Book Image

Linux for Networking Professionals

By : Rob VandenBrink
1 (1)
Book Image

Linux for Networking Professionals

1 (1)
By: Rob VandenBrink

Overview of this book

As Linux continues to gain prominence, there has been a rise in network services being deployed on Linux for cost and flexibility reasons. If you are a networking professional or an infrastructure engineer involved with networks, extensive knowledge of Linux networking is a must. This book will guide you in building a strong foundation of Linux networking concepts. The book begins by covering various major distributions, how to pick the right distro, and basic Linux network configurations. You'll then move on to Linux network diagnostics, setting up a Linux firewall, and using Linux as a host for network services. You'll discover a wide range of network services, why they're important, and how to configure them in an enterprise environment. Finally, as you work with the example builds in this Linux book, you'll learn to configure various services to defend against common attacks. As you advance to the final chapters, you’ll be well on your way towards building the underpinnings for an all-Linux datacenter. By the end of this book, you'll be able to not only configure common Linux network services confidently, but also use tried-and-tested methodologies for future Linux installations.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Section 1: Linux Basics
4
Section 2: Linux as a Network Node and Troubleshooting Platform
8
Section 3: Linux Network Services

The Center for Internet Security benchmarks

CIS publishes security benchmarks that describe the security configuration of any number of infrastructure components. This includes all facets of several different Linux distributions, as well as many applications that might be deployed on Linux. These benchmarks are very "prescriptive" – each recommendation in a benchmark describes the problem, how to resolve it using OS commands or configurations, and how to audit for the current state of the setting.

A very attractive feature of the CIS benchmarks is that they are written and maintained by groups of industry experts who volunteer their time to make the internet a safer place. While vendors do participate in developing these documents, they are group efforts and the final recommendations need the consensus of the group. The end result is a vendor-agnostic, consensus- and community-driven document with very specific recommendations.

The CIS benchmarks are created...