and use one copy of the Mac OS X 
  Server software (the "Mac OS X Server Software") on a single 
  Apple-labeled computer at a time.

  However, a sharp-eyed systems engineer noticed that Leopard Server's 
  software license agreement is significantly different. Dave 
  Schroeder, Senior Systems Engineer at the University of 
  Wisconsin-Madison, posted to the MacEnterprise.org mailing list 
  about his finding, calling out this change:

<http://images.apple.com/legal/sla/docs/macosxserver105.pdf>
<http://www.doit.wisc.edu/>
<http://www.macenterprise.org/>
<http://lists.psu.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0710&L=macenterprise&D=1&O=D&T=0&P=65020&D=0>

  This License allows you to install and use one copy of the Mac OS X 
  Server software (the "Mac OS X Server Software") on a single 
  Apple-labeled computer. You may also install and use other copies of 
  Mac OS X Server Software on the same Apple-labeled computer, 
  provided that you acquire an individual and valid license from Apple 
  for each of these other copies of Mac OS X Server Software.

  This change applies only to Leopard Server, not to the desktop 
  version of Leopard. Apple has not changed the software license 
  agreements for either version of Tiger.


**Virtualization Software Coming Soon?** Both Parallels and VMware had 
  said that making it possible to run multiple copies of Mac OS X in 
  virtual machines was technically feasible, but neither company was 
  interested in jeopardizing their relationship with Apple to create 
  software that would help users violate their license agreements with 
  Apple. 

  That has now changed, as apparently has Apple's opinion of 
  virtualization (Apple PR failed to respond to my calls and email by 
  publication time). Ben Rudolph, Director of Corporate Communications 
  for Parallels, told me, "Enabling Leopard Server to run in a virtual 
  machine may take some time, but we're working closely with Apple on 
  it and will make it public as quickly as possible."

<http://www.parallels.com/>

  Pat Lee, Senior Product Manager at VMware, concurred, saying "We 
  applaud Apple for the exciting licensing changes implemented in 
  Leopard Server. Apple customers can now run Mac OS X Server, 
  Windows, Linux and other x86 operating systems simultaneously on 
  Apple hardware, so we are excited about the possibilities this 
  change presents."

<http://www.vmware.com/>

  Although neither company committed to specific features or 
  timetables, it appears as though we should be seeing virtualization 
  products from both that will enable an Xserve to run multiple copies 
  of Leopard Server in virtual machines. 

<http://www.apple.com/xserve/>


**Why Virtualize Servers?** VMware's Pat Lee said, "We have seen 
  customers gain tremendous ROI in terms of better utilization, lower 
  power consumption and ease of provisioning and management by 
  deploying server virtualization." In other words, server 
  virtualization provides:

* More efficient use of server hardware. Dave Schroeder of the 
  University of Wisconsin-Madison said, "For a variety of reasons, 
  some technical and some organizational, we need to have individual 
  Xserves hosting distinct instances of Mac OS X Server. Often, these 
  individual modern servers are greatly underutilized. With 
  virtualization, we could more effectively manage our computing 
  resources, and combine several of these Mac OS X Server environments 
  into virtual environments on one server."

* Reduced costs. Schroeder explained, "With virtualization, we could 
  likely cut costs by half or more, in terms of hardware, support, and 
  other savings. Utility costs like power and cooling are shielded 
  from us in our organization, but the savings in power, cooling, 
  space, and so on from virtualization will be felt at other levels of 
  the university."

* Easier management and better security. By isolating each service 
  (Web, email, FileMaker Pro, etc.) in a separate virtual machine, it 
  becomes easier to move services between physical servers, prevent 
  services from interacting in undesired ways, and reduce 
  vulnerability should one service be exploited.

* The capability to run multiple platform services simultaneously. An 
  Xserve could run not just several Mac OS X-based services in 
  separate virtual machines, it could also host Windows- or 
  Linux-based services in other virtual machines.

  Ben Rudolph of Parallels emphasized this final point, saying, "We're 
  hearing from our customers - like you are from your readers - that 
  the 'holy grail' of Xserves is to run multiple, isolated, 
  near-native instances of Mac OS X Server on the same box, at the 
  same time. If you couple that with the ability to run Windows and 
  Linux next to those instances of Mac OS X, you've just made Xserves 
  even more compelling for enterprises large and small, even 
  non-traditional Apple shops."

  However, not everyone is an unalloyed fan of virtualization. IT 
  analyst John Welch noted that virtualization is most important in 
  the Windows world and isn't as necessary with Unix-based operating 
  systems like Mac OS X. "Normally, running more than one major 
  service on a Windows box is a recipe for disaster. Windows simply 
  doesn't hold up well under continual heavy load. Unix allows for far 
  higher utilization per box, so virtualization isn't as big a deal. 
  It comes down to use case and operational philosophy. Virtualization 
  is great for some, not so great for others."

  Dave Schroeder responded, "Virtualization isn't perfect for every 
  task, but for distinct services that require their own servers and 
  don't utilize the hardware to its fullest, virtualization can more 
  effectively utilize these hardware resources. This cuts costs not 
  only on hardware, but on duplication of labor and other support 
  costs. Each individual server, even in a virtualized environment, 
  still has some baseline costs associated with it, but virtualization 
  will help Mac OS X Server compete with the lower costs of some of 
  our other virtualized platforms, such as Linux and Windows."


**Good News for the Xserve?** Rudolph's comment about making the 
  Xserve even more compelling is important, and may hold the key to 
  Apple's change of heart. Although Apple is generally thought of as a 
  hardware company, and there's no doubt that the company wants to 
  sell more Xserves, preventing virtualization may have been working 
  against that goal. Dave Schroeder commented, "Right now, Mac OS X 
  Server is the only platform we can't virtualize, which is really 
  beginning to limit its applications alongside more inexpensive 
  general purpose virtual environments." 

  The Leopard Server license agreement restricts virtualization to 
  "Apple-labeled hardware," preventing its use on non-Apple hardware. 
  Although Leopard Server will run fine on most current Macs, those 
  interested in virtualizing servers are most likely relying on the 
  Xserve already.

  So even though Xserve buyers currently need to buy more Xserves than 
  they would if virtualization was available, the lack of 
  virtualization is driving some customers to other server hardware. 
  Plus, with virtualization, if Apple sells two additional ten-client 
  copies of Mac OS X Server for $499 each, the profit on that software 
  is nearly identical to the estimated $1,000 profit of a stock $2,999 
  Xserve (using Apple's latest 33.6 percent gross margin for the 
  Xserve profit estimate). Additionally, without virtualization, some 
  groups might be tempted to rely on multiple cheap Mac minis rather 
  than an Xserve that could run multiple virtual machines.

  Paradoxically, then, enabling customers to buy fewer Xserves by 
  supporting virtualization could result in Apple selling more Xserves 
  overall, since the Xserve could become the server platform of choice 
  in organizations that need to run multiple Mac OS X-based services 
  alongside Windows- and Linux-based services. With virtualization, 
  that could be all on one machine.

  Or could it? According to John Welch, "You need big physical 
  resources for virtualization. Our average VM server is an 8-way box 
  tied to a SAN via Fibre Channel with a ton of RAM and network I/O. 
  For me to virtualize my Xserves, I'd need some big VMs, with 4 GB or 
  more of RAM each, and they'd be putting a serious load on the VM 
  server. Apple doesn't yet make a box that's big enough to be an 
  effective VM server for more than a handful of VMs if they're 
  heavily loaded." 

  The current incarnation of the Xserve hasn't been updated since 
  August 2006, when it moved to an Intel-based architecture and 
  increased the maximum amount of RAM to 32 GB, up from 8 GB in the 
  PowerPC G5-based Xserve. The current Intel-based Xserve has been out 
  for 14 months now, which, as you can see in the Xserve release 
  timeline below, indicates that an update is likely to arrive soon, 
  perhaps in January or February 2008.

* July 2002: Xserve G4 release

* February 2003: Xserve G4 update (7 months)

* March 2004: Xserve G5 release (13 months)

* January 2005: Xserve G5 update (8 months)

* August 2006: Xserve Intel Xeon release (19 months)

  In the end, it appears that Apple may have been planning this all 
  along. The change in Leopard Server's license agreement now, coupled 
  with ongoing development cooperation with Parallels and likely 
  VMware, could lead to an early-2008 release of both a beefed-up 
  Xserve designed to work as a VM server and virtualization products 
  from Parallels and VMware. So although Apple's recalcitrance in 
  allowing earlier versions of Mac OS X to be virtualized has proven 
  troublesome to system engineers like Dave Schroeder up to this 
  point, these changes point to Apple becoming ever more of a player 
  in the enterprise server space.


Leopard Firewall Takes One Step Forward, Three Steps Back
---------------------------------------------------------
  by Rich Mogull <rmogull@securosis.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9294>

  An improved firewall was one of the 300+ features Apple touted 
  before the release of Leopard, but a mix of design choices and 
  functionality changes reduces its effectiveness compared to the 
  firewall in Tiger, something I had heard only rumblings about when I 
  wrote "How Leopard Will Improve Your Security," 2007-10-22. While 
  it's not concerning enough that you shouldn't upgrade, it 
  is something Apple will need to address fairly quickly with an 
  update.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9251>


**What's a Firewall?** For you non-security-geeks out there, a 
  firewall is a tool that blocks traffic to a system or network based 
  on rules (for a more-detailed description, see Chris Pepper's 
  "What's a Firewall, and Why Should You Care?," 1999-02-22). 
  Firewalls have existed since the late 1980s and were developed in 
  response to the first Internet worms, particularly the Morris Worm, 
  as a way of protecting systems and networks by blocking any unwanted 
  traffic. Before firewalls, if you placed a computer on a network 
  (including the Internet), anyone else on that network could remotely 
  probe your system for open connections and send you traffic 
  directly. Since all computers tend to have some vulnerabilities, and 
  some of those vulnerabilities are remotely exploitable over a 
  network, this gives attackers an easy way to play on your network 
  and potentially exploit your systems. Some of these attacks are self 
  propagating - where malicious code takes over a system and then uses 
  that system to take over other systems. This is what distinguishes 
  a worm from a virus - a virus needs user interaction, while a worm 
  "worms" its way through the network from system to system. Some of 
  you might remember the Code Red worm from 2001 that took down major 
  portions of the commercial Internet by hopping from computer to 
  computer. 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/5291>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morris_worm>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_red>

  In the information security field we use many different kinds of 
  firewalls. The most basic is a network firewall, typically a 
  stateful packet inspection firewall, installed in a router. That's a 
  fancy way of saying we use network firewalls that are a little 
  smarter and can track inbound and outbound connections. The way 
  Internet protocols work is that when you make a connection to a 
  remote computer, you do it over a port. These ports are 
  standardized, such as FTP on port 21, HTTP (the Web) on port 80, and 
  SSH on port 22. The remote system needs to communicate back to you, 
  so when you set up the initial connection your computer gives the 
  remote computer an arbitrarily high port number for the return 
  traffic. Otherwise, you would be limited to talking to only one Web 
  site or FTP server at a time. A stateful packet inspection firewall 
  keeps track of all these connections so it can allow traffic back to 
  your system only if you have an open session, on those seemingly 
  random ports that would normally be blocked. 

  Another kind of firewall, the one on our Macs, is a host-based 
  firewall. Since our computers aren't always behind big network 
  firewalls, it makes sense to build a firewall into our computers to 
  protect us from attack as we wander between different networks, 
  something that's increasingly common thanks to laptops. If you 
  connect a laptop to any public network, such as at a wireless 
  hotspot or a hotel, some person or automated program will almost 
  certainly be scanning you.


**The Tiger Firewall** -- In Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger, Apple used a good 
  open-source firewall called ipfw. ipfw is software that sits deep 
  inside Mac OS X and filters network traffic before it makes it to 
  the rest of the operating system, providing the same protection on 
  the road as we have at home. When you opened the Firewall view of 
  the Sharing preference pane in Tiger, that was just a graphical 
  front end to ipfw. Tiger didn't let you adjust the really granular 
  settings without writing your own configuration files, but the 
  available controls were reasonably effective. When you enabled the 
  firewall you could select which network services you wanted to let 
  run. For example, if you had enabled file sharing, the Firewall view 
  would show that file sharing was enabled and that you had to disable 
  it in the Services view. The firewall functioned in a "deny all" 
  mode that blocked everything except ports you specifically enabled, 
  and it offered some advanced options to block all UDP traffic and 
  ignore requests to filtered ports (what's called "stealth mode").

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-11/Tiger-Firewall-view.png>

  This approach wasn't perfect, but was good enough for the average 
  user. It lacked any outbound filtering - a nice feature that lets 
  you lock down your system to ensure that unapproved services on your 
  Mac can't connect to the outside world, and a good technique to help 
  limit attackers or talkative applications. It also lacked 
  application control, a useful feature common in most host firewalls 
  that lets only approved applications talk to the outside world, no 
  matter what port they use. 


**Firewalls in Leopard** -- Leopard still includes ipfw, but it's no 
  longer the default firewall. Instead, Apple has replaced it with a 
  black box - a firewall program that is unknown to security 
  researchers - that behaves a little oddly. From what we can tell, 
  Apple developed the new firewall themselves to add application 
  control. The firewall now lives in the Security pane of System 
  Preferences and has some new options. You now have three options for 
  the firewall: Allow All Incoming Connections, Block All Incoming 
  Connections, and Set Access for Specific Services and Applications. 
  Apple made the decision to move the firewall in an entirely new 
  direction, which isn't necessarily bad, but makes it more difficult 
  to understand what's being filtered, and seems to leave some 
  potential holes open.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-11/Leopard-Security-pane.png>

  The first problem with the Leopard firewall is that it's difficult 
  to tell what the Set Access option does. It starts the new 
  application-level firewall and lists in the Sharing pane any 
  services you've opened, but it doesn't indicate if they are allowed 
  or blocked. There's also no option for you to add your own open 
  services or ports anymore. Instead, you can add or remove individual 
  applications, but not network services. Stealth mode is still 
  available in the Advanced settings, but the UDP blocking, useful to 
  stop port scanning and some other attacks, is gone. 

  Worse yet, when you install Leopard, the firewall is turned off, 
  even if you're upgrading and the firewall was previously enabled. 
  Say what you want about Windows, but the firewall is enabled by 
  default. Finally, the firewall can actually break your applications, 
  which I'll explain more about shortly.

  Further investigation revealed some really strange (for a firewall) 
  behavior. Some applications ask for permission to access the network 
  the first time you use them, like Safari, Firefox, and Cyberduck, 
  while others are ignored, like Colloquy and Twitterrific. If you 
  have a service enabled in the Sharing pane, but select Block All, it 
  still appears open to the outside world when you scan the ports, but 
  you can't connect to it. Some services seem to be open all the time, 
  no matter what you do. If you ever connect to another computer for 
  file sharing, TCP port 88 (for Kerberos authentication) is opened 
  and stays that way until you reboot, no matter what you set on the 
  firewall, even if you enable stealth mode. Bonjour (mDNS) is hidden 
  in stealth mode but available even if you select Block All. Finally, 
  the firewall is a black box - the only way I could learn what was 
  opened or closed was to scan it from the outside using networking 
  tools (such as Nmap, the same tool Trinity used in "The Matrix 
  Reloaded"). Unlike in previous versions of Mac OS X, you can't check 
  settings by looking in a configuration file.

<http://insecure.org/nmap/>

  There's one behavior that caught me completely by surprise and calls 
  for an immediate fix. If you have the firewall set to control 
  applications, those applications that don't already have their code 
  signed are signed by Leopard when they access the network. (Code 
  signing is the process of affixing a digital signature to an 
  application, such that the operating system can tell if the 
  application has been modified by malware, because the application's 
  checksum would no longer match the checksum in the signature.) If 
  the application changes itself while running, as Skype does (and as 
  some other applications do too), it won't match the signature the 
  next time you go to run it and your application won't launch. There 
  are no warnings or errors, and the average user might assume 
  something is seriously wrong with their system. I experienced this 
  myself when I was recording a podcast with Glenn Fleishman: Skype 
  failed to launch; I reinstalled, and it launched. The next time I 
  tried to launch it, Skype failed again, and a reinstall fixed it. I 
  looked in my console and saw a weird error. A quick Google search 
  provided the answer. 

<http://securosis.com/2007/11/01/leopard-firewall-code-signing-breaks-skype-and-other-applications/>

  All of these behaviors are considered "bad" on the whole firewall 
  good/bad scale. Leopard breaks a number of conventions. First, if 
  you select Block All, no network services should be enabled, even if 
  you've turned them on somewhere else. Apple either needs to relabel 
  that setting to "Block All Except...", or change the behavior to 
  block _all_ traffic, especially Bonjour. Application control 
  behavior also needs to be more consistent - having some active 
  applications appear in the settings, but not others, is confusing 
  and could lead to wrong assumptions. I may think I'm only allowing a 
  few applications, when, in reality, all sorts of applications are 
  accepting network connections without my permission. More seriously, 
  Kerberos shouldn't linger on an open port just because you connected 
  to another computer. Having a firewall arbitrarily break approved 
  applications is also unacceptable. Finally, firewall rules need to 
  be user-accessible to allow customized configurations or just to 
  allow the more-advanced users to understand expected behavior.

  I've listed some of the more technical details I've discovered on 
  the firewall on my blog at Securosis.com

<http://securosis.com/2007/11/01/investigating-the-leopard-firewall/>

  These are all problems Apple is perfectly capable of fixing and I'll 
  be surprised if they don't address them sooner rather than later. 
  Until then, I still recommend you activate the firewall in Block All 
  Incoming Connections mode so you don't break applications. If you 
  need to enable file sharing or other remote access, you'll need to 
  either select the Set Access method, or turn your firewall off. One 
  last option is to use ipfw and manually configure firewall rules, or 
  use a GUI tool like the free WaterRoof, and skip the Leopard 
  firewall completely. In WaterRoof, just click Rules Sets to pick 
  your rules, and then go to Tools > Startup Script and install a 
  startup script to run those rules when you reboot.

<http://www.hanynet.com/waterroof/>

  The good news is that I don't know of any active remote exploits for 
  the Mac, and if you have to take the risk you should be OK for now 
  even without your firewall running, especially if you avoid AFP for 
  file sharing and use SMB instead (selectable with the options button 
  in the Sharing preference pane). This isn't ideal, but it does give 
  Apple a little time to fix up the firewall so it protects users 
  without breaking applications.


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/05-Nov-07
------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9292>

**Time Machine** -- How does Time Machine work with several hard 
  disks, and how does it differ from a similar Windows solution? (3 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1589/>


**Desktop pictures in Leopard** -- An early Leopard bug seems to be 
  related to making custom Desktop pictures stick. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1590/>


**Booting separate computers from one drive** -- It's possible to boot 
  Leopard onto both PowerPC- and Intel-based Macs from a single 
  external drive. (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1591/>


**What Classic software is still in use?** Leopard dropped support for 
  Classic applications, but does that really affect many people? And 
  how will people with data in Classic applications migrate it to Mac 
  OS X? (28 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1592/>


**Scanning problems in Leopard** -- One compatibility issue that's 
  arisen with Leopard is operating scanners. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1593/>


**AirPort during installation?** For some reason, the Leopard 
  installer can see and connect to Wi-Fi networks, though actually 
  establishing a connection has led to troubles for some people. (1 
  message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1594/>


**Time Machine: The Good, the Bad, and the Missing Features** -- A 
  reader shares a link to how you can change Time Machine's backup 
  schedule. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1595/>


**Too many text editors, text storage, outliners out there** -- Text 
  is a basic, near-universal medium, and yet there seem to be an 
  infinite number of programs for manipulating it, all with different 
  solutions and synchronization issues. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1597/>


**Six Things I Hate about Leopard** -- Readers respond to Matt 
  Neuburg's article on what Leopard does poorly. (7 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1598/>


**Installing Leopard on an Unsupported G4** -- A reader shares his 
  experience installing Leopard on a PowerPC G4-based Mac that falls 
  outside Leopard's compatibility range. (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1599/>


**Screen Sharing with Leopard Extends to Tiger** -- The capability to 
  share the screen of a Tiger computer to a Mac running Leopard brings 
  up questions of getting it to work through NAT and whether you can 
  control in the opposite direction. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1600/>


**Downgrade new iMac to Tiger from Leopard** -- Is it possible to take 
  a new Mac that came installed with Leopard and downgrade it to 
  Tiger? (5 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1601/>


**Leopard's firewall is broken** -- Although the security features in 
  Leopard look promising, the firewall appears to be a mess in 10.5.0. 
  (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1602/>


**Gmail vs .Mac mail** -- Now that Gmail can handle IMAP messaging, 
  how does it compare to Apple's .Mac email? (6 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1603/>


**Encrypted disk images and Subversion** -- Using an encrypted disk 
  image seems problematic when paired with the Subversion document 
  sharing service. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1604/>


**Apple to Allow Virtualization of Leopard** -- Should Apple extend 
  its license to run virtual copies of Mac OS X 10.5 Server to 
  non-Apple hardware? (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1605/>


**Reporting bugs to Apple** -- Finding bugs in Leopard? Chris Pepper 
  explains how to report them to Apple. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1608/>


**Leopard and AppleWorks** -- Although unsupported, AppleWorks seems 
  to run under Leopard. (6 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1609/>


**Skype and Leopard (with a dash of Time Machine)** -- Another early 
  casualty of Leopard is Skype compatibility (until an update is 
  released, of course). Can Time Machine get an old version back? (4 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1612/>


**Safari 3 update?** When will the release version (instead of the 
  current beta) of Safari 3 be made available to users of Tiger and 
  Windows? (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1613/>


**Spaces & Time Machine, near great features** -- Readers report their 
  experiences with these two new Leopard features, specifically how 
  they operate with Coda and Parallels Desktop. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1614/>


**Leopard Compatibility List Updated** -- In addition to our list of 
  recently updated applications for Leopard, a reader notes some 
  important applications which are not yet compatible. (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1615/>


**Very Odd Wi-Fi Connection problems** -- Odd wireless connection 
  issues prompt suggestions for troubleshooting using different 
  AirPort profiles. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1616/>


**Apple Mail's importing support in Leopard** -- Apple Mail under 
  Leopard can no longer import some other email formats, so if you're 
  still using Claris Emailer or Outlook Express mail, you'd best 
  import their messages before upgrading to Leopard. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1617/>


$$

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