Book Image

Security Automation with Ansible 2

By : Akash Mahajan, MADHU AKULA
Book Image

Security Automation with Ansible 2

By: Akash Mahajan, MADHU AKULA

Overview of this book

Security automation is one of the most interesting skills to have nowadays. Ansible allows you to write automation procedures once and use them across your entire infrastructure. This book will teach you the best way to use Ansible for seemingly complex tasks by using the various building blocks available and creating solutions that are easy to teach others, store for later, perform version control on, and repeat. We’ll start by covering various popular modules and writing simple playbooks to showcase those modules. You’ll see how this can be applied over a variety of platforms and operating systems, whether they are Windows/Linux bare metal servers or containers on a cloud platform. Once the bare bones automation is in place, you’ll learn how to leverage tools such as Ansible Tower or even Jenkins to create scheduled repeatable processes around security patching, security hardening, compliance reports, monitoring of systems, and so on. Moving on, you’ll delve into useful security automation techniques and approaches, and learn how to extend Ansible for enhanced security. While on the way, we will tackle topics like how to manage secrets, how to manage all the playbooks that we will create and how to enable collaboration using Ansible Galaxy. In the final stretch, we’ll tackle how to extend the modules of Ansible for our use, and do all the previous tasks in a programmatic manner to get even more powerful automation frameworks and rigs.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
Free Chapter
1
Introduction to Ansible Playbooks and Roles
5
Automating Web Application Security Testing Using OWASP ZAP

Scheduled scans for file integrity checks, host-level monitoring using Ansible for various compliance initiatives


One of the many advantages of being able to execute commands on the host using Ansible is the ability to get internal system information, such as:

  • File hashes
  • Network connections
  • List of running processes

It can act as a lightweight Host-Based Intrusion Detection System (HIDS). While this may not eliminate the case for a purpose-built HIDS in many cases, we can execute the same kind of security tasks using a tool such as Facebook's osquery along with Ansible. 

osquery

osquery is an operating system instrumentation framework by Facebook and written in C++, that supports Windows, Linux, OS X (macOS), and other operating systems. It provides an interface to query an operating system using an SQL like syntax. By using this, we can perform low-level activities such as running processes, kernel configurations, network connections, and file integrity checks. Overall it's like a host-based...