Difference between revisions of "Synology"
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(Created page with "=Hardening= The certificates are stored in /usr/syno/etc/certificate/_archive. The INFO file defines what applications the certificates are used for. The certificates are in...") |
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[https://bpmsg.com/how-to-make-your-synology-disk-station-nas-more-secure/comment-page-1/ This page] has some good hardening tips. | [https://bpmsg.com/how-to-make-your-synology-disk-station-nas-more-secure/comment-page-1/ This page] has some good hardening tips. | ||
− | Some of the things I did | + | Some of the things I did: |
− | + | * 2 factor authentication on the web interface | |
− | + | * Moved ssh to a high port on my router (NAT xxxx -> synology:22) (and disabled from the internet when not needed) | |
− | + | * Disable HTTP access | |
− | + | * Installed another webserver as frontend as I doubt synology publishes all security updates in time. | |
− | + | * Set home directory protection from 755 to 700 | |
− | + | * Disabled admin account |
Revision as of 20:31, 5 August 2018
Hardening
The certificates are stored in /usr/syno/etc/certificate/_archive. The INFO file defines what applications the certificates are used for. The certificates are in subdirectories with a yet unknown naming convention.
This page has some good hardening tips.
Some of the things I did:
- 2 factor authentication on the web interface
- Moved ssh to a high port on my router (NAT xxxx -> synology:22) (and disabled from the internet when not needed)
- Disable HTTP access
- Installed another webserver as frontend as I doubt synology publishes all security updates in time.
- Set home directory protection from 755 to 700
- Disabled admin account