Simple answer is because no info exists. There has been no active maint/dev on the Honeywall in a long time. Personally, I finish my Masters program in May of this year and may return to the scene after that.
With a bit of a turn of tide in attack vectors and malware collection / research methods I wonder just how relevant the Honeywall (current functional model) is these days and moving forward? Is it time to re-think the architecture? Is it even worth spending time on? Should we scrap it and spend our time somewhere else? Earl On Fri, Jan 28, 2011 at 12:31 PM, Konrad <kon...@track666.com> wrote: > By the way, I could not find any info about upgrading Honeywall roo-1.4 > software/packages to more recent versions. > A problem is that snort rules are quite outdated and lots of attacks fly > under the radar. _______________________________________________ Honeywall mailing list Honeywall@public.honeynet.org https://public.honeynet.org/mailman/listinfo/honeywall