Freebsd 13.X - Mastering Jails
Published 11/2022
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 1.27 GB | Duration: 3h 6m
Using FreeBSD Jails for running software packages in a secure way using pragmatic approach.
What you'll learn
How to install FreeBSD - minimal installation for Jails
Setting-up Jails environment using BastilleBSD
FreeBSD 13.x Lab setup using VirtualBox
Use BastilleBSD for managing Jails in many ways
Use Jails networking options for running Jails in private and public networks
Use Jails on Raspberry PI, and if it is even a vital option
Manage Jails and pf (packet filter firewall)
Backup and restore Jailed environments
Requirements
Basic UNIX / BSD knowledge
Description
Hello,welcome to the 'FreeBSD 13.x - Mastering JAILS' course. The purpose of this course is give a deep overview what Jails are, how to use them for building a testing or production ready environments. All this using a great BastilleBSD project. What are FreeBSD Jails from wikipedia: "The jail mechanism is an implementation of FreeBSD's OS-level virtualisation that allows system administrators to partition a FreeBSD-derived computer system into several independent mini-systems called jails, all sharing the same kernel, with very little overhead. It is implemented through a system call, jail, as well as a userland utility, jail, plus, depending on the system, a number of other utilities. The functionality was committed into FreeBSD in 1999 by Poul-Henning Kamp after some period of production use by a hosting provider, and was first released with FreeBSD 4.0, thus being supported on a number of FreeBSD descendants, including DragonFly BSD, to this day.The need for the FreeBSD jails came from a small shared-environment hosting provider's (R&D Associates, Inc.'s owner, Derrick T. Woolworth) desire to establish a clean, clear-cut separation between their own services and those of their customers, mainly for security and ease of administration (jail(8)). Instead of adding a new layer of fine-grained configuration options, the solution adopted by Poul-Henning Kamp was to compartmentalize the system - both its files and its resources - in such a way that only the right people are given access to the right compartments."Topics covered in this course:'Mastering Jails' course covers most of Jails setup options available and required for running Jails in real live scenarios. Main topics include:Jails EssentialsCreating FreeBSD Lab environmentUsing BastilleBSD for managing Jails in many different waysSetting Jails networking in right wayBONUS: Running FreeBSD Jail on Raspberry PIDuring the course we build a lab environment with fresh FreeBSD installation and we setup Jails from ground to production ready environment. We will practice working with Jails, backing them up or do networking the right way. All this using a great BastilleBSD project. Summary:FreeBSD 13.x Mastering Jails course covers various topics related to using Jails to manage running different software packages in secure way. Using Jails you can avoid security issues / holes of sw packages you host on your system.
Overview
Section 1: Introduction
Lecture 1 Introduction
Section 2: Jails essentials
Lecture 2 What are Jails anyway
Lecture 3 What are Jails good for?
Lecture 4 Tools for maintaining Jails
Section 3: Creating FreeBSD LAB environment
Lecture 5 FreeBSD download
Lecture 6 LAB environment using VirtualBox
Lecture 7 Minimal FreeBSD installation
Lecture 8 Connecting to SSH from the outside
Lecture 9 Updating FreeBSD to latest version
Section 4: BastilleBSD in many different ways
Lecture 10 What is BastilleBSD ?
Lecture 11 BastilleBSD intallation
Lecture 12 Bastille Configuration
Lecture 13 Creating a first Jail
Lecture 14 Making a VirtualBox snapshot
Lecture 15 Common bastille commands when working with jails
Lecture 16 Installing MongoDB in Jails
Lecture 17 Installing NATs messaging system
Lecture 18 Monitoring Jail from outside
Lecture 19 Bastille templates
Lecture 20 Updating Jails
Lecture 21 Cloning the Jail
Lecture 22 Jails backup and restore
Section 5: Jails networking options
Lecture 23 Networking - options available
Lecture 24 Shared Interface (IP alias)
Lecture 25 Loopback (bastille0)
Lecture 26 Virtual Network (VNET)
Section 6: Running FreeBSD Jails on Raspberry PI
Lecture 27 Running FreeBSD on RPI 3b+
Lecture 28 Are there any Jails Raspberry specifics?
Lecture 29 What all we can run on 1GB RAM Raspberry 3b+
'FreeBSD 13.x - Mastering JAILS' course is targeted for individuals or small/medium teams of professional administrators, devops or developers. Jails can serve as a production ready server side option, testing environment for admins and developers or as runtime option for projects backends during development process.
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