Network emulator tool for Linux

I have finally decided to blog about my netem tool that I wrote a couple of months ago.
First, the introductions, netem is a kernel component for controlling QoS, rate control and various network properties that allows you to emulate a network by modifying the kernel’s IP stack’s queue disciplines. You can read more about it here : http://www.linuxfoundation.org/collaborate/workgroups/networking/netem

The issue I had with the netem queue was that it was hard/complicated to use and required a fair bit of reading and understanding of how the Linux IP stack worked in order to even use it properly. I needed an easy to use tool in order to test multiple network properties quickly. I looked around for a tool that would help me with that and only found phpnetemgui which is a very old piece of code, not even compatible with the latest php versions and which requires you to run a server on localhost and give sudo access to the web server… I didn’t like that, so I wrote my own tool for easy netem configuration (thanks to the phpnetemgui code, it was helpful in providing some of the commands).

You can find my netem tool here : http://cgit.collabora.com/git/user/kakaroto/netem.git/

The README has all the information you need in order to use it, so make sure you read it, but let me summarize a bit how it works.
Netem uses a CSV file in which you can set multiple rules, each with its own set of properties (10% packet loss, 5% duplicated packets, 100ms delay with 25ms of jitter, limit bandwidth to 256Kbps, etc..). Each rule has a name and you can have multiple rules with the same name (limit bandwidth to 256Kbps for IP 1.2.3.4, and 512Kbps to IP 1.2.3.5). All these sub-rules with the same name will be considered as being a single rule. You can run netem on an interface, giving it the CSV filename and the name of the rule that you want to activate and it will output all the commands you need to execute in order to emulate the network as specified in the rules from the CSV file.

To actually run the network emulation, just pipe the output to ‘sh’, for example : ./netem eth0 my_rules.csv 256kbps | sudo sh

The reason I did this was to help my colleague Olivier Crete who was working on TFRC (Tcp-Friendly Rate Control) for RTP in Farsight. He needed to be able to emulate various network configurations, change the bandwidth limitations, introduce packet drop, etc.. and see how TFRC would react to make sure that the video/audio stream’s quality stays acceptable and the bitrate calculation adapts correctly to changing network conditions. I’ve also been recently working on HLS (HTTP Live Streaming) support in GStreamer and I’ve used the tool to make sure that the HLS stream correctly adapts to the network bandwidth and switches the bitrate/resolution correctly. This tool has been a great help in doing all these tests, so it’s time now to share it with whoever it might interest.

I’ll conclude with these example outputs for three different rules (taken from the provided test.csv in git) :

  • Limit inbound and outbound bandwidth to 1024Kbps (2 sub-rules)

kakaroto@kakaroto:~/coding/netem$ ./netem wlan0 test.csv 1024kbps
modprobe ifb
ip link set dev ifb0 up
tc qdisc del dev wlan0 ingress
tc qdisc add dev wlan0 ingress
tc filter add dev wlan0 parent ffff: protocol ip u32 match u32 0 0 flowid 1:1 action mirred egress redirect dev ifb0
tc qdisc del dev ifb0 root
tc qdisc add dev ifb0 root handle 1: prio bands 10
tc qdisc del dev wlan0 root
tc qdisc add dev wlan0 root handle 1: prio bands 10
tc qdisc add dev ifb0 parent 1:1 handle 10: htb default 1
tc class add dev ifb0 parent 10: classid 0:1 htb rate 1024kbit ceil 1024kbit burst 0 cburst 0
tc qdisc add dev wlan0 parent 1:1 handle 10: htb default 1
tc class add dev wlan0 parent 10: classid 0:1 htb rate 1024kbit ceil 1024kbit burst 0 cburst 0
tc filter add dev wlan0 protocol ip parent 1:0 prio 1 u32 match ip src 0.0.0.0/0 match ip dst 0.0.0.0/0 flowid 10:1
tc filter add dev ifb0 protocol ip parent 1:0 prio 1 u32 match ip src 0.0.0.0/0 match ip dst 0.0.0.0/0 flowid 10:1

  • A rule to add 100ms of delay with 25ms of jitter using a normal distribution with 25% of correlation

kakaroto@kakaroto:~/coding/netem$ ./netem wlan0 test.csv delay
tc qdisc del dev wlan0 root
tc qdisc add dev wlan0 root handle 1: prio bands 10
tc qdisc add dev wlan0 parent 1:1 handle 10: netem delay 100ms 25ms 25% distribution normal
tc filter add dev wlan0 protocol ip parent 1:0 prio 1 u32 match ip src 0.0.0.0/0 match ip dst 0.0.0.0/0 flowid 10:1

  • A rule that emulates various packet loss, delay, duplication, packet reordering, rate control, for both inbound and outbound connection with IP and port matching (3 sub-rules)

kakaroto@kakaroto:~/coding/netem$ ./netem wlan0 test.csv test1
modprobe ifb
ip link set dev ifb0 up
tc qdisc del dev wlan0 ingress
tc qdisc add dev wlan0 ingress
tc filter add dev wlan0 parent ffff: protocol ip u32 match u32 0 0 flowid 1:1 action mirred egress redirect dev ifb0
tc qdisc del dev ifb0 root
tc qdisc add dev ifb0 root handle 1: prio bands 10
tc qdisc del dev wlan0 root
tc qdisc add dev wlan0 root handle 1: prio bands 10
tc qdisc add dev wlan0 parent 1:1 handle 10: htb default 1
tc class add dev wlan0 parent 10: classid 0:1 htb rate 256kbit ceil 256kbit burst 0 cburst 0
tc qdisc add dev wlan0 parent 10:1 handle 11: netem loss 0.5% 25% duplicate 5% delay 100ms 50ms 25% distribution pareto reorder 1% limit 1000
tc qdisc add dev wlan0 parent 1:2 handle 20: netem loss 0.5% 50% limit 1000
tc qdisc add dev ifb0 parent 1:1 handle 10: netem loss 5% reorder 5% limit 1000
tc filter add dev wlan0 protocol ip parent 1:0 prio 1 u32 match ip dst 1.2.3.4/32 match ip dport 1234 0xffff flowid 10:1
tc filter add dev wlan0 protocol ip parent 1:0 prio 2 u32 match ip sport 4321 0xffff flowid 10:1
tc qdisc add dev wlan0 parent 1:3 handle 30: pfifo
tc filter add dev wlan0 protocol ip parent 1:0 prio 3 u32 match ip src 0.0.0.0/0 match ip dst 0.0.0.0/0 flowid 30:3
tc filter add dev ifb0 protocol ip parent 1:0 prio 1 u32 match ip src 1.2.3.4/32 match ip sport 1234 0xffff flowid 10:1
tc qdisc add dev ifb0 parent 1:2 handle 20: pfifo
tc filter add dev ifb0 protocol ip parent 1:0 prio 2 u32 match ip src 0.0.0.0/0 match ip dst 0.0.0.0/0 flowid 20:2

PSFreedom 1.0 and lots of news!

Hi all,

I’ve wanted to post about PSFreedom for the last 4 days now but everytime there’s something that prevents me from doing so.. there is so much happening that it’s hard to keep up and I’ve been overwhelmed by the reaction!

PSFreedom has seen a tremendous success, it’s been featured on multiple news sites  including Engadget, we’ve had a huge number of ‘fans’ (more like leechers:p) popping up on the newly created IRC channel (#PSFreedom @ irc.freenode.net). Someone (devz3ro) donated a domain and web hosting for our new http://psfreedom.com/wiki website. The number of people who have worked hard to create a beautiful and well organized wiki to keep track of all the ports. The number of  people who have tried (and many succeeded) to port PSFreedom to so many different devices and those who sent me pull requests on github as well as those who simply read my code and reviewed it and decided to comment on my commits so I can improve the code.

Anyways, it has been a tremendous success, real community work and I want to thank personally everyone involved, everyone who helped, whether it be with a small or a big contribution to the project.

Now about the news, I have quite a few… first, a lot of people are asking me how to get this working on the N800 and N810! Well, it’s been working for a few days now, but the mass storage driver was conflicting and made the controller unstable. However, today, drizztbsd contributed a patch that fixes this issue (by killing hald-addon-usb) without modifying any file from your system, so enabling the exploit on the N800, N810 and N900 is all a matter of running the ./psfreedom-enable-maemo.sh script! There is also an easy to use graphical application that should be released today by MohammadAG and a special thank you to Bash who also contributed the PSFreedom logo.

I have also received a ton of requests from people to port this to the iPhone and/or one of their Symbian devices… my answer to that is : RTFM!! In other words, no it is simply *impossible*. It can only be ported to other Linux devices. However, we are close to having it work with IphoneLinux (actually, I just got confirmation a few seconds ago that it’s finally working) as NTAuthority spent countless hours porting it and fixing the controller’s incomplete driver in order to make this work. Once his port is finished, and stable, he will make it available to everyone, so stay tuned and follow the Device compatibility list on the wiki!

Other good news, PSFreedom has been ported to a huge amount of devices already, and the list keeps growing every day! We currently support and have working binaries for not only the N800/N810/N900 but also the Palm Pre, Archos 5 (Generation 6), Archos 5 IMT (Generation 7), as well as, thanks to the work of DocMon in porting PSFreedom to the MSM72K controller, The HTC Desire (Bravo), Nexus One, HTC Dream (G1), HTC Sapphire (HTC Magic 32A/32B), HTC HD2 (running Android), HTC Wildfire and I’ve received confirmation a few minutes ago that it’s been successfully ported to the HTC Evo as well as HTC Diamond. Also, waninkoko recently ported PSFreedom to work on the Dingoo open game console.

For the future, you can expect a lot more devices to be supported, like the iPhone/iPod (Through iPhoneLinux only) as well as the Gp2x Wiz game console, and the huge list of compatible devices available in our wiki. Also note that running the PSFreedom on an Android device isn’t as easy as it is on the N900, you need to flash some nandroid thing, then flash a custom kernel (because Android’s kernel sucks) then run PSFreedom in that environment, then run Nandroid again to restore your system… It is quite complicated but many people are working on making it much simpler to do, the famous AmonRA contacted me and said he started working on building a PSFreedom-compatible recovery image with a menu item to enable/disable the PSFreedom functionality.

There is one last  important bit of news I want to share with you : PSFreedom 1.0 has been released (more like tagged) and it adds support for many devices, the Makefile allows you to build for a specific platform by specifying it as a target, ‘make N900’ or ‘make Desire’ or ‘make Dingoo’ will build it for your needs with the right configuration. Also more importantly, this version will allow you to customize which payload or shellcode you want to send to your PS3 during the exploit. Many people have requested a version that allows you to play backups, while the original release of PSFreedom didn’t allow that, it quickly got patched to allow the backup manager to work. The new release of the PSGroove yesterday also adds 2 system calls that allows user space application to modify the GameOS kernel, and that meant a new payload is available for developers. This version of PSFreedom provides all these payloads and you can choose which one to set by simply copying it to /proc/psfreedom/payload once the module has been loaded. The same also applies to the shellcode.

That’s it for now, there are a ton of other news I’d like to share, but this post is long enough and I’d like to keep some surprises for next time!

Thanks to all for your support!

KaKaRoTo

PSFreedom source code released!

Hi again,

As promised yesterday, I’ve just released the source code for PSFreedom. You can grab it now on github.

If you want to port it to work on another device, then fork the repository and start working, you can send me a pull request once it’s done. See the end of this post for a little howto on porting it to a new device.

I have also decided to remove that video I put yesterday on youtube. I didn’t give the link to anyone, but somehow people found it and it got linked on multiple news sites… that video is useless, hard to watch, and I’m sorry! I’ve made a new video that you can view here :

Since yesterday I’ve been spammed with emails, comments on my blog, PMs and pings on IRC, etc.. and my server even went down (doesn’t seem to be because of high traffic). So I’d like to answer everyone with this FAQ :

Q : What is your relationship with the PSGroove project ?

A: PSGroove was released a while ago while I was already working (about 50% done) on PSFreedom. I had help from Mathieulh and Phire from the PSGroove team, who gave me insight on what the jailbreak does. When PSGroove was released, I read its code to understand what it does and to make sure my code worked in the same way. I copied the descriptors and payload from the code of PSGroove, and I give them credit for what they did, and for what I copied from their project. I set my license to GPL v3 to match theirs, and I gave credits to those who helped me on IRC. However, I say and I insist that PSFreedom is not a port of PSGroove, because I never took their code and ported it to the N900, this is my original work, and I wrote all of its code from scratch. Some of the PSGroove team seem to be in conflict with me because of that, they insist that “if you looked at our code, then it is a without question a port of PSGroove”, and I believe we have two very different understanding of the term ‘port’.

Q : Can/when is it going to work on the iPhone/Symbian/My phone ?

A: PSFreedom is a  Linux driver, so it will only work on Linux-enabled devices.. which means, not on iOS, and not on Symbian, so please stop asking about that!

Q: Will it work on the 770/N800/N810 ?

A: I only did this for the N900, I might port it to other devices, but right now, I cannot give any guarantees to anyone that it will be ported or that it will work on another device… The source code has been released and whoever wants to contribute can go ahead, fork my repository, and send me a pull request when you got something working.

These are linux devices, so yes, it should work, but just like any other device, they use a different controller than the N900, so a little porting will be necessary.

Q: Will it work from a linux PC ?

A: Unfortunately, no, most PCs have a USB controller  that only supports Host mode, but you need Slave mode to be able to make this work.

Q: Can I run backups with this ?

A: At the moment, no, I have used the same payload as PSGroove, which means backups are disabled, although someone already released a version of PSFreedom with backups enabled. In the future, I will hopefully  make the module load any payload at runtime, this way you could choose between different payloads.

Q: Can you make it easier to use ?

A: Me? No.. someone else? Yes.. there is already someone working on a UI for PSFreedom, and it will be available once it’s ready.

Q: What do I need to use PSFreedom on my N900 ?

A: First, you need a N900 (duh) and a PS3 (duh) with firmware 3.41. The N900 should be running the stock kernel (-omap1) not a modified kernel. Then you just need to scp the files to the N900 and run the -enable script.

Q: How much of the source is Nokia N900 specific? Are you using the Linux USB Gadgets library?

A: Very little is N900 specific, I’m using the include/linux/gadget.h if that’s what you mean. See next Q/A for more info.

Q: How hard is it to port it to a new device ?

A: Well, I’ve just separated my code from the N900 specific stuff, so it’s quite easy, there are mainly two functions to write, one to get and one to set the USB address.. two other functions that only return some static result depending on the configuration of the controller (the name of the endpoints, and whether the controller supports high speed or full speed mode).

Read the README file provided with PSFreedom, and check the psfreedom_machine.c file for specifics on what to implement.

Q: How can I port it to a new device.

A: Well, first, you need to figure out what controller your device uses, in the case of the N900, it’s ‘musb’..

Then go to the driver code for that controller (probably in drivers/usb/gadget) and look for ‘SET_ADDRESS’. In the case of musb, it was in drivers/usb/musb/musb_gadget_ep0.c. In there it was setting the address to the USB device, so just copy that code into the psfreedom_machine.c to allow setting the address, and add a similar function to be able to retreive the address.

Then add a function to return 0 or 1 depending on whether the controller supports HIGH, FULL or LOW speed mode (go to usb_gadget_register_driver for your controller, and in the first lines, it should validate the speed argument, it will tell you which ones are acceptable), set LOW speed mode to return TRUE only if FULL speed isn’t available .

Finally, add a function to return the endpoint names.. it will usually be something like ‘epXin’ and ‘epXout’ (where X is the endpoint number), or “epXin-bulk”, etc.. look at how the driver initializes its endpoints or grep for “->name” in the file to find where it sets it…

That should be enough!

Ok this is it for now with the FAQ. Next time, I’ll tell you all about my experience, what problems I encountered and how I fixed them, maybe it will help others!

Enjoy it!

KaKaRoTo

PSFreedom (Jailbreak PS3 with N900) worked, finished and released!

Hi everyone,

As promised, here’s an update on my implementation of the PSJailbreak exploit : IT WORKS!

I made a video to show you, but I suck at making videos, so we can’t really see what’s going…  I’ll do a better one tomorrow.

It’s 9:30 AM here, and I really need to go to sleep, I’ll post more about this tomorrow, and I’ll release the code tomorrow for everyone to enjoy, compile, contribute, read, laugh at, etc…

So here’s the binary release of PSFreedom (thanks to xnt14 for the name) : PSFreedom driver

I would like to thank 3 people in particular who helped me, encouraged me and helped debug with me : NTAuth, philhug and phire (a.k.a phiren) from EFNet.

So here’s how it works.. download the .tar.gz, extract it, copy the files to your n900 (with scp, into /root), then ssh into your N900 and type : ./psfreedom-enable.sh

Then you can follow the usual procedure, unplug the PS3 from power, plug in the N900, connect the power to the PS3, then press power and *quickly* press the eject button… Then just let  the magic happen!

Once you’re done or want to revert back to the normal operation mode of the N900 (or to charge it) run the command ./psfreedom-disable.sh

In the future, we’ll have a nice package to install, a GUI application, I’ll make use of the LEDs  to show you the status of what it’s doing, and i’ll have it auto-revert to mass storage mode, so you can use your N900 not only to enable homebrew but also to store your homebrew!

See you tomorrow! Good night!

KaKaRoTo

Update on PSJailbreak linux kernel (for N900 devices)

Hi all,

For all those who kept bugging me on IRC about “what’s your status” and “when will you release it”, etc.. I’d like to give you a quick status update on my project :

First, this is NOT and I repeat, it’s NOT a port of PSGroove for the N900.. I started my project long before PSGroove was released, and my code has absolutely nothing to do with theirs and we don’t share any code in common. It is NOT a port, it’s a different implementation of the same exploit!
Secondly, it’s going pretty well so far, I finished writing it, all the code is there, and I’m testing it but I’m still getting some issues, for some reason the PS3 isn’t accepting the JIG, I hope I can get this fixed soon, so please, everyone just be patient, I will release it when it’s ready! But the good news is that it’s doable apparently!

For those who read my previous post, here’s an update :

– The kernel OOPS I was getting on linux was because my ‘hub’ was a high speed one, and when a device gets connected, the reply to GetPortStatus ommitted the ‘high speed’ flag in the response.. apparently, a high speed hub can only have high speed devices plugged into it, you can’t plug full speed or low speed devices in a hub, otherwise, your linux kernel crashes! It’s a use case the kernel developers didn’t think of (or didn’t find a way to test it). I will also soon release the code to reproduce that oops so people can look into it.

– I was able to get and set the address on the controller, but I had to add two new functions to the usb-gadget API. This means that you will eventually need to flash your device’s kernel to get advantage of the new functions.

– I figured out how to send a NAK in response to a IN interrupt.. you simply don’t queue anything, the controller apparently takes care of that automatically for you! and I had to read almost all of the controller’s code to figure that one out!

By writing this exploit as a standard linux driver, this means that my module can be used on any other linux-enabled devices.. this means not only the N900, but also the 770, N800, N810, Android phones and future Meego devices. It might need a little porting for some devices though, but it should still work…

That’s it, I’ll keep you informed on how it goes. Hopefully, we’ll soon be able to run homebrew on our PS3 simply by plugging our N900 to it, what a wonderful device it is 🙂

KaKaRoTo

PSJailbreak USB Gadget kernel driver

Hi,

***

For those who don’t want to read a long post, here’s the summary : I’m trying to write a USB gadget driver to make my N900 act as a hub, I don’t know if I can get it to work because the kernel subsystem doesn’t seem to allow me to do it. If someone knows how to get a request’s destination address, or override the usb_gadget_ep0.c SET_ADDRESS, or knows of limitations that would prevent me from making it work, let me know. I also have ‘working code’ for the usb hub now, but it seems that when I simulate a device insertion, my computer’s (not the N900’s) kernel crashes, so I’m a bit stuck.

Read the rest if this article interests you.

***

Some of you already know about the PSJailbreak, for those who don’t, it’s a USB dongle that exploits the PS3 and allows you to run unsigned packages (homebrew).

Some people tried (and some succeeded) to create a ‘cheap’ clone of the dongle by reverse engineering what it does, and rewriting it into some ATMega microcontroller.

My idea was to use an existing programmable linux-based device (my N900) to act as the dongle. So I started looking inside the kernel’s source to understand how I can achieve that. I found that the kernel has a ‘usb gadget’ subsystem for writing gadget drivers (in other words, a driver to make your device act as a slave/peripheral) so I started writing a gadget driver.

I must say it wasn’t an easy task (for someone with ~zero kernel experience) especially considering that the only ‘real’ documentation I found was the undocumented source code of other gadget modules…

Anyways, the PSJailbreak dongle emulates a USB Hub with multiple devices getting connected/disconnected to it, so I tried to write a driver to emulate a USB Hub, I thought that it would be a great idea and useful, since it could be used in order to allow my N900 to be in PCSuite mode *and* mass storage mode at the same time, without having to make that annoying choice everytime I plug it into USB.

Anyways, I first realized that I can’t just insmod/rmmod drivers to emulate a device getting connected/disconnected, because the usb_gadget_register_driver doesn’t allow us to register more than one driver. Ok, makes sense, I can live with that, but this means that I’ll have to modify the kernel to make sure the usb_gadget_register_driver redirects to my hub’s code to simulate the insertion/removal and let my hub driver be the only one registered on the controller. Anyways, for my use case, I thought I can just write all the code for all these ‘virtual devices’ directly into my driver for now.

Second issue I came up with is that the drivers never get a SET_ADDRESS.. that’s handled internally by the kernel (drivers/usb/musb/msub_gadget_ep0.c) which means that even if I say “new device connected”, if the host sends me a SET_ADDRESS, I won’t get it, so I can’t map addresses to my virtual devices… but not only that, but I found no way whatsoever to find what is my current address, or to which address a message is being sent… I suppose it’s all being handled by the usb subsystem.. but I can’t find a “if (destination != self->address) return; anywhere in the code either.. which makes me think that it might be handled by the controller itself.. (since we do receive messages destined to other devices, if we’re connected to a hub, it has to drop those somewhere), but I don’t know, either the controllers don’t let me do what I want, or the kernel’s USB subsystem was never written to allow for USB hubs to be created. I figured that if I could at least simulate a device being connected, I should be able to find out how the kernel would handle the newly received SET_ADDRESS or the requests being received to the virtual device… then maybe I would understand a bit more how to do it and whether or not it’s even possible.

Call it bad luck, but now, whenever I plug my N900 (with my driver module loaded) into my laptop (linux debian, kernel 2.6.32-5), my laptop crashes.. it completely freezes up, the kernel panics, and then I’m forced to reboot it.. I’ve looked at what messages I’m sending/receiving from the N900’s dmesg (yes, the N900 is perfectly fine and doesn’t kernel panic), and I compare it with the USB dump of a generic hub being plugged into the computer, and I see no difference, I’m doing exactly the same! And yet, my kernel segfaults, and now, I’m stuck as I don’t know how to move forward.. I only got a partial stack trace, I know the khubd thread gets the segfault, and that it’s when it’s trying to build a URB…  there also seems to be some error being reported by the power/battery manager or something, so maybe it has something to do with bad/wrong values of self-powered/power needs of the device.. but that’s it…

I went to the #kernel channel on freenode, asked about this issue, asked how to get proper debug/stacktrace, and asked how a usb gadget can know its own address, but noone seems to care/answer/be awake. So that’s why I’m posting this on my blog.. first, to let everyone know what I’m doing and how advanced (or not) I am in the project, but also to ask people for help, if they know of a solution to my problem, let me know in the comments. Please, do not post comments like “I have a PS3/N900/something if you need help testing”… I don’t.

Finally, I’d like to finish by saying that I do not condone piracy. The PSJailbreak is an exploit that jailbreaks the PS3 allowing you to run unsigned code, it opens the door to homebrew and yes, also to piracy, but it’s each individual’s choice to either use it for legal applications or not. It is fair use to be allowed to make backups of your expensive games (and I’ve got about 50+ disc-based games). I’m doing this project only because I like the challenge, I thought it would be a good experience for me to dive a bit into the kernel code, and I found it entertaining. I also wanted to showcase the power of the N900 even more by making it become any usb device I want.. even a PSJailbreak clone, I don’t think anyone has used it in this manner yet.

Thanks for reading!

Update : I got a stacktrace from the kernel crash!

KaKaRoTo

PS3 Hypervisor dumped!

Hi again,

Great news for PS3 owners, The PS3 Dev team from http://ps3news.com (of which I am now a member) has been able to dump the hypervisor’s executables in memory! This was done thanks to a kernel module that I wrote 🙂

My first experience with kernel programming was challenging, fun and very frustrating because of the lack of docs! But thanks to the open source nature of the kernel’s source code, I was able to understand how to properly use the read_proc of the create_proc_entry API, and was able to dump the memory of the hypervisor by giving full access to the memory through a /proc entry.

You can  download the source code of my kernel module from here. I’ve decided to release it under the LGPL license.

Read more about it on the ps3news forums.

p.s.: What this means is that we can now start reverse engineering the PS3’s hypervisor’s code in order to find an exploit or some way to trigger the ability to install custom firmware on the PS3. However, this does not mean that the PS3 is completely hacked.

This exploit was first discovered by George Hotz.

Enjoy! 🙂