STIG stands for Secure Technical Implementation Guide. It’s the standard  by 
which the DoD and other government entities measure whether a system, 
application, etc is in compliance with their protocols. SRG stands for Security 
Requirements Guides. They are both way for implementing security changes to 
your systems to keep them secure and compliant.

Leonard Humphries


On Aug 11, 2020, at 2:58 AM, Eliezer Croitor <ngtech1...@gmail.com> wrote:


Hey Leonard,

Can you clarify what do you mean by STIGing and SRG etc..
What are you trying to achieve?
Plain text might make more sense to these who doesn’t understand these terms.

Thanks,
Eliezer

----
Eliezer Croitoru
Tech Support
Mobile: +972-5-28704261
Email: ngtech1...@gmail.com<mailto:ngtech1...@gmail.com>

From: squid-users <squid-users-boun...@lists.squid-cache.org> On Behalf Of 
Leonard Humphries CW
Sent: Tuesday, August 11, 2020 9:02 AM
To: squid-users@lists.squid-cache.org
Subject: [squid-users] WebServer-SRG or Application SRG for Squid?

I have a task of STIGing Squid on CentOS7.  Does anyone have recommended STIG 
checklists or SRG’s for Squid on CentOS7? Also, It is my understanding that if 
Squid isn’t utilizing caching , then it might be better to use the Application 
SRG instead of the Webserver SRG. Does anyone have any insight to this?

Leonard Humphries

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