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Special Forums Cybersecurity ID Management Security guideline for Linux, AIX, SunOS and HP UX Post 303018583 by blinkingdan on Monday 11th of June 2018 04:22:52 AM
Old 06-11-2018
ID Management Security guideline for Linux, AIX, SunOS and HP UX

I'm searching for COMPREHENSIVE ID management security guideline to manage user administration in my current job. I couldn't find it online or the books that could help.

What I need to know:
  1. User security directories and how to use it.
  2. How user should be managed.
  3. How the standard user policies should be.
  4. How to manage and check sudo logs.
  5. All about root id management.
  6. and many more that I'm suppose to know for ID management Security in corporate companies.

Please help. I really need this badly to set a standard policies and monitoring for my new project for Linux, AIX, SunOS and HP UX servers. We have about 10 000 servers which I need to standardize.

Last edited by rbatte1; 06-11-2018 at 10:56 AM.. Reason: Converted from text numbered list to formatted numbered list with LIST=1 tags
 

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smsd(8) 						      System Manager's Manual							   smsd(8)

NAME
smsd - The SysMan Station daemon SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/smsd OPTIONS
Runs smsd as a daemon. This creates a separate process and redirects output to the smsd log files. DESCRIPTION
The SysMan Station is a client-server application consisting of a daemon (smsd) and the SysMan Station graphical user interface (sys- man_station(8)). The SysMan Station provides the ability to monitor and manage a single system or a TruCluster system. The smsd server is responsible for gathering system management data from the host and presenting that information to the SysMan Station client. SysMan Station management data is collected from the following sources: Desktop Management (DMI) - software related management data Common Hardware - hardware related management data Event Management (EVM) - event data SMS data files - SMS configuration data RESTRICTIONS
You must have root privileges to run this command. EXAMPLES
The following example shows how to run the System Management Station daemon: /sbin/init.d/smsd start FILES
The SysMan Station daemon The directory containing SysMan Station data files SysMan Station log files SEE ALSO
Commands: sysman_station(8) System Administration smsd(8)
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