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Hardening Linux
 
 

Hardening Linux [Kindle Edition]

James Turnbull
5.0 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (1 Kundenrezension)

Digitaler Listenpreis: EUR 28,99 Was ist das?
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Produktbeschreibungen

Kurzbeschreibung

James Turnbull is an IT&T Security Consultant at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia. He is an experienced infrastructure architect with a background in Linux/Unix, AS/400, Windows, and Storage systems. He has been involved in security consulting, infrastructure security design, SLA & support services design, and business application support.

Synopsis

"Hardening" is the process of protecting a system and its applications against unknown threats. Hardening Linux identifies many of the risks of running Linux hosts and applications and provides practical examples and methods to minimize those risks. The book is written for Linux/UNIX administrators who do not necessarily have in-depth knowledge of security but need to know how to secure their networks. In this book, you'll learn how to secure: The base operating system and firewall with iptables Connections to your hosts Fie systems and files Email servers IMAP and POP servers FTP servers A quick reference of the procedures discussed in each chapter are summarized in Appendix C.

Produktinformation

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • Dateigröße: 13236 KB
  • Seitenzahl der Print-Ausgabe: 584 Seiten
  • Verlag: Apress; Auflage: 1 (1. Februar 2005)
  • Verkauf durch: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ASIN: B0040ZN33M
  • Text-to-Speech (Vorlesemodus): Aktiviert
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 5.0 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (1 Kundenrezension)
  • Amazon Bestseller-Rang: #205.167 Bezahlt in Kindle-Shop (Siehe Top 100 Bezahlt in Kindle-Shop)

  •  Ist der Verkauf dieses Produkts für Sie nicht akzeptabel?

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It covers the ground 21. August 2006
Format:Taschenbuch
This book fully covers the ground in securing a Linux system. Hardening Linux by James Turnbull (who also authored Pro Nagios 2.0) packs all you need to know about getting a Linux system secured into a single five-hundred page volume.

Turnbull takes the reader in a fast-paced but very comprehensive fashion through the arduous tasks of closing up the open holes in a Red-Hat or Debian  based Linux distribution, and he covers all major topics which include unlikely candidates such as the virtual terminals on the console, immutable files and capabilities, system logging, rootkits, and penetration detection and recovery.

After reading up on the basics which include users & passwords, Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM), and information on hardening the Linux kernel and the boot loaders, the reader gets an excellent introduction to firewalling with iptables with a whole firewall script for a bastion host in the appendix. That is followed by a full chapter devoted to securing connections with SSL/TLS and remote administration with ssh.

Chapter four is dedicated to securing files and file systems, and includes a section on encrypted file systems to safekeep your data, as well as a walk-through Tripwire. That is followed by a comprehensive look at logging with syslog and syslog-ng, and this chapter includes a discussion and tools related to log analysis and correlation.

NMAP, Nessus and network sniffers make up the bulk of the security testing tools with which Turnbull rightly suggests we check our work after having hardened the basic system. These are covered on fourty pages.

Although Mr. Turnbull recommends Postfix, he covers both that and Sendmail, carefully noting that he doesn't want to contribute to the "my mail server is better than yours" wars. On over fifty pages, the two mail transport agents (MTA) are given careful consideration as to making them as secure as possible. In a further chapter aptly titled Authenticating and Securing Your Mail, the author covers SSL/TLS certificate generation with OpenSSL as well as SMTP authentication (SMTP AUTH) with Cyrus SASL, for both flavors of mail server.

As far as access to mail is concerned, the Cyrus IMAP server is well documented in chapter nine, and the last two chapters guide the reader through securing FTP servers as well as the BIND name server.

Every person responsible for installing a Linux server must read this book! There is of course also detailed information to be gathered from dedicated books which cover the individual subsystems (such as those for DNS & BIND, OpenSSH, etc.), but I strongly encourage every system administrator to have a copy of this excellent book on his or her desk.
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29 von 31 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Much more than I expected 2. März 2005
Von Anthony Lawrence - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Taschenbuch
I thought this might just be a book on iptables and other firewalls, but it's much more. In 400 pages, this covers everything from initial installation right through what to do if you did get breached. It covers email security, ftp,

dns and bind, ssh, file systems, pam authentication, firewalls, penetration testing and more.

The really impressive thing is that everything is covered well - obviously some of these subjects could be hundreds of pages by themselves, but the author manages to succintly present the important concepts.

I'd certainly recommend this to anyone running a Linux box.
26 von 28 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Excellent. Couldn't ask for more. 13. August 2005
Von Lasse Koskela - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Taschenbuch
I haven't run a Linux box since 2002. Some time ago, realizing that I'd soon have a chance to migrate to using Linux for everyday work, I decided I should start refreshing my *NIX commands and shell scripting. Then, I saw "Hardening Linux". Rather spontaneously, I decided to start with this security-focused title instead of the perhaps more intuitive path of installing the latest distro, setting up a bunch of daemons, installing databases, etc. That proved to be an excellent decision. "Hardening Linux" is not a small book. Yet, I read the 500 pages more or less cover to cover. Even though we're talking about a book of which purpose is to help you to secure your Linux server, I felt like I learned more about Linux reading this book than I've learned during the last year at work.

Turnbull kick starts the book by explaining user and group management, basics of the Linux file system security, how to verify downloaded packages, which tools and packages you probably should remove from a production server. By page 50, he had also shown how to compile your kernel with security flags and the Openwall project.

After the rather intense first chapter, the rest of the book's chapters each focus on a certain aspect of a system or a specific product, showing how to secure your system from that particular perspective. Most of these chapters are really top-notch compared to most of the online material I've resorted to in the past. For example, Turnbull presents the most intuitive tutorial on configuring the iptables firewall I've seen so far.

Another excellent description is the chapter on file system security. In my experience, the majority of developers dealing with Linux -- myself included -- don't really know much about Linux file system security beyond the basic file permission attributes. Thanks to chapter 4, I know twice as much about what's possible and what to look out for with regards to file permissions and ownership, and all those mysterious "special" characters that don't have to do with the basic read-write-execute stuff.

The author also covers the topics of syslog (and syslog-ng), secure remote connections (including SSL/TLS and SSH among other things), and gives a broad overview of common security analysis tools such as NMAP, Nessus, Ethereal, and tcpdump. Beyond those I already mentioned, Turnbull has written excellent chapters explaining how to secure your email servers (both sendmail and postfix), putting your FTP server into a chroot jail, and how to set up your DNS server and protect yourself from common attacks such as cache poisoning.

All in all, an excellent book on not just Linux security but also on Linux fundamentals. Highly recommended reading if you're running a Linux box you wouldn't want getting "0wn3d."
10 von 11 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Great topics 3. Mai 2006
Von Michael Stahnke - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Taschenbuch
After reading this book, I think it is going to be the mandatory companion I hand out to new Linux administrators, along with Essential System Administration. The first 6 chapters are exceptional. I can't say enough good things about them. The coverage of PAM is better than anything I have seen. The coverage of authentication, groups, users and best practices surrounding them was very good as well. The logging chapter alone is probably worth the purchase of the book.

After the first section, the book covers more specific topics that are of less interest to me. I realize that a lot of people use email, of all kinds. Chapter 7, 8 and 9 cover email, and I just wasn't that excited about it.

Chapter 10 covered securing FTP, which is nice, and 11 covers Bind. I guess I wonder why some of the topics were chosen. There are whole books on email and bind, available, but there isn't always good material for some other services, like CUPS, maybe some web-based administration tools, or SELinux. The coverage of topics that made the table of contents are very good.

I would say if you are new to Linux Security, or a seasoned player looking for just another reference, this book is great.
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