>> > | The list so far: >> > | a. Apache >> > | b. PHP >> > | c. Sendmail >> > | d. Qmail >> > | e. postfix >> > | f. MySQL >> > | g. Samba >> > | h. Squid >> > | i. LDAP >> > | j. Snort >> > | k. TCPDUMP >> > | l. Ethereal >> > | m. FreeSWAN >> > | n. NetCat >> > | o. Spam Assassin >> > | p. BIND >> > djbdns? >> > | q. Kerberos >> > | r. NMAP >> > | s. Nessus >> > tripwire? >> > Kernel Security Patches(grsecurity,lids,openwall)? > LSM ? SELinux and SubDomain use it, I think. > NFS ? > DHCP ?
Agreed... > telnet, rsh ? Too obsolete ? For telnet, It makes me think of TCP wrappers, and pointing out plaintext transport issues. Are people still crazy enough to use RSH on Linux? I suppose it would be good to cover it and see. I suppose if you were in a big NIS shop or something... > wu-ftpd, vsftpd ? Sure... (never used vsftpd, but a couple FTP daemons in the mix would be good, especially topics like how to set up ftp-only accounts by changing the shell, putting them in sandboxes, etc.) > By the way, at first I thought 'L3-Security' means > 'Layer3-Securiy' like 'Layer 3 switch'. (^o^) > Why not 'Lv3-Security', please ? Fine by me. We can "switch" to Lvl3-Security :) _______________________________________________ lpi-examdev mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://list.lpi.org/mailman/listinfo/lpi-examdev