Hewlett Packard Joins Up With Bastille Project 40
Jay Beale writes: "We've just recently released Bastille Linux 1.2.0 and it's pretty darn cool! It's now smarter, it's got a pretty new X interface and it works with the new 2.4 firewalling. Bastille shipped by default on Mandrake Linux 8 -- now, Hewlett Packard is helping us develop Bastille functionality for HP-UX. The page is here and the press release is here."
Let 'em eat cake (Score:1)
Re:bastille (Score:3)
So perhaps not the best choice of names...
-dair
Nice interface? (Score:1)
If that's new and pretty, I don't want to even consider looking at old and ugly interfaces. Who designed the Motif widget set anyway? Must have been Stevie Wonder.
Actually, that's Tk... (Score:1)
...which would be Athena. Actually, Athena is so utilitarian that I'm not sure it can even be judged on an aesthetic basis. It's almost orthogonal to beauty.
> Who designed the Motif widget set anyway? Must have been Stevie Wonder.
I'm not sure, but the application in question is using Tk, not Motif. IMHO Tk is less attractive than Motif, which is less than GTK, which is less than Qt. And, truthfully, I'm not just wild about Qt.
Of course, GTK and Qt are themable, so you can tweak them to your liking, assuming that you don't mind the performance hit (not sure how bad it is). Actually, Tk may be themable too, but I've never looked into it.
--Lenny
the great paradigm shift (Score:2)
------------
a funny comment: 1 karma
an insightful comment: 1 karma
a good old-fashioned flame: priceless
Re:Ugh (Score:1)
Ugh (Score:2)
I installed Mandrake 8.0, played with the security levels a bit, and found that it had decided to firewall my machine so that no connections could be made to it. Reasonable enough for a paranoid setup, but switching the security level back to 'low' didn't fix it.
What annoyed me more was that there was no clear explanation of what had happened, so there wasn't an easy way to fix it. (I tried listing iptables/ipchains - nothing.) When stuff like this breaks, you need an obvious config file or two which you can fix by hand. 'man bastille' didn't help, and the files under
Of course this is a problem with 'easy' graphical setup tools in any area, not just Mandrake's version of Bastille. But for security, I'm not sure that this approach is the right one.
It might be better to ship the OS in the most locked-down state by default and the user has to deliberately enable things like connections from the outside. Then at least the vendor would have an incentive to make this stuff robust and easy to set up.
Re:In related news.... (Score:1)
Re:The other Bush, but still interesting (Score:2)
BTW - thanks for the link.
I find the page a bit biased - for example, suggesting that all of the representatives in Congress are cowards for not defending the rights of athiests.
It seems a bit of an exaggeration to suggest 2.2 million atheists have served in the military since WWII. I admit little to back that up, but the author making that assertion offers no backing for his belief in that number. It seems unlikely because the vast majority of Americans claim to be believers in God.
In fact, a majority of Americans (something like 60%) claim to be "born again Christians."
I find this number unlikely, but I can see why congress-people might tend to side with the majority who claim belief in God rather than the minority who assert that He does not exist.
Thanks for the link, and the clarification that it was GHWB and not GWB.
Re:The other Bush, but still interesting -(Way OT) (Score:2)
The percentage of people in the US who identify themselves as Christian is about 85%. Those climing to be born again are about 40% of the country.
Barna Research [barna.org]
BTW - I'd be very interested to hear from you directly about why you feel that "born again" Christians are hokey and participating in a scam. Please email me directly, since this discussion is WAY OT. Respectfully, Anomaly
Re:bastille (Score:2)
--
Re:Wow, I'm good. (Score:1)
"Yes, I'd like to order one of your new Armored Personnel Carriers."
"No, I'm sure you make them, I read it on Slashdot."
Re:Let 'em eat cake (Score:3)
Absolutely: the problem wasn't the building, it was the administration.
(Hint: it might help to read previous Slashdot stories to understand new ones. Context is everything.)
Re:Is there a bitchslapping... (Score:2)
Re:bastille (Score:2)
Re:bastille (Score:2)
Anyway ! only the myth, the legend and symbol, count
In related news.... (Score:2)
Re:Ugh (Score:2)
OpenBSD ships tightly locked down, but Theo and the team aren't trying to sell a product, they are writing an OS for themselves first and foremost, and to anyone who wants a copy, they'll sell ya a dirt cheap cd. But distro's like Red Hat and Mandrake are selling a product to people who want stuff to work, locking a system down causes confusion for the unitiated. It sucks, but you can't just print in the manual that "this is turned off by default" and expect people to notice because we all know, no newbie rtfm's.
Really surprises me that REd Hat 7.1 ships with sendmail locked down to remote connections, if ya know sendmail, its easy to workaround. But for a Linux newbie who wants a mail server for his home...... he had to call me. You start locking systems down and selling a secure distro and all of a sudden, your tech support is flooded by callers screaming that "it doesn't work." Strangely enough, you even get this from fairly expirianced users, because we have come to expect stuff to work right out of the box.
Its a shame really, a side effect of our instant oatmeal, quick fix, now now now society I guess.
Nice but... What's so different (Score:3)
Maybe it's because I've used OpenBSD way too long, and am critical but I feel someone somewhere is missing some key factors when creating these so called "Secure" distro's.
If Woody would have checked his code beforehand... this would have never happened. Remember that Woody Woodpecker cartoon? Well since I've made the switch to BSD's (Open for my site, Free @ home) I've never looked back at Linux.
I will however say kudos to the Bastille team for having some positive news on the Linux side of things, and hopefully more vendors will start supporting, even advocating any version of Nix versus the alternative [microsoft.com]
Hey Mr. Cynic, I take you've never used it (Score:3)
Bastille does you a favor, and asks you if you need certain services or not. Most people don't, and Bastille will turn them off for you. Also, once you've done it, you can duplicate the behavior across your new server farm, saving you Boatloads of time and effort.
Think of it as being the software to lock down your servers by reducing fluff in an easy fashion.
Yes, coders should be "better" and yes, linux providers should be better with coming up with more secure distros, but since they don't, what's the harm in using something that does? For now, Bastille is it.
My one gripe here is that what if you don't want X anywhere near your machine? I guess you're stuck with the clunky curses interface. (eh, well it's really not THAT bad).
All distro's unix'en should do this (Score:2)
Re:Nice but... What's so different (Score:2)
Some people don't run Linux on a network so security isn't a concern for them.
Re:the great paradigm shift (Score:1)
All the companies you listed sell hardware as thier main expertise, I doubt they would even worry about OS at all if a commodity OS would run "just right" on thier hardware. The jump to linux is to get free work done. The price of the hardware in the "enterprise" class doesn't change much based on operating system so you might as well throw on a free one if it does the job.
The paradigm shift is not to "open source is better" but instead to "free OS's make us more money on hardware". I'm not sure if that is good or bad but I guess we will see soon.
Re:bastille (Score:1)
They did pretty well in the first one. Perhaps what you meant to say is that they fell pretty early on in World War II.
Re:It's a crazy idea, but... (Score:1)
====
If all comedy comes out of tragedy, let the killing begin...
Re:the great paradigm shift (Score:1)
I was shocked.
bastille (Score:5)
Re:bastille (Score:1)
Re:Nice but... What's so different (Score:1)
And that's really what one aspect of OpenBSD (of which I'm an avid fan) and Linux+Bastille (whatever) is all about. Secure defaults. Linux distros on their own tend more towards the 'UNIX' tradition of everything and the kitchen sink, on by default, to make installation 'easy.'
Bastille seeks to at least check that the windows and doors are closed. OpenBSD then went one step further and went on with a code audit to ensure that the services and tools that actually have to run (i.e. that aren't 'unnecessary') don't have obvious weaknesses in them. Here Linux obviously lags behind, and here's where the core developers could play a part, and also where OpenBSD has the edge. Note however, that TANSTAAFL, and the Linux core developers may well have other priorites, that preclude them from investing all that time in a code audit. These things are expensive.
I don't have a problem with this, there are niches for all the above solutions, i.e. in order of increasing (potential) security 'plain' Linux, Linux + Bastille, and OpenBSD. There are plenty of people out there with diverse enough security needs, and threats, to have room for them all.
Re:Let 'em eat cake (Score:1)
Or you could say that they've learnt from their namesake, and are focusing on the right thing.
Re:Ugh (Score:1)
Re:The other Bush, but still interesting -(Way OT) (Score:1)
I'd like to know where the %60 came from. While that number may hold true for parts of the South, or the White House, I find it difficult to believe it's as widespread as %60 in the Country as a whole.
But then, given how many Americans can'tfind Asia on a world map, it wouldn't be too suprising if %60 proclaim dedication to this hokey "Born Again" scam.
PS: the obove are my OPINIONS. They ain't fact. Correct them if you can.
It's a crazy idea, but... (Score:3)
How about a Windows port? Actually, a full-scale rewrite would probably be needed. Sure would get used a lot, though, and it'd be yet another foot-in-the-door for the GPL in Microsoft shops, which can only be a good thing.
--
"I'm not downloaded, I'm just loaded and down"
Timothy, broken link (Score:1)
Forgot the colon.
By the way, I think this teaming up of HP/Bastille is great. Both organizations, in my opinion, make great products (I say this as the owner of four HP computers, two routers, two APCs, two ScanJets, etc.) I've never had one fail.
They run 'alternate' OSes quite well, too...
Wow, I'm good. (Score:1)
I do, however, hear that HP's power backups are actually manufactured by APC, so maybe I'm not completely wrong in saying that...
Re:bastille (Score:1)
The other Bush, but still interesting (Score:1)
Yeah, that quote caught my eye too. I did a Google search and found this [holysmoke.org]. And I suppose GB Sr. never figured out how he lost to Clinton...
Re:The other Bush, but still interesting (Score:1)
Are you suggesting that GHWB lost because Mr. Clinton was pro-atheist, and GHWB was anti-atheist?
That whole election is ancient history in my mind, but I don't remember even hearing about that when it happened. I doubt that quote by itself cost him very many votes. It does reflect a certain mindset however that made a lot of people nervous.
Although his statement wasn't offensive to the major monotheistic religions, it was pretty damning towards anybody who falls out of the mainstream. The whole church/state seperation forms a wall at the top of a very slippery slope, comdemning one religion that you don't like is not that far away from condemning others. I too found that paper a tad questionable, but that shouldn't detract from the statement itself.
I don't think I can get any farther off topic here, so I'll bid this thread ado. It's just that I do enjoy interesting discourse where ever I can find it, even in a pseudo religious discussion pretending to have something to do with a project that's Linux related named after a French prison.
Nice name: Bastille (Score:2)
Of course, you can play Rush's Bastille Day while configuring it, so it's not all bad.
Go Dog Go! (Score:3)
In March, my company decided to get in on the Bastille bandwagon, as we thought it was good for us and for our customers. I must say that so far it has been a surprising success... my manager calculates that it'll save us about $25,000 per year - and we're a very small shop!
Of course there are always teething problems, but we have found that the minor and temporary pains are far outweighed by the cleaner, more robust environment.
Highly recommended.