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The concept behind a fork bomb — the processes continually replicate themselves, potentially causing a denial of service. In computing, a fork bomb (also called rabbit virus) is a denial-of-service (DoS) attack wherein a process continually replicates itself to deplete available system resources, slowing down or crashing the system due to resource starvation.
Should Wikipedia include what errors, etc. come up during a fork bomb? IE: Windows Command Line in Vista states that "The process tried to write to a nonexistent pipe." This usually occurs late in the fork bomb. 24.183.100.243 02:24, 20 January 2009 (UTC) Neither it works in Windows 7 also:
The Rabbit (or Wabbit) virus, more a fork bomb than a virus, is written. The Rabbit virus makes multiple copies of itself on a single computer (and was named " rabbit " for the speed at which it did so) until it clogs the system, reducing system performance, before finally reaching a threshold and crashing the computer.
Microsoft released a version of cmd.exe for Windows 9x and ME called WIN95CMD to allow users of older versions of Windows to use certain cmd.exe-style batch files. As of Windows 8, cmd.exe is the normal command interpreter for batch files; the older COMMAND.COM can be run as well in 32-bit versions of Windows able to run 16-bit programs.
Fork bomb: a similar method to exhaust a system's resources through recursion; Zip bomb: a similar attack utilizing zip archives; XML external entity attack: an XML attack to return arbitrary server files; Document type definition: a template for validating XML files
The initial version of cmd.exe for Windows NT was developed by Therese Stowell. [6] Windows CE 2.11 was the first embedded Windows release to support a console and a Windows CE version of cmd.exe. [7] The ReactOS implementation of cmd.exe is derived from FreeCOM, the FreeDOS command line interpreter. [2]
“You can't just drop a bomb on the Department of Education and turn it into rubble,” says Jonathan E. Collins, a professor of political science and education at Teachers College, Columbia ...
Jerusalem is a logic bomb DOS virus first detected at Hebrew University of Jerusalem, in October 1987. [1] On infection, the Jerusalem virus becomes memory resident (using 2kb of memory), and then infects every executable file run, except for COMMAND.COM. [2] COM files grow by 1,813 bytes when infected by Jerusalem and are not re-infected.