Solaris 10 Security Essentials

Solaris™ 10 Security Essentials describes the various security technologies contained in the Solaris operating system. The book describes how to make installations secure and how to configure the OS to the particular needs of your environment, whether your systems are on the edge of the Internet or running a data center. The authors present the material in a straightforward way that makes a seemingly arcane subject accessible to system administrators at all levels.

 

The strengths of the Solaris operating system’s security model are its scalability and its adaptability. It can protect a single user with login authentication or multiple users with Internet and intranet configurations requiring user-rights management, authentication, encryption, IP security, key management, and more. This book is written for users who need to secure their laptops, network administrators who must secure an entire company, and everyone in between.

 

The book’s topics include

  • Zones virtualization security
  • System hardening
  • Trusted Extensions (Multi-layered Security)
  • Privileges and role-based access control (RBAC)
  • Cryptographic services and key management
  • Auditing
  • Network security
  • Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM)

Solaris™ 10 Security Essentials is the first in a new series on Solaris system administration. It is a superb guide to deploying and managing secure computer environments.

1101414783
Solaris 10 Security Essentials

Solaris™ 10 Security Essentials describes the various security technologies contained in the Solaris operating system. The book describes how to make installations secure and how to configure the OS to the particular needs of your environment, whether your systems are on the edge of the Internet or running a data center. The authors present the material in a straightforward way that makes a seemingly arcane subject accessible to system administrators at all levels.

 

The strengths of the Solaris operating system’s security model are its scalability and its adaptability. It can protect a single user with login authentication or multiple users with Internet and intranet configurations requiring user-rights management, authentication, encryption, IP security, key management, and more. This book is written for users who need to secure their laptops, network administrators who must secure an entire company, and everyone in between.

 

The book’s topics include

  • Zones virtualization security
  • System hardening
  • Trusted Extensions (Multi-layered Security)
  • Privileges and role-based access control (RBAC)
  • Cryptographic services and key management
  • Auditing
  • Network security
  • Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM)

Solaris™ 10 Security Essentials is the first in a new series on Solaris system administration. It is a superb guide to deploying and managing secure computer environments.

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Solaris 10 Security Essentials

Solaris 10 Security Essentials

by Sun Microsystems
Solaris 10 Security Essentials

Solaris 10 Security Essentials

by Sun Microsystems

eBook

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Overview

Solaris™ 10 Security Essentials describes the various security technologies contained in the Solaris operating system. The book describes how to make installations secure and how to configure the OS to the particular needs of your environment, whether your systems are on the edge of the Internet or running a data center. The authors present the material in a straightforward way that makes a seemingly arcane subject accessible to system administrators at all levels.

 

The strengths of the Solaris operating system’s security model are its scalability and its adaptability. It can protect a single user with login authentication or multiple users with Internet and intranet configurations requiring user-rights management, authentication, encryption, IP security, key management, and more. This book is written for users who need to secure their laptops, network administrators who must secure an entire company, and everyone in between.

 

The book’s topics include

  • Zones virtualization security
  • System hardening
  • Trusted Extensions (Multi-layered Security)
  • Privileges and role-based access control (RBAC)
  • Cryptographic services and key management
  • Auditing
  • Network security
  • Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM)

Solaris™ 10 Security Essentials is the first in a new series on Solaris system administration. It is a superb guide to deploying and managing secure computer environments.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780131365445
Publisher: Pearson Education
Publication date: 11/09/2009
Series: Oracle Solaris System Administration Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 312
File size: 8 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

This book is the work of the engineers, architects, and writers at Sun Microsystems who conceptualized the services, wrote the procedures, and coded the Solaris OS’s security features. These authors bring a vast range of industry and academic experience to the business of creating and deploying secure operating systems. Authors include Glenn Brunette, Hai-May Chao, Martin Englund, Glenn Faden, Mark Fenwick, Valerie Anne Fenwick, Wyllys Ingersoll, Wolfgang Ley, Darren Moffat, Pravas Kumar Panda, Jan Pechanec, Mark Phalan, Darren Reed, Scott Rotondo, Christoph Schuba, Sharon Read Veach, Joep Vesseur, and Paul Wernau.

Table of Contents

Preface xv

About the Authors xix

 

Chapter 1: Solaris Security Services 1

1.1 A Solaris Security Story 1

1.2 Security Services in the Solaris OS 3

1.3 Configurable Security Services in the Solaris OS 5

 

Chapter 2: Hardening Solaris Systems 9

2.1 Securing Network Services 9

2.2 Configuration Hardening 16

2.3 Basic Audit and Reporting Tool 20

2.4 Signed ELF Filesystem Objects 22

2.5 Solaris Fingerprint Database (sfpDB) 23

 

Chapter 3: System Protection with SMF 29

3.1 Service Management Facility (SMF) 29

3.2 How SMF Configuration Works 30

3.3 Modifying Solaris Services Defaults 31

 

Chapter 4: File System Security 41

4.1 Traditional UNIX File System Security 41

4.2 ZFS/NFSv4 ACLs 48

4.3 Maintaining File System Integrity 52

4.4 UFS and NFSv4 Mount Options 57

4.5 ZFS Mount Options 58

4.6 ZFS Delegated Administration 59

 

Chapter 5: Privileges and Role-Based Access Control 63

5.1 Traditional UNIX Security Model 63

5.2 Solaris Fine-Grained Privileges 66

5.3 Solaris Role-Based Access Control 72

5.4 Privileges for System Services 90

 

Chapter 6: Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM) 95

6.1 The PAM Framework 96

6.2 The PAM Modules 96

6.3 The PAM Configuration File 101

6.4 PAM Consumers 106

6.5 The PAM Library 109

6.6 PAM Tasks 110

 

Chapter 7: Solaris Cryptographic Framework 113

7.1 PKCS #11 Standard and Library 114

7.2 User-Level Commands 119

7.3 Administration of the Solaris Cryptographic Framework 122

7.4 Hardware Acceleration 125

7.5 Examples of Using the Cryptographic Framework 127

 

Chapter 8: Key Management Framework (KMF) 133

8.1 Key Management Administrative Utility 134

8.2 KMF Policy-Enforcement Mechanism 139

8.3 Key Management Policy Configuration Utility 140

8.4 KMF Programming Interfaces 142

 

Chapter 9: Auditing 145

9.1 Introduction and Background 145

9.2 Definitions and Concepts 147

9.3 Configuring Auditing 148

9.4 Analyzing the Audit Trail 157

9.5 Managing the Audit Trail 163

9.6 Common Auditing Customizations 165

 

Chapter 10: Solaris Network Security 169

10.1 IP Filter 169

10.2 What Is IPsec? 179

10.3 Solaris Secure Shell (SunSSH) 192

10.4 Configuring SunSSH 194

10.5 OpenSSL 199

10.6 Kerberos 201

10.7 Kerberos in the Solaris OS 204

10.8 Kerberos Administration 207

10.9 Application Servers 215

10.10 Interoperability with Microsoft Active Directory 217

 

Chapter 11: Zones Virtualization Security 221

11.1 The Concept of OS Virtualization: Introduction and Motivation 221

11.2 The Architecture of Solaris Zones 222

11.3 Getting Started with Zones 226

11.4 The Security Advantages of OS Virtualization 229

11.5 Monitoring Events in Zones 236

 

Chapter 12: Configuring and Using Trusted Extensions 239

12.1 Why Use Trusted Extensions? 239

12.2 Enabling Trusted Extensions 240

12.3 Getting Started 241

12.4 Configuring Your Trusted Network 243

12.5 Creating Users and Roles 248

12.6 Creating Labeled Zones 251

12.7 Using the Multilevel Desktop 254

 

Index 261

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