pam_apparmor
The YaST module openSUSE Leap. Use it to configure security aspects such as settings for the login procedure and for password creation, for boot permissions, user creation or for default file permissions. Launch it from the YaST control center by › . The dialog always starts with the , and other configuration dialogs are available from the right pane.
offers a central clearinghouse to configure security-related settings for
PolKit (formerly known as PolicyKit) is an application framework that
acts as a negotiator between the unprivileged user session and the
privileged system context. Whenever a process from the user session
tries to carry out an action in the system context, PolKit is queried.
Based on its configuration—specified in a so-called
“policy”—the answer could be “yes”,
“no”, or “needs authentication”. Unlike
classical privilege authorization programs such as sudo, PolKit does
not grant root
permissions to an entire session, but only to
the action in question.
POSIX ACLs (access control lists) can be used as an expansion of the traditional permission concept for file system objects. With ACLs, permissions can be defined more flexibly than with the traditional permission concept.
Most users have some confidential data on their computer that third parties should not be able to access. The more you rely on mobile computing and on working in different environments and networks, the more carefully you should handle your data. The encryption of files or entire partitions is recom…
Certificates play an important role in the authentication of companies and individuals. Usually certificates are administered by the application itself. In some cases, it makes sense to share certificates between applications. The certificate store is a common ground for Firefox, Evolution, and NetworkManager. This chapter explains some details.
Securing your systems is a mandatory task for any mission-critical
system administrator. Because it is impossible to always guarantee that
the system is not compromised, it is very important to do extra checks
regularly (for example with
cron
) to ensure that the system
is still under your control. This is where AIDE, the
Advanced Intrusion Detection Environment, comes
into play.