On Freitag, 4. Juli 2014, Ricardo Iramar dos Santos wrote:
I did a fresh install of OpenVAS from source following INSTALL files in a
Ubuntu 12.04.4 LTS (AWS server).
Everything looks fine when I ran openvas-check-setup (below I'll paste the
output).
Just to test the installation I created the
Hey,
i tested the oval scan config from greenbones website. But the NVT „Show System
Characteristics“ gathered no informations. The ssh login was possible… Is it
still necessary to install ovaldi on the scanned system?
Then i downloaded the report format for OVAL System Characteristics from
Hey,
i haven´t found any system requirements for openvas, it would be helpful if
there were some on the website.
The only thing i got was on greenbones website, the Security Manager ONE
appliance.
Requirements:
2 CPUs, 2GB Ram and 10GB HD
Is that enough for about 30 scans a day (up to 10
Hi List,
Is there nice way to install openvas 7 on rhel 7? tried using atomic repos,
but with
no success?
Error: Unable to determine distribution type. Please send the contents of
/etc/redhat-release to supp...@atomicrocketturtle.com
Eero
___
2014-07-07 11:50 GMT+03:00 Rene Behring rene.behr...@gmail.com:
Hey,
i haven´t found any system requirements for openvas, it would be helpful
if there were some on the website.
The only thing i got was on greenbones website, the Security Manager ONE
appliance.
Requirements:
2 CPUs, 2GB
2014-07-07 14:05 GMT+03:00 Rene Behring rene.behr...@gmail.com:
What? Well thats more than i thought…
By the Way, i am talking about OpenVAS 6 on a RHEL 6 VM.
What hardware has your RHEL 7 server and where does your knowledge come
from?
Thanks for your fast response ;)
Well, we are
I'm happily scanning hundreds of IPs using a 2GHz 256MByte Arch Linux
Virtual Private Server. Depends on your requirements.
Do you need to run a lot of scans in parallel, or can a scan run lazily all
night?
Do you want to brute force / enumerate logins, or do you just run
discovery scans.
Etc
Am 07.07.2014 13:26, schrieb Eero Volotinen:
Well, we are currently running two physical scanner servers and one very
large amazon instance for our PCI scanners ..
Usually servers are running quad core processor and 32GB to 128GB of physical
memory.
So, it's based on my experiences on
As far as i am testing OpenVAS i didn’t need more then 2GB. But a few day ago
linux killed openvas because it eats to much memory...
I think i will take a quadcore with 4gb ram.
Am 07.07.2014 um 13:31 schrieb Reindl Harald h.rei...@thelounge.net:
Am 07.07.2014 13:26, schrieb Eero
A lot of this really depends on which and how many plugins you use as well
as the size of your target object. You'll potentially see a lot of forked
processes.
FWIW, I have a 4CPU 16GB RAM VM to scan /23 size networks (approx 500
hosts) with virtually all plugins enabled and configured.
-G
Hi Jan,
I checked and there is no erros.
And change the Target to Consider Alive now I got a lot results. :D
Thanks a lot for your support.
Ricardo Iramar
On Mon, Jul 7, 2014 at 3:40 AM, Jan-Oliver Wagner
jan-oliver.wag...@greenbone.net wrote:
On Freitag, 4. Juli 2014, Ricardo Iramar dos
I just installed from the source following this
http://www.openvas.org/install-source.html and I had no problem.
TIP: Install all the deps (including packages -dev) into your system first.
On Mon, Jul 7, 2014 at 6:21 AM, Eero Volotinen eero.voloti...@iki.fi
wrote:
Hi List,
Is there nice way
2014-07-07 21:48 GMT+03:00 Ricardo Iramar dos Santos rira...@gmail.com:
I just installed from the source following this
http://www.openvas.org/install-source.html and I had no problem.
TIP: Install all the deps (including packages -dev) into your system first.
Thanks for the tip, but I
Something to consider:
The number of nasl processes running (if we remove basic control
tasks from the picture) is the number of hosts being scanned at
a time multipled by the number of scripts being executed by the
host.
How you configure the two numbers above will result in drastically
14 matches
Mail list logo