Book Review: Snort Cookbook

Anyone in information security knows the de facto standard for network intrusion detection is Snort. The problem is that while the documentation for Snort is ok, many of tha add-on functions, plugins, and associated applications are lacking or non-existent. This book tries to bring into one place all the things one could want to do with Snort and put it in one place. In a large part, it succeeds.

It does miss a few things along the way, such as management tools like BASE (the replacement for ACID which is not being developed anymore), and sguil. It also tends more to explain how to do things than why to do things, and I believe the section on sensor placement could be expanded. Lastly, I think the portion on legal aspects of intrusion detection and evidence can be expanded, but that might need to be taken with a grain of salt, because I am a legal wonk. To be fair, a book of this type can't cover everything in great detail.

As someone who does run Snort and has been working on ways to expand some of the data I get to it, it has proven to be a valuable resource which far outweighs the few things I found lacking. It is the only resource of its kind I know to exist. It brings to light some tools which I haven't thought of using the way it suggests, like perfmonitor and clamav. I came away from reading this book with solid ideas and tools which I plan to add into Snort. If you are looking for solid documentation on Snort and the tools and tricks you can use with it, this is your book.


Crossposted at Ravings of John C. A. Bambenek.

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Article Author: John Bambenek

John Bambenek is a freelance columnist and author. He is the author of Illinois Deserves Better and is an information security professional, part of the Internet Storm Center and a courseware author and certification grader for the GIAC family of security certifications. …

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  • Snort Cookbook Snort Cookbook

    If you are a network administrator, you're under a lot of pressure to ensure that mission-critical systems are completely safe from malicious code, buffer overflows, stealth port scans, SMB probes, OS ...

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  • 1 - Aaman

    Jun 25, 2005 at 2:09 pm

    You should check out "Hacking Exposed" )3-5240-01700-7965) - pretty comprehensive intrusion detection, exploit track, etc. book

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