securityonion
hardening
securityonion | hardening | |
---|---|---|
7 | 5 | |
2,878 | 1,312 | |
3.9% | - | |
8.8 | 8.9 | |
4 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Shell | Shell | |
- | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
securityonion
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Security Onion on Proxmox with Linux Bridges and LACP Bond
I'm trying to get Security Onion running in my lab on my Proxmox server. I'm having trouble getting my WAN traffic to my SO VM. My WAN comes in on VLAN 100 to my switch and goes to my router (Virtual VyOS on the same physical host). I have a ton of VMs and really don't want to move to OVS if I don't absolutely have to. I found this discussion which included some commands for getting SO working on a Linux bridge, but this didn't work for me. Probably because my environment is different. Does anybody have SO setup this way? If so, how did you do it?
- Do I need to be concerned? Ipinfo.io says the ip adress is from Slovakia.
- Elastic Stack 8.2 and Suricata Integration
- Security Onion 2: #distro de #Linux para la caza de amenazas, la supervisión de la seguridad empresarial y la gestión de registros 💯
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FOSS Deep Packet Inspection Options
https://securityonionsolutions.com/software/ https://github.com/Security-Onion-Solutions/securityonion
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PFsense vs Mikrotik
I have been debating in my head whether to keep my current setup (PFsense on an old laptop) or buy a 'proper?' solution, by this I mean specialised hardware. PFsense has had a few issues like randomly dropping out, but it has been fine for around 4 days now. My question is: Should I buy a Mikrotik HEX S and use the laptop for other things, or not buy a Mikrotik and instead buy a Dell Optiplex 3020 from Ebay and run SecurityOnion (https://github.com/Security-Onion-Solutions/securityonion) or pfELK (https://github.com/pfelk/pfelk) on it.
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SecurityOnion
Community support is here. You can also purchase support from the developers on their website.
hardening
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Security Harden Ubuntu 22.04
Thanks for the link. I’m looking into it now. I also am testing out konstrukoid/hardening on GitHub
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Any tool to check the security of my server?
There is also: https://github.com/konstruktoid/hardening
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Industry Standard Linux Hardening Script [Ubuntu Server]
Are there any Linux(Ubuntu Server in my case) hardening scripts that abides to any well known industry standards. I can only find some scripts on Github like this one - https://github.com/konstruktoid/hardening
- Basic Server Hardening Steps
- Advice on locking down / securing servers?
What are some alternatives?
arkime - Arkime is an open source, large scale, full packet capturing, indexing, and database system.
debian-cis - PCI-DSS compliant Debian 10/11/12 hardening
Malcolm - Malcolm is a powerful, easily deployable network traffic analysis tool suite for full packet capture artifacts (PCAP files), Zeek logs and Suricata alerts.
Android-PIN-Bruteforce - Unlock an Android phone (or device) by bruteforcing the lockscreen PIN. Turn your Kali Nethunter phone into a bruteforce PIN cracker for Android devices! (no root, no adb)
pfelk - pfSense/OPNsense + Elastic Stack
ansible-role-hardening - Ansible role to apply a security baseline. Systemd edition.
nDPI - Open Source Deep Packet Inspection Software Toolkit
How-To-Secure-A-Linux-Server - An evolving how-to guide for securing a Linux server.
core - OPNsense GUI, API and systems backend
PowerDNS - PowerDNS Authoritative, PowerDNS Recursor, dnsdist
AIMOD2 - Adversarial Interception Mission Oriented Discovery and Disruption Framework, or AIMOD2, is a structured threat hunting approach to proactively identify, engage and prevent cyber threats denying or mitigating potential damage to the organization.
ubuntu-hardened-host - Hardened (FIPS) Host for NGINX, Docker, Kubernets, etc