Tiger (security software)

Tiger is a security software for Unix-like computer operating systems. It can be used both as a security audit tool and a host-based intrusion detection system and supports multiple UNIX platforms. Tiger is free under the GPL license and unlike other tools, it needs only of POSIX tools, and is written entirely in shell language.

Tiger Security Tool
Developer(s)Javier Fernández-Sanguino
Initial release1994
Stable release
3.2.3 / March 3, 2010 (2010-03-03)
Operating systemUnix, Linux, Solaris
Available inEnglish
TypeSecurity Audit, Intrusion Detection System
LicenseGPL
Websitehttp://www.nongnu.org/tiger/

Tiger is based on a set of modular scripts that can be run either together or independently to check different aspects of a UNIX system including the review of:

  • available patches not installed
  • filesystem permissions
  • dormant users
  • specific configuration of system files

History

Tiger was originally developed by Douglas Lee Schales, Dave K. Hess, Khalid Warraich, and Dave R. Safford in 1992 at Texas A&M University.[1] [2] The tool was originally developed to provide a check of UNIX systems on the A&M campus that had to be accessed from off campus and, consequently, required clearance through the network security measures set in place. It was developed after a coordinated attack in August 1992 to computers in the campus. The campus system administrators needed something that any user could use to test the system's security and run if they could figure out how to get it down to their machines. The tool was presented in the Fourth USENIX Security Symposium. It was written at the same time that other auditing tools such as COPS, SATAN and Internet Security Scanner were written. Eventually, after the 2.2.4 version, which was released in 1994, development of Tiger stalled.[3]

Three different forks evolved after Tiger: TARA (developed by Advanced Research Computing Tiger Analytical Research Assistant), one internally developed by the HP corporation by Bryan Gartner and the last one developed for the Debian GNU/Linux distribution by Javier Fernández-Sanguino (current upstream maintainer). All the forks aimed at making Tiger work in newer versions of different UNIX operating systems.

These forks were merged in May 2002 and in June 2002 the new source code, now labeled as the 3.0 release, was published in the download section of the newly created Savannah site. Following this merge, the following releases were published:

  • The 3.1 release was published in October 2002, it was considered an unstable release and included some new checks, a new autoconf script for automatic configuration, but mostly included fixes for bugs found after testing Tiger in Debian GNU/Linux and in other operating systems. Over 2,200 lines of code and documentation were included in this release.
  • The 3.2 release was published in May 2003. It improved the stability of the tool and fixed some security problems including a buffer overflow in realpath.
  • The 3.2.1 release 7 was published in October 2003. It introduced new checks including: check_ndd (for HPUX and SunOS systems), check_passwspec (for Linux and HPUX) check_trusted (for HPUX), check_rootkit (which can interact with the chkrootkit tool), check_xinetd, and, finally, aide_run and integrit_run (integrity file checkers).
  • The 3.2.2 release was published in August 2007. It introduced support for Tru64, Solaris 8 and 9. This release also introduced the audit scripts, a collection of scripts originally written by Marc Heuse that can be used to do offline audits of systems by recovering all the needed information and putting it into an archive. These scripts are intended for use with security operating systems baselines or checklists.
  • The 3.2.3 release was published in September 2007. It was mainly a bug fix release which also included new features related to handling exotic filesystems in Linux.

Overview

Tiger has some interesting features including a modular design that is easy to expand. It can be used as an audit tool and a host-based intrusion detection system tool as described in the program's manpage [4] and in the source code documentation (README.hostids).

Tiger complements Intrusion Detection System (IDS) (from network IDS Snort), to the kernel (Log-based Intrusion Detection System or LIDS, or SNARE for Linux and Systrace for OpenBSD, for example), integrity checkers (many of these: AIDE, integrit, Samhain, Tripwire...) and logcheckers, providing a framework in which all of them can work together while checking the system configuration and status.

gollark: I basically just have to divide the force by γ³ as long as the box is ticked.
gollark: It turns out that implementing special relativity is very easy (since it's rendered from the reference frame of the ground or something).
gollark: Well, I remember some sort of "lunar lander" game I made several years ago, presumably very loosely based on the "lunar lander" game on ??? platform, so it's based on that.
gollark: Apo11o has evidently internalized this fact.
gollark: There is NO ESCAPE.

References

  1. Mann, Scott; Mitchell, Ellen L. (2000). Linux System Security. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall PTR. p. 341. ISBN 0-13-015807-0.
  2. Safford, David R.; Lee Schales, Douglas; David K., Hess (1993). "The TAMU Security Package: An Ongoing Response to Internet Intruders in an Academic Environment". Proceedings of the Fourth USENIX Security Symposium.
  3. http://www.net.tamu.edu/network/tools/tiger.html
  4. Fernandez-Sanguino, Javier. "Tiger program manpage". Retrieved 14 January 2018.
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