A new security tool developed by Department of Energy engineers is designed to give security and IT administrators the ability to more quickly identify and respond to an issue on the network. . Hone is the brainchild of Glenn Fink, a senior research scientist with the Secure Cyber Systems Group at the DOE The link for this article located at eWeek is no longer available. . Explore how Hone improves network oversight for rapid incident resolution and effective security administration.. Network Monitoring, Cyber Attack Response, IT Security Innovations. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
GroundWork Monitor Community Edition is a free edition of GroundWork Monitor Enterprise, a commercial open source network monitoring solution geared toward large enterprise customers. Free editions often have some limited functionality, but GroundWork Monitor Community Edition offers the visibility a small- to medium-sized network needs by harnessing the power of popular tools such as Nagios, MRTG, NeDi, Ganglia, Nmap, MySQL, and RRDtool. Have you ever used an open source network monitoring tool to keep tabs on your network devices? Check out this free open source application which allows you to integrate popular network tools into a comprehensive network monitoring system. . The link for this article located at linux.com is no longer available. . Discover GroundWork Monitor Community Edition for thorough network oversight utilizing well-known open-source utilities.. GroundWork Monitor, Open Source Tool, Network Monitoring, Community Edition, IT Management. . Brittany Day
Zabbix is an enterprise-class open source distributed monitoring solution for servers, network services, and network devices. It's easier to use and provides more functionality than Nagios or BigBrother. . The link for this article located at Linux.com is no longer available. . The link for this article located at Linux.com is no longer available.. zabbix, enterprise-class, source, distributed, monitoring, solution, servers, network, servi. . Anthony Pell
How can a system administrator monitor a large number of machines and services to proactively address problems before anyone else suffers from them? The answer is Nagios. Nagios is an open source network monitoring tool. It is free, powerful and flexible. It can be tricky to learn and implement, but can reduce enormously the amount of time required to keep track of how your organization's IT infrastructure is performing. . I'll cover the usefulness and architecture of Nagios in part one of this two-part column. In part two, I'll offer configuration examples and advice. To understand the usefulness of Nagios, consider a typical IT infrastructure that one or more system administrators are responsible for. Even a small company may have a number of pieces of hardware with many services and software packages running on them. Larger companies may have hundreds or even thousands of items to keep up and running. Both small and large companies may have decentralized operations, implying a decentralized IT infrastructure, with no ability to physically see many of the machines at all. Naturally, each piece of hardware will have a unique set of software products running on it. Faced with a multitude of hardware and software to monitor, administrators cannot pay attention to each specific item; the default posture in this kind of situation is to respond to service outages on a reactive basis. Worse, awareness of the problem usually comes only after an end-user complains. The link for this article located at SearchEnterpriseLinux.com is no longer available. . Discover Nagios, the free software solution designed to enable IT administrators to proficiently oversee the performance of their technological infrastructure.. Nagios,IT Management,Network Monitoring,System Administration. . Brittany Day
The death knell for intrusion detection is getting louder. Tired of doing full-time monitoring and fending off alerts that 99 times out of 100 mean nothing, enterprises have been ready to shove these expensive network-monitoring products off the proverbial cliff.. . .. The death knell for intrusion detection is getting louder. Tired of doing full-time monitoring and fending off alerts that 99 times out of 100 mean nothing, enterprises have been ready to shove these expensive network-monitoring products off the proverbial cliff. Research firm Gartner Inc. provided another nudge Wednesday when it declared IDS will be obsolete by 2005. Instead, Gartner recommends that businesses invest their security dollars on firewalls that block attacks, rather than alert administrators to them. "The underlying problem with IDS is that enterprises are investing in technology to detect intrusions on a network. This implies they are doing something wrong and letting those attacks in," said Gartner vice president of research Richard Stiennon. "Enterprises investing money to alert them when the next SQL Slammer worm arrives is a waste of money." According to Gartner's Information Security Hype Cycle, intrusion detection has failed to deliver value relative to its costs. Enterprises have been quick to decry IDS for the plethora of false positives it generates, for the voluminous amounts of log data administrators have to pore over and for its inability to monitor at speeds of more than 600 Mbps. The link for this article located at SearchSecurity is no longer available. . Gartner highlights issues related to breach detection mechanisms and endorses the use of security barriers for efficient protection measures.. Intrusion Detection, Firewalls, Network Security Solutions, Gartner Recommendations. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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