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| OSSEC Host-Based Intrusion Detection Guide | 
| Authors: Andrew Hay, Daniel Cid, Rory Bray Publisher: Syngress Category: Book
List Price: $59.95 Buy New: $40.50 You Save: $19.45 (32%)
Buy New/Used from $40.50
Avg. Customer Rating:   (3 reviews) Sales Rank: 355118
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 416 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.5 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 7.5 x 0.9
ISBN: 159749240X Dewey Decimal Number: 005 EAN: 9781597492409 ASIN: 159749240X
Publication Date: February 18, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description This book is the definitive guide on the OSSEC Host-based Intrusion Detection system and frankly, to really use OSSEC you are going to need a definitive guide. Documentation has been available since the start of the OSSEC project but, due to time constraints, no formal book has been created to outline the various features and functions of the OSSEC product. This has left very important and powerful features of the product undocumented...until now! The book you are holding will show you how to install and configure OSSEC on the operating system of your choice and provide detailed examples to help prevent and mitigate attacks on your systems. -- Stephen Northcutt OSSEC determines if a host has been compromised in this manner by taking the equivalent of a picture of the host machine in its original, unaltered state. This ?picture? captures the most relevant information about that machine?s configuration. OSSEC saves this ?picture? and then constantly compares it to the current state of that machine to identify anything that may have changed from the original configuration. Now, many of these changes are necessary, harmless, and authorized, such as a system administrator installing a new software upgrade, patch, or application. But, then there are the not-so-harmless changes, like the installation of a rootkit, trojan horse, or virus. Differentiating between the harmless and the not-so-harmless changes determines whether the system administrator or security professional is managing a secure, efficient network or a compromised network which might be funneling credit card numbers out to phishing gangs or storing massive amounts of pornography creating significant liability for that organization. Separating the wheat from the chaff is by no means an easy task. Hence the need for this book. The book is co-authored by Daniel Cid, who is the founder and lead developer of the freely available OSSEC host-based IDS. As such, readers can be certain they are reading the most accurate, timely, and insightful information on OSSEC.
.Get Started with OSSEC Get an overview of the features of OSSEC including commonly used terminology, pre-install preparation, and deployment considerations. .Follow Steb-by-Step Installation Instructions Walk through the installation process for the "local", "agent", and "server" install types on some of the most popular operating systems available. .Master Configuration Learn the basic configuration options for your install type and learn how to monitor log files, receive remote messages, configure email notification, and configure alert levels. .Work With Rules Extract key information from logs using decoders and how you can leverage rules to alert you of strange occurrences on your network. .Understand System Integrity Check and Rootkit Detection Monitor binary executable files, system configuration files, and the Microsoft Windows registry. .Configure Active Response Configure the active response actions you want and bind the actions to specific rules and sequence of events. .Use the OSSEC Web User Interface Install, configure, and use the community-developed, open source web interface available for OSSEC. .Play in the OSSEC VMware Environment Sandbox Use the OSSEC HIDS VMware Guest image on the companion DVD to implement what you have learned in a sandbox-style environment. .Dig Deep into Data Log Mining Take the "high art" of log analysis to the next level by breaking the dependence on the lists of strings or patterns to look for in the logs.
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| Customer Reviews:
  The Guide to Doing More with Less October 29, 2008 In these days of tight and/or frozen budgets, utilizing open source applications has become a must for many of us in the security realm. OSSEC is one such "must have" application that will give you visibility and insight into Windows, Mac and Linux machines on your network through the use of this Host Intrusion Detection application. There are many options, architectures and configuration variables and this book is an excellent resource that will guide you whether you are a seasoned professional or just starting to think about deploying host based intrusion detection in your environment. This book is a must have for any security engineer's bookshelf and a quick way to get you on the road to compliance using powerful and FREE software.
  Excellent book on a very powerful open source tool October 27, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I'm surprised no one has offered serious commentary on the only book dedicated to OSSEC, an incredible open source host-based intrusion detection system. I first tried OSSEC in early 2007 and wrote in my blog: "OSSEC is really amazing in the sense that you can install it and immediately it starts parsing system logs for interesting activity." Stephen Northcutt of SANS quotes this post in his foreword to the book on p xxv. Once you start using OSSEC, especially with the WebUI, you'll become a log addict. OSSEC HIDS Guide (OHG) is your ticket to taking OSSEC to the next level, even though a basic installation will make you stronger and smarter.
I have to congratulate the author team for OHG. Writing a book for Syngress with many contributors is usually a recipe for disaster. OHG features three lead authors, four contributors, and one foreword author -- and they don't step on each others' toes. Each of the main chapters was coherent and well-written, with solid Frequently Asked Questions sections at the end. The chapters are well-formatted with a mix of tables, figures, clear screen captures, and plenty of configuration examples. The authors even include a DVD with a ready-to-run VMWare image of a Linux system running OSSEC and the WebUI. Please note the .rtf packaged on the DVD mentions visiting a "osui" directory on the Linux Web server in order to view the OSSEC WebUI. The correct URL is "oswui". The Camtasia videos walking viewers through OSSEC installation are a nice touch for the visually-inclined.
I had very few issues with OHG. I think two of the references to "/tmp" on p 203 should really be "tmp/", i.e., references to the tmp/ directory in the WebUI directory. Upgrading OSSEC is trivial (it detects a previous installation and asks the user how to proceed), but I would have liked to see that process mentioned explicitly in the book.
I appreciated the citation for my first book on p 256, but I think the author (hi Anton) missed a crucial point about Network Security Monitoring (NSM): data makes the expert. A ninja with no data isn't very effective. A newbie with data may not be a ninja, but he/she will be more likely to detect and respond to intrusions than the data-less ninja.
This is a simple review to write. If you use OSSEC, you should buy OHG. You'll learn how everything works, how to move beyond the simple (yet still powerful) out-of-the-free-box OSSEC feature set, and find more suspicious and malicious activity in your enterprise. In a future edition I would like to see discussions of integrating OSSEC with other log tools like Splunk.
  Best book about Intrusion Detection!! March 22, 2008 0 out of 4 found this review helpful
It is a great book. It is very important for system, and security administrators who are responsable for protecting assets in their infrastructure.
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