| Red
Hat Enterprise Security 
Course Summary
Red Hat Enterprise Linux has gained considerable
momentum as the operating system of choice for
deploying network services such as web, ftp, email,
and file sharing. RHS333 Red Hat Enterprise Security:
Network Services is an intensive course that provides
four days of instruction and labs on how to to
use the latest technologies to secure your services.
Goals:
RHS333 trains people with RHCE-level competency
to understand, prevent, detect, and properly respond
to sophisticated security threats aimed at enterprise
systems. The course equips system administrators
and security professionals with the skills and
knowledge to harden computers against both internal
and external attacks, providing in-depth analysis
of the ever-changing threat models as they pertain
to Red Hat Enterprise Linux. RH333 builds on the
security skills developed in other Red Hat training
courses so that administrators can design and
implement an adequate security profile for critical
enterprise systems.
Audience:
The audience for this course includes system administrators,
consultants, and other IT professionals responsible
for the planning, implementation, and maintenance
of network servers. While the emphasis is on running
these services on Red Hat Enterprise Linux, and
the content and labs will assume its use, system
administrators and others using proprietary forms
of Unix may also find many elements of this course
relevant.
Prerequisites:
• RH253, RH300, or RHCE certification or equivalent
work experience is required for this course.
• Course participants should already know the
essential elements of how to configure the services
covered, as this course will be focusing on more
advanced topics from the outset.
Duration:
4 days
What you will learn:
RHS333 goes beyond the essential security coverage
offered in the RHCE curriculum and delves deeper
into the security features, capabilities, and
risks associated with the most commonly deployed
services. Among the topics covered in this four-day,
hands-on course are the following:
Course Outline
1. The Threat Model and Protection Methods
o Internet threat model and the attacker's plan
o System security and service availability
o An overview of protection mechanisms
2. Basic Service Security
o SELinux
o Host-based access control
o Firewalls using Netfilter and iptables
o TCP wrappers
o xinetd and service limits
3. Cryptography
o Overview of cryptographic techniques
o Management of SSL certificates
o Using GnuPG
4. Logging and NTP
o Time synchronization with NTP
o Logging: syslog and its weaknesses
o Protecting log servers
5. BIND and DNS Security
o BIND vulnerabilities
o DNS Security: attacks on DNS
o Access control lists
o Transaction signatures
o Restricting zone transfers and recursive queries
o DNS Topologies
o Bogus servers and blackholes
o Views
o Monitoring and logging
o Dynamic DNS security
6. Network Authentication: RPC, NIS,
and Kerberos
o Vulnerabilities
o Network-managed users and account management
o RPC and NIS security issues
o Improving NIS security
o Using Kerberos authentication
o Debugging Kerberized Services
o Kerberos Cross-Realm Trust
o Kerberos Encryption
7. Network File System
o Overview of NFS versions 2, 3, and 4
o Security in NFS versions 2 and 3
o Improvements in security in NFS4
o Troubleshooting NFS4
o Client-side mount options
8. OpenSSH
o Vulnerabilities
o Server configuration and the SSH protocols
o Authentication and access control
o Client-side security
o Protecting private keys
o Port-forwarding and X11-forwarding issues
9. Electronic Mail with Sendmail
o Vulnerabilities
o Server topologies
o Email encryption
o Access control and STARTTLS
o Anti-spam mechanisms
10. Postfix
o Vulnerabilities
o Security and Postfix design
o Configuring SASL/TLS
11. FTP
o Vulnerabilities
o The FTP protocol and FTP servers
o Logging
o Anonymous FTP
o Access control
12. Apache security
o Vulnerabilities
o Access control
o Authentication: files, passwords, Kerberos
o Security implications of common configuration
options
o CGI security
o Server side includes
o suEXEC
13. Intrusion Detection and Recovery
o Intrusion risks
o Security policy
o Detecting possible intrusions
o Monitoring network traffic and open ports
o Detecting modified files
o Investigating and verifying detected intrusions
o Recovering from, reporting, and documenting
intrusions
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