After two major outages in as many weeks — including the CrowdStrike crash — alarm bells are ringing about the world's overreliance on Microsoft. Andrew Chan...
Does Mac OS have an ebpf API like Linux has, or would a similar crowdstrike bug kill a Mac as well? The issue is that windows doesn’t really have a way to do this without a kernel driver, which can take the whole system down if there’s a bug.
This API allows for security applications to monitor for potentially malicious behaviors. As it is part of the System Extension and DriverKit, it shouldn’t crash the system kernel… but you do need to request for entitlement from Apple to build apps using that API (honestly probably a good thing, prevents spywares using it to spy on people).
Does Mac OS have an ebpf API like Linux has, or would a similar crowdstrike bug kill a Mac as well? The issue is that windows doesn’t really have a way to do this without a kernel driver, which can take the whole system down if there’s a bug.
https://developer.apple.com/documentation/endpointsecurity
This API allows for security applications to monitor for potentially malicious behaviors. As it is part of the System Extension and DriverKit, it shouldn’t crash the system kernel… but you do need to request for entitlement from Apple to build apps using that API (honestly probably a good thing, prevents spywares using it to spy on people).
CrowdStrike managed to break Linux systems a few months ago
https://www.theregister.com/2024/07/21/crowdstrike_linux_crashes_restoration_tools/
Linux, windows and MacOS have security APIs to avoid kernel drivers but they also let the user approve 3rd parties to install them still.