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802.11 Security

802.11 Security

Bruce Potter, O'Reilly Media, Inc.

ISBN:0596002904, Edition: 1st, 2002-12

Price: $34.95

Table of Contents

Copyright

Preface
Assumptions About the Reader
Scope of the Book
Conventions Used in This Book
Other Sources of Information
We'd Like to Hear from You
Acknowledgments

Part I: 802.11 Security Basics

Chapter 1. A Wireless World
Section 1.1. What Is Wireless?
Section 1.2. Radio Transmission
Section 1.3. Inherent Insecurity
Section 1.4. 802.11
Section 1.5. Structure of 802.11 MAC
Section 1.6. WEP
Section 1.7. Problems with WEP
Section 1.8. Is It Hopeless?

Chapter 2. Attacks and Risks
Section 2.1. An Example Network
Section 2.2. Denialof- Service Attacks
Section 2.3. Man-inthe- Middle Attacks
Section 2.4. Illicit Use
Section 2.5. Wireless Risks
Section 2.6. Knowing Is Half the Battle

Part II: Station Security

Chapter 3. Station Security
Section 3.1. Client Security Goals
Section 3.2. Audit Logging
Section 3.3. Security Updates

Chapter 4. FreeBSD Station Security
Section 4.1. FreeBSD Client Setup

Chapter 5. Linux Station Security
Section 5.1. Linux Client Setup
Section 5.2. Kernel Configuration
Section 5.3. OS Protection
Section 5.4. Audit Logging
Section 5.5. Secure Communication

Chapter 6. OpenBSD Station Security
Section 6.1. OpenBSD Client Setup
Section 6.2. Kernel Configuration
Section 6.3. OS Protection
Section 6.4. Audit Logging

Chapter 7. Mac OS X Station Security
Section 7.1. Mac OS X Setup
Section 7.2. OS Protection
Section 7.3. Audit Logging

Chapter 8. Windows Station Security
Section 8.1. Windows Client Setup
Section 8.2. OS Protection
Section 8.3. Audit Logging
Section 8.4. Secure Communication

Part III: Access Point Security

Chapter 9. Setting Up an Access Point
Section 9.1. General Access Point Security
Section 9.2. Setting Up a Linux Access Point
Section 9.3. Setting Up a FreeBSD Access Point
Section 9.4. Setting Up an OpenBSD Access Point
Section 9.5. Taking It to the Gateway

Part IV: Gateway Security

Chapter 10. Gateway Security
Section 10.1. Gateway Architecture
Section 10.2. Secure Installation
Section 10.3. Firewall Rule Creation
Section 10.4. Audit Logging

Chapter 11. Building a Linux Gateway
Section 11.1. Laying Out the Network
Section 11.2. Building the Gateway
Section 11.3. Configuring Network Interfaces
Section 11.4. Building the Firewall Rules
Section 11.5. MAC Address Filtering
Section 11.6. DHCP
Section 11.7. DNS
Section 11.8. Static ARP
Section 11.9. Audit Logging
Section 11.10. Wrapping Up

Chapter 12. Building a FreeBSD Gateway
Section 12.1. Building the Gateway
Section 12.2. Building the Firewall Rules
Section 12.3. Rate Limiting
Section 12.4. DHCP
Section 12.5. DNS
Section 12.6. Static ARP
Section 12.7. Auditing

Chapter 13. Building an OpenBSD Gateway
Section 13.1. Building the Gateway
Section 13.2. Building the Firewall Rules
Section 13.3. Rate Limiting
Section 13.4. DHCP
Section 13.5. DNS
Section 13.6. Static ARP
Section 13.7. Auditing

Chapter 14. Authentication and Encryption
Section 14.1. Portals
Section 14.2. IPsec VPN
Section 14.3. 802.1x

Chapter 15. Putting It All Together
Section 15.1. Pieces of a Coherent System
Section 15.2. User Knowledge
Section 15.3. Looking Ahead Colophon

Index