-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 All,
I'll try to respond to everything at once... David, I was actually thinking along David's (second post) lines of stepping back for a bit and discussing the overall GOOD/EVIL feeling we all have about the current state of the Honeywall. I'm sure you have a lot of things to talk about after operating roos for a while now... Building applications that people can install on a running OS is something we have all talked about casually in the past. I even took some steps in that direction for roo-1.2 but didn't get there. It would be a LOT of work because there are so many parts and peices in our current setup and it isnt very modular which, once again, begs for the design review discussion... Maybe we're making this [current design] much more complicated than it needs to be? Arthur, CentOS is a logical progression from FC6 but I don't really want to lock anything in until we discuss it a bit more. OS choice for the next "installable" Honeywall should likely be an early discussion topic though. Steve, Infrastructure? I think just some Wiki space to share ideas and post whos doing what to start. What does everyone think? I really want to keep the technology we have to manage minimal for now so it doesnt just end up being wasteland... As more are willing to chip in/maintain it, and we identify the need, we know who to call ;P Thanks again for getting the lists going! Earl On Thu, 21 Jun 2007 05:44:03 -0400 David Watson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >Arthur Clune wrote: >> >> On 21 Jun 2007, at 09:57, David Watson wrote: >> >>> >>> How about setting out the current plan for Honeywall >development now >>> that v1.2 has gone public >> >> David has just beat me to it. Another thing it would be good to >know is >> what you think might need doing to move to CentOS. That might be >a good >> thing for people to get involved in? > >One question to resolve should probably be 'does the honeywall >need to be a full platform or can it just be a bundle of related >applications you drop on a platform of your choice'. This seems to >come >up often enough to merit some consideration. > >Probably jumping the gun slightly here, but IMHO a general >strengths and >weaknesses review of all our current honeynet technology would be >worthwhile, to ensure that we are working on the most important >challenges and delivering what most needs doing, rather than just >ploughing on with a previous path. > >Thanks, > >David > >-- >David Watson >UK Honeynet Project >www.ukhoneynet.org >[EMAIL PROTECTED] >_______________________________________________ >Honeywall mailing list >[email protected] >https://public.honeynet.org/mailman/listinfo/honeywall -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Note: This signature can be verified at https://www.hushtools.com/verify Version: Hush 2.5 wkYEARECAAYFAkZ7HoAACgkQk7+e+4lPSm3BPACePIgQMSyNaxdHiBZzOheXquHq504A n0Pvd4a0SOLWeUGJyWXjKItCyPwW =z9un -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ Honeywall mailing list [email protected] https://public.honeynet.org/mailman/listinfo/honeywall
