Anyone else experience this?
I start with a fresh install of Backup Exec 9.1 on Windows 2003 SP1. Make a simple backup job to disk that backs up files on a Linux machine running the latest UNIX agent. Everything works fine.
Then I install service pack 4a for Backup Exec 9.1, reboot, come...
Well, I have the following for DMZ hosts:
access-list acl_dmz permit tcp xxx.xxx.xxx.0 255.255.255.0 any eq www
access-list acl_dmz permit tcp xxx.xxx.xxx.0 255.255.255.0 any eq https
access-list acl_dmz permit tcp xxx.xxx.xxx.0 255.255.255.0 any eq ftp
With those lines, I have no problems...
Yup. I guess what I'm getting at, is if your VPN (which is only a tunnel) is using the same auth mechanism as the server(s) you're connecting to, what's the difference?
PIX with Aladdin smartcard is what I use. However, I don't see the point in going to all that trouble in a lot of cases when...
1. For a managed environment, you MUST have NT domains or Active Directory working. If not, you're wasting your time.
2. Otherwise, you should just be able to load the Anti-Virus CLIENT, and configure that machine with the client to automatically go out to Symantec's site on the internet and...
The better option would be to use Terminal Services on the server side with W2K3 SP1 installed, then force the user to provide either smart card and/or a FIPS-compliant login (digital certificate of some kind). Quite frankly, I think this approach is MORE secure than a VPN, since most VPN's...
It matters in that if you are using PDM or SSH, you will need a private key generated for the PIX based on it's new domain name.
If you change the domain name and then try to connect via SSH, I'm pretty sure it won't let you.
Well, I have a question.
What's the protocol by which the server in the DMZ is supposed to get antivirus updates? Is it http, ftp, https...what is it?
When you install the corporate or enterprise edition of Symantec Antivirus (who makes Norton) and you choose the managed install and specify a...
SCSI is higher sustained revolutions per minute. Until all SATA drives start spinning at 10k and 15k respectively, SCSI will always be faster. That's just the raw math. Aside from that, SATA ALWAYS has a lower mean time before failure. So, you're going to be replacing them more often.
Can't tell you the best way. Just be aware that whatever you use, the recipient needs to have relatively the same thing in order to decrypt the emails.
For me, I prefer PGP because it's an open standard and more available to the world. With PGP, you can send a message encrypted with PGP, but...
What update level are you using for Red Hat AS?
AS 3 Update 4 or 5 should automatically recognize your RAID array...you should not need any extracurricular drivers upon bootup.
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