Hi debian fellas
I need to know if there is any software for debian to
detect the presence of backdoors or rootkits. I suspect
that our old debian web server has been compromised.
..Craig
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Hi Craig,
On Thu, Aug 30, 2001 at 09:34:51AM +0200, Craig wrote:
> I need to know if there is any software for debian to
> detect the presence of backdoors or rootkits. I suspect
> that our old debian web server has been compromised.
This is what I would do:
- check running processes: compare '
On Thu, Aug 30, 2001 at 10:11:42AM +0200, Joerg Wendland wrote:
> Hi Craig,
>
> On Thu, Aug 30, 2001 at 09:34:51AM +0200, Craig wrote:
> > I need to know if there is any software for debian to
> > detect the presence of backdoors or rootkits. I suspect
> > that our old debian web server has been
On Wed, 29 Aug 2001, Michael Wood wrote:
> I don't know what "Mandrake SNF" is
Mandrakesoft's Single Network Firewall -- a pre-built template for an
ipchains rules firewall, controlled by a web browser + PHP interface.
$99 with snappy 412 pp manual; or whatever it costs you to download and
burn
I highly recommend the rcf firewall which can be found at
http://rcf.mvlan.net
> On Wed, 29 Aug 2001, Michael Wood wrote:
>
> > I don't know what "Mandrake SNF" is
>
> Mandrakesoft's Single Network Firewall -- a pre-built template for an
> ipchains rules firewall, controlled by a web browser +
On Thu, 30 Aug 2001, Craig wrote:
Specific question:
> I need to know if there is any software for debian to
> detect the presence of backdoors or rootkits.
Specific answer:
apt-get install chkrootkit
HTH
--
Sell your shares in Adobe. Boycott ALL American non-free software.
On Thu, Aug 30, 2001 at 10:58:25AM +, Martin WHEELER wrote:
> On Wed, 29 Aug 2001, Michael Wood wrote:
>
> > I don't know what "Mandrake SNF" is
>
> Mandrakesoft's Single Network Firewall -- a pre-built template
> for an ipchains rules firewall, controlled by a web browser +
[snip]
I see :)
On Tue, 28 Aug 2001, Craig wrote:
>> only thing is its version 1.30
>> whereas if you download the source its 2.01 >
Martin then wrote:
Ah -- OK. Thanks for clueing me in -- I hadn't realised.
Is the difference worth it?
(I.e. what can't-possibly-do-without
goodies am I going to g
Hi!
On my Internet server (running potato and kernel 2.2.19pre), I got a funny
thing happening. The kernel started to spit out errors on the console. I
can't reproduce them, but they are the CPU dump of registers that you get
when unix normally crashes and then halts the machine. I kept get
> Anyone know what causes this or seen this happen before?
I have no idea why but I did have this happen to me running 2.2.19.
Same exact symptoms.
Only thing unusual was that I had patched the kernel to support an
AACraid controller and made some modifications to run Oracle. At the
time I wa
Hi all,
I was wondering if anyone could give me a hint as to how to set up my
dhcpd to issue routing information to clients for a private network.
What I would like to be able to do is have something like this:
option static-routes 192.168.40.0/24 10.0.15.4, 192.168.50.0/24
10.0.15.5;
option
I think it's probably too late for that. The only way to be 100% about your
"disinfected" system is to fdisk it and rebuild from scratch. You can save
your config files and data files, if you're sure they too haven't been
altered. But say somebody relaxed an obscure security setting in some
con
On Thu, 23 Aug 2001, Jordi S . Bunster wrote:
> What can possibly be happening? Sometimes the command
> /etc/init.d/apache restart, or sometimes even ( /etc/init.d/apache
> stop ; sleep 5 ; /etc/init.d/apache start) seems not do release por
> 80.
Before you start it again did you use "ps" to see
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