Is 'Old-School' the Wrong Way to Describe Reliable Security?
Posted
by rickramsey
on Oracle Blogs
See other posts from Oracle Blogs
or by rickramsey
Published on Wed, 5 Sep 2012 21:34:25 +0000
Indexed on
2012/09/06
3:44 UTC
Read the original article
Hit count: 523
/Linux
The Hotel Toronto apparently knows how to secure its environment.
"Built directly into the bedrock in 1913, the vault features an incredible 4-foot thick steel door that weighs 40 tonnes, yet can nonetheless be moved with a single finger. During construction, the gargantuan door was hauled up Yonge Street from the harbour by a team of 18 horses. "
1913. Those were the days. Sysadmins had to be strong as bulls and willing to shovel horse maneur. At least nowadays you don't have to be that strong. And, if you happen to be trying to secure your Oracle Linux environment, you may be able to avoid the shoveling, as well. Provided you know the tricks of the trade contained in these two recently published articles.
Tips for Hardening an Oracle Linux Server
General strategies for hardening an Oracle Linux server. Oracle Linux comes "secure by default," but the actions you take when deploying the server can increase or decrease its security. How to minimize active services, lock down network services, and many other tips. By Ginny Henningsen, James Morris and Lenz Grimmer.
Tips for Securing an Oracle Linux Environment
System logging withlogwatch
and process accounting withpsacct
can help detect intrusion attempts and determine whether a system has been compromised. So can using the RPM package manager to verifying the integrity of installed software. These and other tools are described in this second article, which takes a wider perspective and gives you tips for securing your entire Oracle Linux environment. Also by the crack team of Ginny Henningsen, James Morris and Lenz Grimmer.
- Rick
Website | Newsletter |
© Oracle Blogs or respective owner