Book Image

Enterprise Cloud Security and Governance

By : Zeal Vora
Book Image

Enterprise Cloud Security and Governance

By: Zeal Vora

Overview of this book

Modern day businesses and enterprises are moving to the Cloud, to improve efficiency and speed, achieve flexibility and cost effectiveness, and for on-demand Cloud services. However, enterprise Cloud security remains a major concern because migrating to the public Cloud requires transferring some control over organizational assets to the Cloud provider. There are chances these assets can be mismanaged and therefore, as a Cloud security professional, you need to be armed with techniques to help businesses minimize the risks and misuse of business data. The book starts with the basics of Cloud security and offers an understanding of various policies, governance, and compliance challenges in Cloud. This helps you build a strong foundation before you dive deep into understanding what it takes to design a secured network infrastructure and a well-architected application using various security services in the Cloud environment. Automating security tasks, such as Server Hardening with Ansible, and other automation services, such as Monit, will monitor other security daemons and take the necessary action in case these security daemons are stopped maliciously. In short, this book has everything you need to secure your Cloud environment with. It is your ticket to obtain industry-adopted best practices for developing a secure, highly available, and fault-tolerant architecture for organizations.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)

SELinux

Most system administrators generally work only with basic Discretionary Access Control (DAC) to control the permission of files and directories. On the operating system that uses DAC, the user can control the permissions of the files, typically via chmod or chown commands.

However, just relying on discretionary access control is not adequate, especially at an enterprise level. There needs to be a more granular refinement in permissions. Let's look into one such use case where DAC will not help:

Every program run by the user inherits all the permissions of the user. There are many programs such as Apache that must run as root user. In such a case, Apache will inherit all the permissions of the root user. Since Apache is a web server and lots of people outside your network will communicate with it to see web pages, if a malicious hacker compromises the Apache process...