The Purpose of This Book


The goal of this book is to give the reader enough information that they may configure a firewall using iptables in Linux. A secondary goal is to educate the reader about system and network security. However, because this isn't a book on system and network security, those topics are indeed secondary even though they do consume a large portion of the book. There are also topics in this book that I haven't seen (yet) in other books to any great degree.

You are reading the third revision of this book and the first revision with a new author, Steve Suehring. Bob Ziegler wrote the original material and also revised the work into its second revision in 2001. Bob did an excellent job and I've built upon his solid foundation to bring you the third revision. In addition, the previous revision had some material contributed by Carl B. Constantine. You'll find Carl's contribution, though updated, in Appendix C of this revision, "VPNs."

I learned much of what I know about Linux security while working at an Internet service provider (ISP), beginning in 1995. Resisting the temptation to recite a "back when I was young" tale, I'll just say that most of what I learned was done with security in mind. It had to be. By definition at an ISP, you must run publicly available services and those services must be available 24x7. Having publicly available services means that there's a constant threat (and frequent execution) of attacks against the network and the systems therein. If we wouldn't have considered security to be central to our operation, we simply could not have ensured the reliability that our customers demanded, nor could we have guaranteed the integrity of the data that we housed. None of this takes into account the general lack of security tools, software, and books like this back in 1995, either.

That background also helps to answer the question "Why Linux?" The answer was and is quite simple: Linux and open-source tools were the only solution when I was tasked with solving these problems. There simply was no other way to provide Internet services with anywhere near the reliability that Linux and open-source software provided. No other operating system provided the same set of reliability and security while at the same time keeping down the Total Cost of Ownership (TCO). The same can largely be said today. With a pure technological decision, Linux wins. Factor in TCO and the picture only gets better for Linux and open-source software, regardless of the results from funded and paid studies. Why Linux? Because it works.




Linux Firewalls
Linux Firewalls: Attack Detection and Response with iptables, psad, and fwsnort
ISBN: 1593271417
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2005
Pages: 163
Authors: Michael Rash

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