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Oracle Solaris 11.1 Administration: Security Services Oracle Solaris 11.1 Information Library |
1. Security Services (Overview)
Part II System, File, and Device Security
2. Managing Machine Security (Overview)
3. Controlling Access to Systems (Tasks)
4. Virus Scanning Service (Tasks)
5. Controlling Access to Devices (Tasks)
6. Verifying File Integrity by Using BART (Tasks)
7. Controlling Access to Files (Tasks)
Part III Roles, Rights Profiles, and Privileges
8. Using Roles and Privileges (Overview)
9. Using Role-Based Access Control (Tasks)
10. Security Attributes in Oracle Solaris (Reference)
Part IV Cryptographic Services
11. Cryptographic Framework (Overview)
12. Cryptographic Framework (Tasks)
Part V Authentication Services and Secure Communication
14. Using Pluggable Authentication Modules
17. Using Simple Authentication and Security Layer
18. Network Services Authentication (Tasks)
19. Introduction to the Kerberos Service
20. Planning for the Kerberos Service
21. Configuring the Kerberos Service (Tasks)
22. Kerberos Error Messages and Troubleshooting
23. Administering Kerberos Principals and Policies (Tasks)
24. Using Kerberos Applications (Tasks)
25. The Kerberos Service (Reference)
Part VII Auditing in Oracle Solaris
Rights Profiles for Administering Auditing
Auditing and Oracle Solaris Zones
Audit Policies for Asynchronous and Synchronous Events
The audit configuration files in Oracle Solaris are marked in the package with the preserve=renamenew package attribute. This attribute preserves any modifications you make to the files across updates. For information about the effects of the preserve values, see the pkg(5) man page.
These configuration files are also marked with the overlay=allow package attribute. This attribute enables you to create your own package that contains these files and replace the Oracle Solaris files with files from your package. When you set the overlay attribute to true in your package, the pkg subcommands, such as verify, fix, revert, and so on, will return results on your packages. For more information, see the pkg(1) and pkg(5) man pages.