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The 42 project Born2beroot explores the fundamentals of system administration by inviting us to install and configure a virtual machine with VirtualBox.

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Born2BeRoot

The 42 project Born2beroot explores the fundamentals of system administration by inviting us to install and configure a virtual machine with VirtualBox.

You can find lots of tutorials how to install and configure your machine, but here I would like to give some examples of the most important questions during the defense of your project and the brief answers to them from my personal notes. Hope it can help you to clarify some points. The following manual is made for 100% project, without bonuses.

When your machine is completely installed and configured, I advise you to directly make the signature.txt file (shasum -> born2beroot.vdi) and then directly zip the whole project folder. Due to undefined behavior of the goinfre folder try to keep the archive of your project on the external hdd or cloud, and unzip it just before the evaluation.


Virtual Machine

Q : The interest and basic functioning of the Virtual Machine ?

A : Virtual Machine is the virtualization / emulation of a computer system which provides the functionality of a physical computer. It can virtually imitate different system architecture, allowing execution of software applications and operating systems written for another CPU or architectures.

Q : The difference between Aptitude and Apt ?

A : Aptitude and Apt are popular tools to handle package management. Both can deal with all kind of activities including installation, removal, search and etc... Aptitude is vaster in performance and integrates functionalities of Apt and its other variants including apt-mark and apt-cache.

Q : What is APPArmor ?

A : APPArmor is an important security module that allows the system administrator to restrict program's capabilities and lock down the vulnerable processes.

Q : How to check the operating system ?

A : hostnamectl


Password Policies and Expiration

Q : How to set password policies and expiration?

A : First step : change password protection policies. Open common-password file : sudo nano /etc/pam.d/common-password, and then add these values into the line:

password requisite pam_pwquality.so retry=3 lcredit =-1 ucredit=-1 dcredit=-1 maxrepeat=3 usercheck=-1 difok=7 enforce_for_root

Password must contain at least one lowercase : lcredit =-1

Password must contain at least one upperrcase : ucredit =-1

Maximum repeat of the same character : maxrepeat=3

Check if the password contains the user name in some form : usercheck=-1 (value should not be zero)

The minimum number of characters that must be different from the old password : difok=7

Same policy for root users : enforce_for_root

Second Step : set the password expiration policy (for new user only). Open login.defs file : sudo nano /etc/login.defs

Scroll down till the following lines :

PASS_MAX_DAYS 9999

PASS_MIN_DAYS 0

PASS_WARN_AGE 7

And change the values to :

PASS_MAX_DAYS 30

PASS_MIN_DAYS 2

PASS_WARN_AGE 7

!!! Remember by doing this step, you will only change the password expiration policy for the new user. To change it for the original user and for the root follow the next step.

Third Step : set password expiration policy for the original user and the root.

To check the password expiration policy, simply use the command chage -l (username). You will notice that all the values are still the same.

To change PASS_MAX_DAYS from 9999 to 30 (as asked in the subject) : sudo chage -m 30 (user name)

To change PASS_MIN_DAYS from 0 to 2 (as asked in the subject) : sudo chage -M 2 (user name)

Now you can do the same for the root.

Q : How to change password for any user ?

A : sudo passwd (user name)


UFW

Q : What is UFW ?

A : UFW (Uncomplicated Firewall) is a network security device that monitors incoming and out going network traffic and permits to block date packets based on a set of security rules.

Q : How to check UFW status/see all the rules/ports ?

A : sudo ufw status

Q : How to add new port/rule ?

A : sudo ufw allow (port number)

Q : How to delete port/rule

A : sudo ufw delete allow (port number)


SSH

Q : What is SSH ?

A : SSH (Secure Shell or Secure Socket Shell) is a network protocol that gives system administrator a secure way to access a computer over an unsecured network.

Q : How to check SSH status

A : sudo systemctl status ssh

Q : How to connect through SSH ?

A : Open iTerm (or any other terminal) and type ssh [email protected] -p (port number) , for the defense port number will be 4242

Q : How to restart SSH ?

A : sudo service ssh restart


Users and Groups

Q : How to check if original user was added to user42 and sudo groups ?

A : getent group user42/sudo

Q : How to create a new user ?

A : sudo adduser (new user name)

Q : How to create a new group ?

A : sudo groupadd (new group name)

Q : How to assign a user to the group ?

A : sudo usermod -aG (group name) (user name)

Q : How to delete a user ?

A : sudo userdel -r (user name)

Q : How to delete a group ?

A : sudo groupdel -r (group name)


Hostname

Q : How to change the host name ?

A : This should be done in 2 steps.

First type : sudo hostnamectl set-hostname (new host name). Then open hosts file : sudo nano /etc/host and change the hostname by simply replacing the line with the hostname. Reboot to apply changes : sudo reboot


Partitions

Q : What is LVM ?

A : LVM (Logical Volume Management) is a form of storage virtualisation that allows a very flexible disk space management. LVM provides a higher level view of the disk storage than the traditional view of the disk and partitions and gives the system administrator much more flexibility in allocating storage to applications and users.

Q : How to check the partitions of the virtual machine ?

A : lsblk


Sudo

Q : What is Sudo ?

A : Sudo (Substitute User and Do) is a program that enables users to run programs with the security privileges of the superuser or any other users.

Q : How to check sudo status ?

A : dpkg -l | grep sudo

Q : How to give or remove sudo for a user ?

A : su - (user name)

Q : Where is sudo.log is located ?

A : cd /var/log/sudo/


Script and Crontab

Q : Where is monitoring.sh is located

A : cd /usr/local/bin/

Q : What is crontab ?

A : Crontab is a long-running process that executes commands at specific dates and time.

Q : How to configurate crontab file ?

A : Open crontab file : crontab -e, and add the following line at the end of the file :

*/10 * * * * /usr/local/bin/monitoring.sh | wall

Q : How to change cron time to 1 minute ?

A : change 10 to 1 :

*/1 * * * * /usr/local/bin/monitoring.sh | wall

Q : How to stop crontab showing script ?

A : add # sign in front of the line :

#*/10 * * * * /usr/local/bin/monitoring.sh | wall


Script Example

Here is an example of the script which was perfectly functional for me:

#!/bin/bash

echo -n '#Architecture: '; uname -a

echo -n "#CPU physical : "; grep -c processor /proc/cpuinfo

echo -n "#vCPU : "; cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep processor | wc -l

echo -n "#Memory Usage: "; free -m | awk 'NR==2{printf "%s/%sMB (%.2f%%)\n", $3,$2,$3*100/$2 }'

echo -n "#Disk Usage: "; df -h | awk '$NF=="/"{printf "%d/%dGB (%s)\n", $3,$2,$5}'

echo -n "#CPU load: "; mpstat | awk 'NR==4 {printf "%.2f%%\n", $6}'

echo -n "#Last boot: "; who -b | awk '{printf "%s %s\n", $3, $4}'

echo -n "#LVM use: "; if cat /etc/fstab | grep -q "/dev/mapper/"; then echo "yes"; else echo "no"; fi

echo -n "#Connexions TCP : ";  netstat -an | grep ESTABLISHED |  wc -l ;

echo -n "#User log : "; who | wc -l

echo -n "#IP : "; hostname -I

echo -n "#MAC : "; ip link show | awk '$1 == "link/ether" {print $2}'

echo -n "#Sudo : "; journalctl -q | grep sudo | grep COMMAND | wc -l

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The 42 project Born2beroot explores the fundamentals of system administration by inviting us to install and configure a virtual machine with VirtualBox.

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