Scaleway is the world’s first Cloud Computing IaaS platform that offers ARM BareMetal SSD servers, starting at €0.006 on an hourly basis.
Source : Des serveurs dédiés SSD dans le cloud pour tous vos projets | Scaleway
Scaleway is the world’s first Cloud Computing IaaS platform that offers ARM BareMetal SSD servers, starting at €0.006 on an hourly basis.
Source : Des serveurs dédiés SSD dans le cloud pour tous vos projets | Scaleway
Sure, Dropbox is easy to use, but what about alternatives focused on Linux users?
Linux workstation security checklist
This is a set of recommendations used by the Linux Foundation for their systems administrators. All of LF employees are remote workers and we use this set of guidelines to ensure that a sysadmin’s system passes core security requirements in order to reduce the risk of it becoming an attack vector against the rest of our infrastructure.
Even if your systems administrators are not remote workers, chances are that they perform a lot of their work either from a portable laptop in a work environment, or set up their home systems to access the work infrastructure for after-hours/emergency support. In either case, you can adapt this set of recommendations to suit your environment.
This, by no means, is an exhaustive « workstation hardening » document, but rather an attempt at a set of baseline recommendations to avoid most glaring security errors without introducing too much inconvenience. You may read this document and think it is way too paranoid, while someone else may think this barely scratches the surface. Security is just like driving on the highway — anyone going slower than you is an idiot, while anyone driving faster than you is a crazy person. These guidelines are merely a basic set of core safety rules that is neither exhaustive, nor a replacement for experience, vigilance, and common sense.
Each section is split into two areas:
The checklist that can be adapted to your project’s needs
Free-form list of considerations that explain what dictated these decisions
Le malware Mumblehard a ciblé des milliers d’ordinateurs exécutant des systèmes d’exploitation à base Linux et FreeBSD. Principalement des serveurs Web pour cette menace active depuis au moins 2009.
Source : Mumblehard : un malware Linux sous les radars pendant cinq ans
Installation d’OpenMeetings de la fondation Apache.
Plateforme de conférence audio/vidéo, fournissant tableau blanc, t’chat, visionneuse de documents… le tout en ligne.
Sur plateforme SLES 12, recompilation de plusieurs sources dont ImageMagick, sox, ffmpeg pour avoir les bons codecs, swftools…
Installation d’OpenMeetings lui même, sans problème en suivant la page d’explication fournie sur le site. Intégration au LDAP de l’entreprise. Prochaine piste à creuser l’intégration de la VoIP et le raccordement au PABX de l’entreprise.
Attention cependant aux versions de Java sur le serveur et du client FlashPlayer sur le poste client. (galère pour comprendre pourquoi l’upload de document renvoie systématiquement « HTTP-ERROR: 503 » sur mon poste Linux FlashPlayer 11.2.202.452, alors que ça marche sur des postes Windows Win7 avec un FlashPlayer up-to-date…)
Sécuriser WordPress…