[CentOS] Check integrity or rootkits on remote server?

Tue Jun 13 12:32:03 UTC 2006
Joshua Gimer <jgimer at gmail.com>

I would run an integrity checker like tripwire, one alternative is aide
http://sourceforge.net/projects/aide. If you have another machine at the
same location then you could create an NFS share with read-only permissions
that you could mount and umount only when you are going to perform the
checks, just make sure that the directory on the remote machine has the
right permission set and is in an obscure directory. As far as the root-kit
detection tools, I don't see why you shouldn't run those too.

On 6/12/06, Marco Fioretti <mfioretti at mclink.it> wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> when one has physical access to a computer, he
> can run something like tripwire, with keys and
> checksum on a separate, write-only media, to
> verify the integrity of the system.
>
> What if the system is a remote one (in my case
> Centos 4.3 on a User Mode Linux VPS some hundred
> of KMs from here)?
>
> Does it still make sense to run tripwire remotely?
> If yes, how, since you cannot plug a floppy or USB
> drive in the machine?
>
> What if tripwire was never ran? Does it make sense, on
> a Centos system without physical access, to download there
> and run remotely one of those rootkit detection tools?
> Would its findings be surely accurate?
>
> Generally speaking, how does one handle these issues on
> remote systems?
> Thanks in advance for any comment,
>
> Marco
>
>
>
>
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-- 
Thx
Joshua Gimer
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