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Mastering Linux Security and Hardening

Mastering Linux Security and Hardening

By : Donald A. Tevault
3.9 (7)
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Mastering Linux Security and Hardening

Mastering Linux Security and Hardening

3.9 (7)
By: Donald A. Tevault

Overview of this book

This book has extensive coverage of techniques that will help prevent attackers from breaching your system, by building a much more secure Linux environment. You will learn various security techniques such as SSH hardening, network service detection, setting up firewalls, encrypting file systems, protecting user accounts, authentication processes, and so on. Moving forward, you will also develop hands-on skills with advanced Linux permissions, access control, special modes, and more. Lastly, this book will also cover best practices and troubleshooting techniques to get your work done efficiently. By the end of this book, you will be confident in delivering a system that will be much harder to compromise.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
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Setting up sudo privileges for full administrative users


Before we look at how to limit what users can do, let's first look at how to allow a user to do everything, including logging into the root command prompt. There are a couple of methods for doing that.

Method 1 – adding users to a predefined admin group

The first method, which is the simplest, is to add users to a predefined administrators group and then, if it hasn't already been done, to configure the sudo policy to allow that group to do its job. It's simple enough to do except that different Linux distro families use different admin groups. 

On Unix, BSD, and most Linux systems, you would add users to the wheel group. (Members of the Red Hat family, including CentOS, fall into this category.) When I do the groups command on my CentOS machine, I get this:

[donnie@localhost ~]$ groups
donnie wheel
[donnie@localhost ~]$

This shows that I'm a member of the wheel group. By doing sudo visudo, I'll open the sudo policy file. Scrolling down...

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