Book Image

Linux Networking Solutions - Part 2 [Video]

By : Gregory Boyce
Book Image

Linux Networking Solutions - Part 2 [Video]

By: Gregory Boyce

Overview of this book

<p>To begin, you'll find out how to use Samba 4 to create an Active Directory compatible directory service for your network, then you’ll see how to set up file storage. In this section you will learn how several options to explore in order to host your own file storage, including Samba, NFS, and WebDAV.</p> <p>Moving on, you'll learn how to set up an e-mail server, and we'll look at how e-mail works as a service. You'll also set up SMTP and IMAP mail services, and enable spam filtering. Then we’ll configure our own XMPP-based IM service, configure it to communicate with other XMPP services, and configure Pidgin as a client to utilize the service.</p> <p>After that, you'll see how to start monitoring services on your network using Nagios. Then, you'll map out the network so you can discover what is actually there. Finally, you'll discover how to watch over your network through centralized logging and manage an intrusion detection system using Snort.</p> <h2>Style and Approach</h2> <p>This video is packed with practical and a task-based approach that will walk you through building, maintaining, and securing a computer network using Linux.</p>
Table of Contents (7 chapters)
Chapter 3
Setting Up E-mail
Content Locked
Section 2
Setting Up DNS Records for E-mail Delivery
Rather than depending on the A record, you can use one or more MX records with defined priorities that point to A records which may be in or out of the domain you're configuring. - Set up the MX records - Look at the examples of MX records - Check mapping of targets of MX records with A records