Book Image

Mastering Linux Security and Hardening - Third Edition

By : Donald A. Tevault
3.7 (7)
Book Image

Mastering Linux Security and Hardening - Third Edition

3.7 (7)
By: Donald A. Tevault

Overview of this book

The third edition of Mastering Linux Security and Hardening is an updated, comprehensive introduction to implementing the latest Linux security measures, using the latest versions of Ubuntu and AlmaLinux. In this new edition, you will learn how to set up a practice lab, create user accounts with appropriate privilege levels, protect sensitive data with permissions settings and encryption, and configure a firewall with the newest firewall technologies. You’ll also explore how to use sudo to set up administrative accounts with only the privileges required to do a specific job, and you’ll get a peek at the new sudo features that have been added over the past couple of years. You’ll also see updated information on how to set up a local certificate authority for both Ubuntu and AlmaLinux, as well as how to automate system auditing. Other important skills that you’ll learn include how to automatically harden systems with OpenSCAP, audit systems with auditd, harden the Linux kernel configuration, protect your systems from malware, and perform vulnerability scans of your systems. As a bonus, you’ll see how to use Security Onion to set up an Intrusion Detection System. By the end of this new edition, you will confidently be able to set up a Linux server that will be secure and harder for malicious actors to compromise.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
1
Section 1: Setting up a Secure Linux System
9
Section 2: Mastering File and Directory Access Control (DAC)
12
Section 3: Advanced System Hardening Techniques
20
Other Books You May Enjoy
21
Index

Questions

  1. Which of the following would represent a MAC principle?
    1. You can set permissions on your own files and directories however you need to.
    2. You can allow any system process to access whatever you need it to access.
    3. System processes can only access whichever resources MAC policies allow them to access.
    4. MAC will allow access, even if DAC doesn’t.
  2. How does SELinux work?
    1. It places a label on each system object and allows or denies access according to what SELinux policies say about the labels.
    2. It simply consults a profile for each system process to see what the process is allowed to do.
    3. It uses extended attributes that an administrator would set with the chattr utility.
    4. It allows each user to set his or her own MACs.
  3. Which of these utilities would you use to fix an incorrect SELinux security context?
    1. Chattr
    2. Chcontext
    3. ...