Linux
...
- get middleware mount on the server
- check the for open ports as some of the Linux boxes are all locked down
Expand listing open ports listing open ports HTML <br>
http://www.rhce.ca/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-4-Manual/security-guide/s1-server-ports.html
HTML <br>
Panel sudo nmap -sT -O localhost
The output of this command looks like the following:
Starting nmap 3.55 (
...
)
...
at
...
2004-09-24
...
13:49
...
EDT
...
Interesting
...
ports
...
on
...
localhost.localdomain
...
(127.0.0.1):
...
(The
...
1653
...
ports
...
scanned
...
but
...
not
...
shown
...
below
...
are
...
in
...
state:
...
closed)
...
PORT STATE SERVICE
22/tcp
...
open
...
ssh
...
25/tcp
...
open
...
smtp
...
111/tcp
...
open
...
rpcbind
...
113/tcp
...
open
...
auth
...
631/tcp
...
open
...
ipp
...
834/tcp
...
open
...
unknown
...
2601/tcp
...
open
...
zebra
...
32774/tcp
...
open
...
sometimes-rpc11
...
Device
...
type:
...
general
...
purpose
...
Running:
...
Linux
...
2.4.X|2.5.X|2.6.X
...
OS
...
details:
...
Linux
...
2.5.25
...
-
...
2.6.3
...
or
...
Gentoo
...
1.2
...
Linux
...
2.4.19
...
rc1-rc7)
...
Uptime
...
12.857
...
days
...
(since
...
Sat
...
Sep
...
11
...
17:16:20
...
2004)
...
Nmap
...
run
...
completed
...
– 1
...
IP
...
address
...
(1
...
host
...
up)
...
scanned
...
in
...
5.190
...
seconds
- if the ports are locked down request some "test" ports be opened for migration
- determine the OS version
- get the vanilla version of the apache from the middleware
- for RHEL4 use the most recent RHEL4 release off the middleware ../apache_2.2.10_relxx_RHEL4/vanilla*.tar
- for RHEL5 use the most recent release ../apache_2.2.10_relxx/vanilla*.tar