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Mastering Linux Security and Hardening

Mastering Linux Security and Hardening

By : Donald A. Tevault
4.5 (4)
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Mastering Linux Security and Hardening

Mastering Linux Security and Hardening

4.5 (4)
By: Donald A. Tevault

Overview of this book

From creating networks and servers to automating the entire working environment, Linux has been extremely popular with system administrators for the last couple of decades. However, security has always been a major concern. With limited resources available in the Linux security domain, this book will be an invaluable guide in helping you get your Linux systems properly secured. Complete with in-depth explanations of essential concepts, practical examples, and self-assessment questions, this book begins by helping you set up a practice lab environment and takes you through the core functionalities of securing Linux. You'll practice various Linux hardening techniques and advance to setting up a locked-down Linux server. As you progress, you will also learn how to create user accounts with appropriate privilege levels, protect sensitive data by setting permissions and encryption, and configure a firewall. The book will help you set up mandatory access control, system auditing, security profiles, and kernel hardening, and finally cover best practices and troubleshooting techniques to secure your Linux environment efficiently. By the end of this Linux security book, you will be able to confidently set up a Linux server that will be much harder for malicious actors to compromise.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
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1
Section 1: Setting up a Secure Linux System
8
Section 2: Mastering File and Directory Access Control (DAC)
11
Section 3: Advanced System Hardening Techniques

OpenSSL and the public key infrastructure

With OpenSSL, we can encrypt information on the fly as it goes across the network. There's no need to manually encrypt our data before we send it across the network because OpenSSL encryption happens automatically. This is important because online commerce and banking couldn't exist without it.

The Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) in OpenSSL is the protocol. Ironically, even though we're using the OpenSSL suite of programs and libraries, we no longer want to use SSL. Instead, we now want to use the Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol . SSL is full of legacy code and a lot of vulnerabilities that go along with that legacy code. TLS is newer, and is much more secure. But, even when working with TLS, we can still use the OpenSSL suite.

One reason that the older SSL protocol is so bad is because of past government regulations...

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