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Date:      Thu, 13 Sep 2001 22:25:02 +0100
From:      Brian Somers <brian@freebsd-services.com>
To:        Giorgos Keramidas <charon@labs.gr>
Cc:        hackers@FreeBSD.ORG, brian@freebsd-services.com
Subject:   Re: Checking changes to listening ports in /etc/security 
Message-ID:  <200109132125.f8DLP2d97096@hak.lan.Awfulhak.org>
In-Reply-To: Message from Giorgos Keramidas <charon@labs.gr>  of "Wed, 12 Sep 2001 20:57:43 %2B0300." <20010912205743.A64992@hades.hell.gr> 

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> I've been adding an extra check in my local version of /etc/security for quite
> some time now.  All it does is use 'netstat' to grab a list of the listening
> tcp and udp ports of my machine and save it to /var/log/netstat.today
> (and /var/log/netstat.yesterday).  This way, when some service starts
> and listens on a new port the next run of /etc/security will log the
> fact in the usual stuff sent to root by mail.  I tested this running
> /etc/periodic/daily/450.security twice, and running a local IRC daemon between
> the two runs.  The output that is added to the message root receives looks
> like the following:
[.....]

I like this idea.  I think It would be worth making it diff against 
/dev/null when netstat.today doesn't exist, so that the first time 
this is run on a given machine, you get to see all the ports that are 
open.

[.....]
+[ -n "$ignore" ] && cmd="egrep -v ${ignore#|}" || cmd=cat
[.....]

I think this like is bogus.  In fact, it looks like the 
$daily_status_security_noamd periodic.conf tunable is broken.

Oops !  I'll fix it after your changes go in.
-- 
Brian <brian@freebsd-services.com>                <brian@Awfulhak.org>
      http://www.freebsd-services.com/        <brian@[uk.]FreeBSD.org>
Don't _EVER_ lose your sense of humour !      <brian@[uk.]OpenBSD.org>



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