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14.04.5.12
Please note! This wiki is no longer maintained. Our documentation has moved to https://securityonion.net/docs/. Please update your bookmarks. You can find the latest version of this page at: https://securityonion.net/docs/14.04.5.12.
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As always, make sure you verify the downloaded ISO image:
https://github.com/Security-Onion-Solutions/security-onion/blob/master/Verify_ISO.md -
The ISO boot menu no longer has the Live Desktop option. Instead, choose the Install option to go directly to the installer (or simply wait 10 seconds for it to automatically boot into the installer).
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On the "Installation type" screen, you may want to select the "Use LVM" option, as this will automatically create a /boot partition at the beginning of the drive and will give you more flexibility later. Check to see if the installer allocates a large amount of space to /home. If this is the case, you may want to shrink /home to give more space to /.
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If prompted with an encrypt home folder or encrypt partition option, DO NOT enable this feature.
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If asked about automatic updates, DO NOT enable automatic updates.
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The Keyboard Layout screen may be larger than your screen resolution and so the Continue button may be off the screen to the right like this:
https://launchpadlibrarian.net/207213663/Screenshot_wilyi386deskmanual_2015-05-22_13%3A05%3A41.png
You can simply slide the window over until you see the Continue button. For more information, please see:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/ubiquity/+bug/1458039 -
Once the installer completes, it should prompt to remove installation media and press ENTER. If instead it appears to hang, simply press the ENTER key to reboot. If that doesn't work, you may forcibly restart the machine.
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Once you've logged into your newly installed Security Onion, you'll notice that there is only a Setup icon on the desktop. Other icons will be created when you complete both phases of Setup. So you'll run Setup, configure your network interfaces, reboot, run Setup again to configure services, and then you'll see desktop icons for user interfaces.
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Setup now has the option of Stable Setup (ELSA) or Experimental Setup (Elastic). The Elastic Stack is more powerful but does require more hardware resources. We are recommending a BARE MINIMUM of 2 CPU cores and 8GB RAM.
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When choosing Evaluation Mode, the following services are enabled by default: Snort, Bro, netsniff-ng, pcap_agent, snort_agent, barnyard2.
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When choosing Production Mode, you then have the option of Best Practices or Custom. Best Practices asks a smaller number of questions and chooses the services that most folks want (Snort, Bro, netsniff-ng, pcap_agent, snort_agent, barnyard2, salt). Custom gives you more control over your system but requires more in-depth knowledge about services and their functions.
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Once you've completed both phases of Setup, you should see new icons on your Desktop.
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For more information, please refer to the full Installation guide and other documentation on the Wiki.
- Introduction
- Use Cases
- Hardware Requirements
- Release Notes
- Download/Install
- Booting Issues
- After Installation
- UTC and Time Zones
- Services
- VirtualBox Walkthrough
- VMWare Walkthrough
- Videos
- Architecture
- Cheat Sheet
- Conference
- Elastic Stack
- Elastic Architecture
- Elasticsearch
- Logstash
- Kibana
- ElastAlert
- Curator
- FreqServer
- DomainStats
- Docker
- Redis
- Data Fields
- Beats
- Pre-Releases
- ELSA to Elastic
- Network Configuration
- Proxy Configuration
- Firewall/Hardening
- Email Configuration
- Integrating with other systems
- Changing IP Addresses
- NTP
- Managing Alerts
- Managing Rules
- Adding Local Rules
- Disabling Processes
- Filtering with BPF
- Adjusting PF_RING for traffic
- MySQL Tuning
- Adding a new disk
- High Performance Tuning
- Trimming PCAPs