Ethical Hacking

Learn to find vulnerabilities before the bad guys do! Gain real world hands on hacking experience in our state of the art hacking lab. Course designed and taught by expert instructors with years of penetration testing experience. 12 student maximum in every class. Certification attempt included in every package.
Computer Forensics Training at InfoSec Institute

Gain the in-demand skills of a certified computer examiner, learn to recover trace data left behind by fraud, theft, and cybercrime perpetrators. Discover the source of computer crime and abuse at your organization so that it never happens again. All of our class sizes are guaranteed to be 12 students or less to facilitate one-on-one interaction with one of our expert instructors.




Network Security Focus-Linux
[Top] [All Lists]

Re: which distribution to choose

Subject: Re: which distribution to choose
Date: Fri, 03 Dec 2004 12:59:22 -0700
Hi,

Two recommendations, depending on your level knowledge and how hands on you 
want to get. Well, actually three, because you can always build one yourself 
from scratch :-)

First, I would recommend taking a look at Devil Linux (www.devil-linux.org). 
It was designed as a firewall/router but now also contains some server 
applications. It boots and runs from CDROM and uses a diskette or USB pen 
drive for configuration storage. No hard drive is required (although one can 
be used) and it provides the functionality you are looking for.

There is an active and helpful support community but if needed, commercial 
support is also available.


Second, If you prefer a distribution you can install with a decent web based 
interface, I would look at IPCop (www.ipcop.org).

HTH

Martin


On December 2, 2004 09:31, Jochen Witte wrote:
Hello,

I would like to set up a firewall to protect a small company network. What
I would like to have is some kind of VPN solution (OpenVPN and ipsec),
iptables firewalling and a secure distribution with some additional
sec-related sofware (tripwire etc.). Also I need to run an Apache for
proxy-requests.

My question is, which distribution to choose for such a
setup. I would prefer a standard distribution for easy updates and
community support. A specific "security-enhanced" distribution would do it
also, if it is not too "pure" :)

Any suggestions?

Regards
Jochen

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>