Linux Security Technologies
The continued popularity and rapid growth of open source software in general and the Linux operating system specifically are having a disruptive impact on proprietary software. The disruptive impacts of open source software are so pervasive that they are completely re-ordering the enterprise system strategies in many corporations globally today (Rooney, 2004). With this proliferation of open source software and the foundation being laid by the Linux operating system, there continues to be an urgent and escalating need for new security tools and applications and tools as well. Of the many security applications and tools available for the Linux operating system, the three that will be analyzed and assessed in this paper include chroot jail, iptables and SELinux. The analysis will include which organizations are sponsoring the development of each of these technologies, an explanation of how each of these technologies change the Linux operating system to make it more secure, and which types of threats each of these technologies are designed to eradicate and protect against.
chroot jail Evaluation
Originally designed and first launched in the initial release of Unix Version 7, which was first introduced in 1979, the chroot jail command limits which users have access to the root directories of UNIX. This is critically important from a system administration command standpoint, as the root directory access on a UNIX system can quickly re-order directory structures and en masse delete data and applications. During this timeframe the Berkeley System Division (BSD) UNIX was also very popular, and the vulnerability of root directory access was a very high security priority for commercial, educational and government organizations standardizing on this command. The chroot jail command was quickly integrated into the initial BSD releases due to the high priority customers of this operating system placed on its value...
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