/mandos/trunk

To get this branch, use:
bzr branch http://bzr.recompile.se/loggerhead/mandos/trunk

« back to all changes in this revision

Viewing changes to intro.xml

  • Committer: Björn Påhlsson
  • Date: 2011-10-02 19:18:24 UTC
  • mto: This revision was merged to the branch mainline in revision 505.
  • Revision ID: belorn@fukt.bsnet.se-20111002191824-eweh4pvneeg3qzia
transitional stuff actually working
documented change to D-Bus API

Show diffs side-by-side

added added

removed removed

Lines of Context:
1
1
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
2
2
<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"
3
3
"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5/docbookx.dtd" [
4
 
<!ENTITY TIMESTAMP "2016-11-27">
 
4
<!ENTITY TIMESTAMP "2011-08-08">
5
5
<!ENTITY % common SYSTEM "common.ent">
6
6
%common;
7
7
]>
18
18
        <firstname>Björn</firstname>
19
19
        <surname>Påhlsson</surname>
20
20
        <address>
21
 
          <email>belorn@recompile.se</email>
 
21
          <email>belorn@fukt.bsnet.se</email>
22
22
        </address>
23
23
      </author>
24
24
      <author>
25
25
        <firstname>Teddy</firstname>
26
26
        <surname>Hogeborn</surname>
27
27
        <address>
28
 
          <email>teddy@recompile.se</email>
 
28
          <email>teddy@fukt.bsnet.se</email>
29
29
        </address>
30
30
      </author>
31
31
    </authorgroup>
32
32
    <copyright>
33
33
      <year>2011</year>
34
 
      <year>2012</year>
35
 
      <year>2013</year>
36
 
      <year>2014</year>
37
 
      <year>2015</year>
38
 
      <year>2016</year>
39
34
      <holder>Teddy Hogeborn</holder>
40
35
      <holder>Björn Påhlsson</holder>
41
36
    </copyright>
77
72
  <refsect1 id="introduction">
78
73
    <title>INTRODUCTION</title>
79
74
    <para>
80
 
      <!-- This paragraph is a combination and paraphrase of two
81
 
           quotes from the 1995 movie “The Usual Suspects”. -->
82
75
      You know how it is.  You’ve heard of it happening.  The Man
83
76
      comes and takes away your servers, your friends’ servers, the
84
77
      servers of everybody in the same hosting facility. The servers
203
196
      </para>
204
197
    </refsect2>
205
198
    
206
 
    <refsect2 id="sniff">
207
 
      <title>How about sniffing the network traffic and decrypting it
208
 
      later by physically grabbing the Mandos client and using its
209
 
      key?</title>
210
 
      <para>
211
 
        We only use <acronym>PFS</acronym> (Perfect Forward Security)
212
 
        key exchange algorithms in TLS, which protects against this.
213
 
      </para>
214
 
    </refsect2>
215
 
    
216
199
    <refsect2 id="physgrab">
217
200
      <title>Physically grabbing the Mandos server computer?</title>
218
201
      <para>
231
214
      </para>
232
215
    </refsect2>
233
216
    
234
 
    <refsect2 id="fakecheck">
235
 
      <title>Faking checker results?</title>
 
217
    <refsect2 id="fakeping">
 
218
      <title>Faking ping replies?</title>
236
219
      <para>
237
 
        If the Mandos client does not have an SSH server, the default
238
 
        is for the Mandos server to use
 
220
        The default for the server is to use
239
221
        <quote><literal>fping</literal></quote>, the replies to which
240
222
        could be faked to eliminate the timeout.  But this could
241
223
        easily be changed to any shell command, with any security
242
 
        measures you like.  If the Mandos client
243
 
        <emphasis>has</emphasis> an SSH server, the default
244
 
        configuration (as generated by
245
 
        <command>mandos-keygen</command> with the
246
 
        <option>--password</option> option) is for the Mandos server
247
 
        to use an <command>ssh-keyscan</command> command with strict
248
 
        keychecking, which can not be faked.  Alternatively, IPsec
249
 
        could be used for the ping packets, making them secure.
 
224
        measures you like.  It could, for instance, be changed to an
 
225
        SSH command with strict keychecking, which could not be faked.
 
226
        Or IPsec could be used for the ping packets, making them
 
227
        secure.
250
228
      </para>
251
229
    </refsect2>
252
230
  </refsect1>
381
359
    </para>
382
360
  </refsect1>
383
361
  
384
 
  <refsect1 id="bugs">
385
 
    <title>BUGS</title>
386
 
    <xi:include href="bugs.xml"/>
387
 
  </refsect1>
388
 
  
389
362
  <refsect1 id="see_also">
390
363
    <title>SEE ALSO</title>
391
364
    <para>
419
392
    <variablelist>
420
393
      <varlistentry>
421
394
        <term>
422
 
          <ulink url="https://www.recompile.se/mandos">Mandos</ulink>
 
395
          <ulink url="http://www.fukt.bsnet.se/mandos">Mandos</ulink>
423
396
        </term>
424
397
        <listitem>
425
398
          <para>