Radmind

Radmind is a suite of Unix command-line tools and an application server designed to remotely administer the file systems of multiple client machines.[1][2]

Radmind
Developer(s)Research Systems Unix Group at the University of Michigan
Stable release
1.14.1 / December 13, 2010
Repository
Operating systemUNIX, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows
TypeSecurity (tripwire), file management
WebsiteAt U. Mich, at GitHub, at Sourceforge

For Mac OS X, there is a graphical user interface called Radmind Assistant, as well as a GUI for the Radmind server called Radmind Server Manager.[3]

Radmind was the 2003 Apple Design Awards runner-up for Best Mac OS X Server Solution.[4]

Radmind is developed by the Research Systems Unix Group at the University of Michigan.

How Radmind Works

Radmind operates as a tripwire, detecting changes in a client's filesystem (and, in the case of Microsoft Windows, the registry) and reversing the changes.[5][6][7] Radmind stores filesystem specifications in text files called transcripts, signified with a .T extension. Transcripts are referenced from command files, signified with a .K extension, which specify which transcripts (and with what precedence) should be applied to a client machine's filesystem.

Suite of tools

The radmind suite of tools comprises

  • ktcheck, which updates the locally stored command files and transcripts to match those on the server.
  • fsdiff, which checks the client filesystem against the transcripts on the local system without using network bandwidth.
  • lapply, which updates the client filesystem to match the transcripts, downloading files as needed.
  • lcreate, which uploads new transcripts to the server.
  • lcksum, which verifies uploaded transcripts.
  • lfdiff, which compares local files with copies on Radmind server.
  • lmerge, which combines transcripts on the server.
  • ra.sh , which automates the update process using ktcheck, fsdiff, and lapply.
  • twhich, which returns which transcript(s) a file is referenced in.
  • applefile, which allows Radmind to work with AppleSingle files.
gollark: Great!
gollark: I was looking at things, and they make some good-sounding claims, except they seem unreasonably good.
gollark: Ah, Lemmmy. Have you heard of "VictoriaMetrics" at all?
gollark: Why not just watch things in 480p and run superresolution neural networks in your head? Much cheaper.
gollark: It's available for free on the BBC iPlayerâ„¢.

References

  1. Kevin M. White (16 April 2010). Apple Training Series: Mac OS X Deployment v10.5. Pearson Education. p. 472. ISBN 978-0-13-208942-5.
  2. Schoun Regan editor; David Pugh editor (5 June 2006). Apple Training Series: Mac OS X 10.4 System Administration Reference. Pearson Education. p. 426. ISBN 978-0-13-279791-7.
  3. Michael Bartosh; Ryan Faas (24 May 2005). Essential Mac OS X Panther Server Administration: Integrating Mac OS X Server into Heterogeneous Networks. "O'Reilly Media, Inc.". pp. 74–75. ISBN 978-0-596-55060-8.
  4. "WWDC: Apple announces Design Awards". MacWorld. Retrieved 13 February 2014.
  5. Noah Gift; Jeremy Jones (8 December 2008). Python for Unix and Linux System Administration. O'Reilly Germany. p. 244. ISBN 978-0-596-51582-9.
  6. Edward Marczak; Greg Neagle (18 August 2010). Enterprise Mac Managed Preferences. Apress. p. 146. ISBN 978-1-4302-2937-7.
  7. Al-Sakib Khan Pathan (29 January 2014). The State of the Art in Intrusion Prevention and Detection. CRC Press. p. 41. ISBN 978-1-4822-0351-6.
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