Route manager from writing arbitrary files. * Add patch route-manager-secu-fix-280cd5.patch to prevent the (This message was generated automatically at their request if youīelieve that there is a problem with it please contact the archiveĪdministrators by mailing PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-įlightgear - Flight Gear Flight Simulatorįlightgear (1:2016.4.3+dfsg-1) unstable urgency=high Markus Wanner (supplier of updated flightgear package) Have further comments please address them to the maintainer will reopen the bug report if appropriate. Thank you for reporting the bug, which will now be closed. We believe that the bug you reported is fixed in the latest version ofįlightgear, which is due to be installed in the Debian FTP archive.Ī summary of the changes between this version and the previous one is Which can be embedded in aircraft, which can in their turn be installed by The upstreamĬan certainly be used as is for the version in unstable. ![]() I'm attaching here the patch for FlightGear 3.0.0 as well as the mentionedĭebdiff for completeness and “self-containedness” of this report. ![]() Since all parties have already been contacted, this bug report is mainly for Including an additional fix for build failures I encountered while testing the The second one being more ready-to-use for Debian since it contains a debdiff It is however fixed in the upstream Git repository:Īnd I have backported this fix to FlightGear 3.0.0, i.e., the version shipped October 5, 2009, which largely includes those shipped in Debian stable, ![]() This problem is, AFAICT, present in all FlightGear versions released after Tree to cause the route manager to save a flightplan. Has a security bug allowing malicious Nasal code to overwrite arbitraryįiles the user running FlightGear has write access to, by using the property Recent addition) and in several Linux distributions, the flightgear package Tags: security upstream fixed-upstream patchĪnd reported to people in charge of FlightGear both upstream (of which I am a Once my support for airways and airport procedures is more complete, I will return to the turn-anticipation problem - it's related to other changes in the same area, since airport procedures have more 'difficult' turn requirements than en-route flying.Date: Wed, 09:55:53 +0100 Source: flightgear It's possible (by hacking the source and building your own code) to enable it, *but* there is no point if you aren't running an aircraft with a well-tuned autopilot - in fact it will probably be *worse*! With turn-anticipation enabled, the GPS smoothly adjusts the desired aircraft course from the inbound and outbound legs, over a period of seconds (maybe 10 or 20, depending on some factors).Īs you might guess, there's quite a few things to get right in such code, and I didn't want to hold up the other GPS changes while I found a perfect solution to turn anticipation, so I disabled it. The key problem is the lack of 'turn anticipation', which my new GPS code partially support, but is disabled because it doesn't work reliably. Some of the issues you mention are related to the aircraft autopilot configuration, especially the oscillation when the desired course/heading changes, but some are the 'fault' of the generic code. I've been doing some extensive work on the route-manager and generic GPS code, in the past year. ![]() Thanks!! c.trag427 Posts: 24 Joined: Wed 9:44 pm My question is-how does one fly along a route composed of GPS waypoints (I assume those can only be entered into route manager) in FLIGHTGEAR and fly along them WITHOUT selecting "true heading" so that turns aren't so spastic and shaky? Is there anything that shows the heading needed to fly to reach the waypoint? I know in MSFS there's a RMI-type thing that points to the waypoint. So, to make turns smoother, I tried flying to the heading displayed in "true heading." But then when I tried using the route manager again on autopilot, I noticed it didn't fly the heading displayed in "true heading." However, I've noticed how jerky and sudden the aircraft turns when the autopilot is flying the aircraft from route manager (true heading selected). I enter the waypoints into route manager, hit true heading, and it flies me along my route just fine. I've been doing flights for a while in the 757-200 in fg.
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