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How to Configure Blacklistd on FreeBSD 15 — step-by-step FreeBSD 15 tutorial on Progressive Robot

How to Configure Blacklistd on FreeBSD 15

Introduction Deploying configure blacklistd on a FreeBSD 15 machine differs from Linux in several important ways: packages come from the FreeBSD Ports Collection or the binary pkg repository, services are registered in /etc/rc.conf via sysrc(8), and firewall rules are written in pf.conf(5) syntax. This tutorial stays entirely within the standard base + ports approach so […]

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How to Set Up FreeBSD Security Event Auditing on FreeBSD 15 — step-by-step FreeBSD 15 tutorial on Progressive Robot

How to Set Up FreeBSD Security Event Auditing on FreeBSD 15

Introduction This guide explains how to Set Up FreeBSD Security Event Auditing on FreeBSD 15 on FreeBSD 15. FreeBSD uses the pkg(8) binary package manager, rc.conf(5) for service startup configuration, and pf(4) as its primary packet filter. There is no SELinux or AppArmor — instead, FreeBSD provides the MAC (Mandatory Access Control) framework and Capsicum […]

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How to Configure Capsicum Sandboxing on FreeBSD 15 — step-by-step FreeBSD 15 tutorial on Progressive Robot

How to Configure Capsicum Sandboxing on FreeBSD 15

Introduction Deploying configure capsicum sandboxing on a FreeBSD 15 machine differs from Linux in several important ways: packages come from the FreeBSD Ports Collection or the binary pkg repository, services are registered in /etc/rc.conf via sysrc(8), and firewall rules are written in pf.conf(5) syntax. This tutorial stays entirely within the standard base + ports approach […]

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How to Set Up Port Knocking on FreeBSD 15 — step-by-step FreeBSD 15 tutorial on Progressive Robot

How to Set Up Port Knocking on FreeBSD 15

Introduction This guide explains how to Set Up Port Knocking on FreeBSD 15 on FreeBSD 15. FreeBSD uses the pkg(8) binary package manager, rc.conf(5) for service startup configuration, and pf(4) as its primary packet filter. There is no SELinux or AppArmor — instead, FreeBSD provides the MAC (Mandatory Access Control) framework and Capsicum for fine-grained […]

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How to Configure Mandatory Access Control (MAC) on FreeBSD 15 — step-by-step FreeBSD 15 tutorial on Progressive Robot

How to Configure Mandatory Access Control (MAC) on FreeBSD 15

Introduction This guide explains how to Configure Mandatory Access Control (MAC) on FreeBSD 15 on FreeBSD 15. FreeBSD uses the pkg(8) binary package manager, rc.conf(5) for service startup configuration, and pf(4) as its primary packet filter. There is no SELinux or AppArmor — instead, FreeBSD provides the MAC (Mandatory Access Control) framework and Capsicum for […]

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How to Apply CIS Benchmark Hardening to FreeBSD 15 — step-by-step FreeBSD 15 tutorial on Progressive Robot

How to Apply CIS Benchmark Hardening to FreeBSD 15

Introduction FreeBSD 15 is a UNIX-derived operating system renowned for its network stack performance, ZFS integration, and Jail isolation primitives. Setting up apply cis benchmark hardening to freebsd 15 on FreeBSD 15 follows the rc.conf/service(8) paradigm rather than systemd, which means enabling a service and configuring its startup options are done differently from any Linux […]

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How to Configure OpenVAS Vulnerability Scanner on FreeBSD 15 — step-by-step FreeBSD 15 tutorial on Progressive Robot

How to Configure OpenVAS Vulnerability Scanner on FreeBSD 15

Introduction This guide explains how to Configure OpenVAS Vulnerability Scanner on FreeBSD 15 on FreeBSD 15. FreeBSD uses the pkg(8) binary package manager, rc.conf(5) for service startup configuration, and pf(4) as its primary packet filter. There is no SELinux or AppArmor — instead, FreeBSD provides the MAC (Mandatory Access Control) framework and Capsicum for fine-grained […]

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How to Configure DNSSEC Validation on FreeBSD 15 — step-by-step FreeBSD 15 tutorial on Progressive Robot

How to Configure DNSSEC Validation on FreeBSD 15

Introduction Deploying configure dnssec validation on a FreeBSD 15 machine differs from Linux in several important ways: packages come from the FreeBSD Ports Collection or the binary pkg repository, services are registered in /etc/rc.conf via sysrc(8), and firewall rules are written in pf.conf(5) syntax. This tutorial stays entirely within the standard base + ports approach […]

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How to Install Jaeger for Distributed Tracing on RHEL 7 — step-by-step RHEL 7 tutorial on Progressive Robot

How to Install Jaeger for Distributed Tracing on RHEL 7

How to Install Jaeger for Distributed Tracing on RHEL 7 As systems evolve from monoliths to microservices, understanding the path of a single request across dozens of services becomes increasingly difficult using traditional logs and metrics alone. Jaeger is an open-source distributed tracing platform originally developed by Uber Technologies and now hosted by the Cloud […]

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How to Harden Shared Memory on FreeBSD 15 — step-by-step FreeBSD 15 tutorial on Progressive Robot

How to Harden Shared Memory on FreeBSD 15

Introduction This guide explains how to Harden Shared Memory on FreeBSD 15 on FreeBSD 15. FreeBSD uses the pkg(8) binary package manager, rc.conf(5) for service startup configuration, and pf(4) as its primary packet filter. There is no SELinux or AppArmor — instead, FreeBSD provides the MAC (Mandatory Access Control) framework and Capsicum for fine-grained privilege […]

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