COLLEGE OF BUSINESS AND
INFORMATION SYSTEMS
CIS-418-D01
Intrusion Control/Detect, Spring 2007
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Instructor: |
Dr. Xinwen Fu |
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Office: |
302D, East Hall |
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Phone:
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605-256-5820 |
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E-Mail:
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Homepage: |
http://www.homepages.dsu.edu/fux/ |
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Office Hours: |
Mon. Wed. 1:30PM ~ 5:30PM |
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Course Name: |
CIS-418-D01 Intrusion Control/Detect |
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Credits: |
3.00 |
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Duration: |
01/18/2006-05/12/2006 |
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Time: |
Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM |
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Location: |
East Hall, Room 204 |
NOTICE: Please follow the lab rules and laws.
If you are not sure about legal issues, please never try
tricks you learn in this class on machines outside the IA lab. If you find any
violation of laws and rules in our class, please report to me ASAP. I hate to
say this: if you apply attacks to machines belonging to other people and police
finds you, I will not be responsible for it. This class is for securing systems
by studying intrusions, not applying attacks against people.
COURSE
DESCRIPTION
Provides students with hands-on and
theoretical knowledge of network and computer systems intrusion concepts,
including security terminology, virus operations, operating system and Web
browser vulnerabilities, firewall operation standards, and computer fraud.
COURSE PREREQUISITES:
Prerequisites:
CIS-414 Computer Security
Fundamentals
Technology Skills
1. Some programming language, such as C and Assembly
languages
2. Windows, Unix and Linux operating systems (Redhat)
3. Linux/Windows software installation
4. Knowledge of networks
5. Creative thoughts
DESCRIPTION OF INSTRUCTIONAL METHODS
Class Preparation
¡¤ The course web site is located within WebCT (http://webct.dsu.edu/).
¡¤ Announcements, questions (and answers, etc. will be available through WebCT.
¡¤ Lecturing is based on the textbook with learning materials provided.
¡¤ Security techniques may be practiced in the IA lab.
¡¤ Discussions and questions/answers take place through WebCT, which should be checked approximately once every 48-hours.
¡¤ A Chat room is also likely to be used from time to time.
¡¤ You will be expected to be prepared for class, and you must complete the assignments by the due dates.
COURSE REQUIREMENTS
Textbooks (Chapter 10 ~ Chapter
18)
¡¤
Ryan
Russell (Editor), Dan Kaminsky, Rain Forest Puppy,
Joe Grand, K2, David Ahmad, Hal Flynn, Ido Dubrawsky, Steve W. Manzuik, Ryan
Permeh, Hack Proofing Your Network (Second Edition),
ISBN: 1928994709
o
Textbooks
may be purchased at the bookstore or electronically through: http://www.amazon.com or some other bookseller
¡¤
On line sources from
the publisher: http://www.syngress.com/solutions/
Supplementary Materials
Learning materials will be provided when necessary.
Class Attendance Policy
Students are expected to attend and participate in class. Attendance may be
verified by quizzes delivered through WebCT or in
class. There will be no make-up opportunities for missed quizzes.
Cheating and Plagiarism Policy
All forms of academic dishonesty will result in an F for the course and notification of the Academic Dishonesty Committee. Academic dishonesty includes (but is not limited to) plagiarism, copying answers or work done by another student (either on an exam or assignment), allowing another student to copy from you, and using unauthorized materials during an exam.
Make-up
Exams
¡¤ Make-up exams will only be given in case of serious need and only when the instructor is notified prior to the exam time. If this is not done, the grade is automatically zero for that exam/quiz.
¡¤ Written verification for the student¡¯s inability to take an exam will be required.
¡¤ The make-up exams will be different from those given to the class.
University Deadlines
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Jan 19 (Fri) |
Last day to drop a class in person for first half semester classes and receive 100% refund |
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Jan. 20 (Sat) |
Last day to drop a class online for first half semester classes and receive 100% refund |
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Jan. 25 (Thurs) |
CENSUS DAY Last day to register for any class to determine financial aid eligibility Last day to add a full semester class Last day to drop a full semester class and receive 100% refund |
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Feb. 22 (Thurs) |
Last day to withdraw from a first half semester class and receive a ¡°W¡± |
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Mar. 23 (Fri) |
Last day to drop a second half semester class and receive 100% refund |
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April 10 (Tues) |
Last day to withdraw from a full semester class or school and receive a grade of ¡°W¡± |
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April 20 (Fri) |
Last day to withdraw from second half semester classes and receive a grade of ¡°W¡± |
COURSE GOALS
Upon completion of this course, students should be able to:
1. Do vulnerability analysis of network systems
A. Master basic classes of network-based attacks
B. Be familiar with the widely used intrusion
detection system: Snort
2. Understand the basic principle of protecting
network systems
A. Understand the basic laws of network security
B. Master the basic methodology of software
security
3. Write formal technical papers such as
conference/journal articles
EVALUATION PROCEDURES
Components of Course
Grade:
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Assignments (5~10) |
40% |
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Quiz |
10% |
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Midterm |
20% |
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Project/Presentation |
30% |
Grade Scale
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90 ~ 100% |
A |
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70 ~ 89.9% |
B |
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60 ~ 69.9% |
C |
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50~59.9% |
D |
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59.9% and below |
F |
Homework Assignments
¡¤
All assignments
are to be turned in on or before the due date and time. If you try and cannot
turn in an assignment electronically because the campus network is down, you
will not be penalized.
¡¤ An assignment turned in up to 24-hours late will be reduced by 10% of the assignment¡¯s worth, more than 24 hours late will be reduced 100%.
¡¤
The due
date and time for each assignment will be specified on assignment postings.
¡¤
All
assignments are expected to be individually and independently completed. Should
two or more students turn in substantially the same solution or program, in the
judgment of the instructor, the assignment will be given a grade of zero. A
second such incident will result in an F grade for the course.
¡¤ All
assignments are to be turned in through WebCT.
Exams
¡¤
Exams
and quizzes will be based on textbooks, web sites, and assignments.
¡¤
All
exams are take-home, but timed.
¡¤
The
tentative exam format will be true/false, multiple choice, fill-in-the-blanks,
programs, and/or short essays.
Projects
¡¤ Each member of this
class is required to join a team of 4-5 persons. A team must have a team leader
coordinating the communication with members and the instructor.
¡¤ Each team must be
formed within 2 weeks from the semester start and the team leader will report
the list of members to the instructor once the team is formed.
¡¤ Team work is
encouraged since all members of a team will receive the same score based on the
entire team¡¯s performance for team projects.
¡¤ Some of the
projects will be performed within a close laboratory.
EARLY ALERT STATEMENT
Academic Success Support
As your professor, I am personally committed to supporting YOUR academic success in this course. For that reason, if you demonstrate any academic performance or behavioral problems which may impede your success, I will personally discuss and attempt to resolve the issue with you. If the situation persists, I will forward my concern to the Student Development Office and your academic advisor to seek their support and assistance in the matter. My goal is to make your learning experience in this course as meaningful and successful as possible.
Americans with Disabilities
Act (
If there is any student in this
class who, due to a disability, has need for non-standard note-taking, test
taking, or other course accommodations, please contact
WIRELESS
The tablet PC will be used as a supplementary instructional device. This technology will be valuable in the classroom and you are strongly encouraged to bring a wireless computing device to class to achieve the full educational benefit of in-class assignments.
LINKS TO OTHER SOURCES OF INFORMATION:
Graduate Catalog: http://www.departments.dsu.edu/registrar/catalog/
Library:
http://www.departments.dsu.edu/library/
Computer Services Support: http://support.dsu.edu/
Student
Handbook: http://www.departments.dsu.edu/student_services/handbook/
DEWT Student Guide: http://www.departments.dsu.edu/disted/studentguide/guide.htm
Semester Calendar: http://www.departments.dsu.edu/registrar/catalog/schedule/
TENTATIVE CLASS SCHEDULE
The schedule may be adjusted based on the actual progress in the semester.
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Index |
Topics |
Chapter |
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Introduction |
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Topic 0 |
Introduction |
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Topic 1 |
Sniffing |
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Topic 2 |
Session Hijacking |
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Feb 19 (Mon) |
President¡¯s Day ¨C no classes |
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Topic 3 |
Spoofing: Attacks on Trusted Identity |
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Mar 5~11 |
Spring Break |
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Topic 4 |
Tunneling |
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Mar.29
(Thurs) |
Assessment Day ¨C no
daytime classes on main campus; classes starting 5:00 p.m. and later will
meet |
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Topic 5 |
Viruses, Trojan Horses, and |
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Topic 6 |
IDS - Snort |
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April 6-9 |
Easter Holiday ¨C no classes. Please note:
Easter holiday begins at 5:00 pm April 5 |
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Topic 7 |
Automated security review and attack tools |
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Topic 8 |
Reporting security problems |
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Exam
date |
May 7 |
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