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Jon Goldberg, 11/21/2017 10:33 PM
Inherited Site Security Review¶
This is a checklist of steps to take when inheriting a site that JMA did not build. This list is not comprehensive, and we should add to it over time.
- Reset the passwords of server and CMS (encourage client to do latter)
- Disable unnecessary logins of server and CMS (encourage client to do latter)
- If CiviCRM, check civicrm_contact for API keys. Remove/change them.
- If CiviCRM, check for CiviConnect apps.
- Remove interactive shell login from legitimate server users who don't need a shell.
- Removing all unnecessary public RSA keys for ssh access
- Remove unnecessary software from the server. TODO: Explain how to find this (dpkg -l, ps -ef, etc.)
- Review all running services on the server with service --status-all or (preferably, if using systemd) systemctl
- check listening servers with # netstat -lp
- compare that output to an nmap scan of localhost # nmap -sT -O localhost ** they should line up closely. if nmap shows a port open that netstat does not, run a rootkit checker and investigate further.
- Compare THAT output to an nmap scan from another computer (your own - or a dev server if your ISP blocks some ports): nmap -sT -O www.example.org
- install fail2ban if not already installed. Consider also tripwire and some iptables.
- Check for hacks. While this resource is incomplete, it suffices for now. Despite the name, it's useful for Drupal AND WordPress. Be sure to grep a dump of the database and not just the filesystem.
Updated by Jon Goldberg almost 7 years ago · 1 revisions