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1.13      deraadt    13: <title>The OpenBSD Bookstore</title>
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1.36      jufi       18: <a href="index.html"><img alt="[OpenBSD]" height="30" width="141" border="0" src="images/smalltitle.gif"></a>
1.13      deraadt    19: <p>
1.36      jufi       20: <h2><font color="#cc0000">UNIX and BSD books</font></h2>
                     21: <hr>
1.1       ian        22:
1.91    ! deraadt    23: <h3>OpenBSD-specific books</h3>
1.15      philen     24: <dl>
1.89      austin     25:
1.81      deraadt    26: <dt><a name="book8"><i>The Book of PF, 2nd Edition<br>
                     27: A No-Nonsense Guide to the OpenBSD Firewall</i></a>
                     28: <dd>by Peter N. M. Hansteen
                     29: <dd>ISBN-13: 978-1-59327-274-6
                     30: <dd>November 2010.
                     31: <dd>
1.72      wvdputte   32: The first sentence of this book is, "<i>This is a book about building the
                     33: network you need</i>". Taking it from there, Peter walks you through the whys
                     34: and the hows of building the high performance, low maintenance network you need,
                     35: using OpenBSD tools.<br>
                     36: The book covers all bases from the basic one machine configuration and basic
                     37: local area networks, all the way up to configurations with traffic shaping and
                     38: load balancing with "self healing" networks and countermeasures against common
1.73      wvdputte   39: problems such as DoS attempts and spamming.  A basic understanding of TCP/IP
1.72      wvdputte   40: and some Unix knowledge is assumed.<br>
                     41: The official book website for a sample chapter, table of contents and errata
1.75      tobias     42: can be found at
1.89      austin     43: <a href="http://www.nostarch.com/pf2.htm">http://www.nostarch.com/pf2.htm</a>.
                     44: <dd>[<a href="https://https.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/order?B08=1&amp;B08%2b=Add">
                     45: Order direct from the OpenBSD website International</a>]
                     46:
                     47:
1.72      wvdputte   48: <p>
1.87      austin     49: <dt><a name="book9"><i>SSH Mastery</i></a>
                     50: <dd>by Michael Lucas
                     51: <dd>ISBN-13: 978-1470069711
                     52: <dd>ISBN-10: 1470069717
                     53: <dd>February 2012, 145 pp.
                     54: <dd>
                     55: A guide to what you need to know about SSH. This book will help you
                     56: eliminate passwords on your network, tunnel unencrypted protocols
                     57: through secure channels, build VPNs with OpenSSH, and more. Focuses on
                     58: the OpenSSH server, the OpenSSH client, and the PuTTY client.
                     59: Michael W Lucas is the author of Absolute OpenBSD and other BSD books.
                     60: Helping support OpenBSD, Michael is contributing all his author's profits, from
                     61: orders via the main OpenBSD order page, back to the project.
1.88      deraadt    62: <dd>[<a href="https://https.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/order?B09=1&amp;B09%2b=Add">
1.87      austin     63: Order direct from the OpenBSD website International.</a>]
                     64: <p>
                     65:
                     66:
1.89      austin     67: <dt><a name="book10"><i>Absolute OpenBSD. 2nd Edition!</i></a>
1.41      jose       68: <dd>by Michael Lucas
1.89      austin     69: <dd>ISBN-13  978-1-59327-476-4
                     70: <dd>Expected April 2013, 536 pp.
1.41      jose       71: <dd>
1.90      deraadt    72: Michael Lucas brings us the long anticipated second edition of his
1.89      austin     73: wildly successful book about using OpenBSD.  This book covers all aspects of the
                     74: OpenBSD system for new UNIX and BSD users alike.<br>
                     75:
                     76: <a href="https://www.michaelwlucas.com/nonfiction/absolute-openbsd-2nd-edition">
                     77: The official Absolute OpenBSD 2nd edition website is here.</a>.
                     78: <dd>[<a href="https://https.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/order?B10=1&amp;B10%2b=Add">
                     79: Pre-order direct from the OpenBSD website International.</a>]
1.42      wvdputte   80:
1.41      jose       81: <p>
1.65      ian        82: <dt><a name="book5"><i>OpenBSD 4.0: A Crash Course</i></a> (PDF)
                     83: <dd>by Jem Matzan
                     84: <dd>ISBN 0-596-51015-2
                     85: <dd>January 2007, 59 pp.
                     86: <dd>
                     87: Jem Matzan, known for his online articles promoting OpenBSD,
                     88: is the author of this "Short Cut" guide to installing and administering
                     89: OpenBSD 4.0. Topics include initial configuration, desktop and server,
                     90: using ports (complete with extra hints on some ports), and maintenance.
                     91: You order this book direct from O'Reilly, and it comes as a PDF
                     92: with free download of corrected versions as they become available.
                     93: <ul>
                     94: </ul>
                     95: <dd>[<a href="http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/openbsd4/">Order from O'Reilly</a>]
                     96:
                     97: <p>
1.48      austin     98: <dt><a name="book3">
                     99: <i>Secure Architectures with OpenBSD</i></a>
1.47      jose      100: <dd>by Brandon Palmer, Jose Nazario.
                    101: <dd>ISBN 03-21193-66-0
                    102: <dd>April 2004, 520 pp.
                    103: <dd>
                    104: A guide for system and network administrators who need to move to a
                    105: more secure operating system and a reference for seasoned OpenBSD users
                    106: who want to fully exploit every feature of the system. This book
                    107: covers all aspects of OpenBSD, including systrace, Kerberos V, IPv6 and
                    108: IPsec, and the development environment.
1.55      grunk     109: <dd>[<a href="https://https.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/order?B03=1&amp;B03%2b=Add">Order direct from the OpenBSD website International</a>]
1.15      philen    110: </dl>
                    111: <hr>
                    112:
1.91    ! deraadt   113: <h3>BSD-specific books</h3>
1.15      philen    114: <dl>
                    115: <dt>
                    116: <i>The Design and Implementation of the 4.4 BSD Operating System</i>
                    117: <dd>by Marshal Kirk McKusick, Keith Bostic, Michael J. Karels, John S. Quarterman
                    118: <dd>
1.52      millert   119: At 549 pages plus an index, <a href="http://www.awprofessional.com/title/0201549794">this book</a> must be considered comprehensive.
1.15      philen    120: McKusick, Bostic and Karels are well known as prime movers at
                    121: Berkeley CSRG (Computer Systems Research Group) during the 4.3/4.4BSD
                    122: period. This book covers the 4.4 and 4.4-Lite releases, and discusses
                    123: everything you wanted to know about how the system operates.  Not
                    124: 100% applicable, but probably the closest there is to an overall
                    125: system internals manual for OpenBSD.
1.13      deraadt   126: <p>
1.15      philen    127: <dt>
                    128: <i>Source Code Secrets: The Basic 386BSD Operating System Reference
                    129: (Volume 1 of Operating System Source Code Secrets)</i>
                    130: <dd>by L. W. Jolitz, William Jolitz; 1997
                    131: <dd>
                    132: The Jolitzes built the first port of BSD to the PC-386 architecture,
                    133: and deserve a lot of credit for making BSD portable to this low-cost
                    134: architecture. The earliest versions, called "386bsd", were described
1.46      david     135: in articles in <em>Dr. Dobbs Journal</em>. This book goes beyond the articles,
1.15      philen    136: and provides a comprehensive annotated collection of source code.
                    137: Not all of it applies to modern versions of OpenBSD, of course, but
                    138: you can still learn a lot from it.
1.13      deraadt   139: <p>
1.15      philen    140: <dt>
                    141: <i>Berkeley Unix: A Simple and Comprehensive Guide</i>
                    142: <dd>by James Wilson
                    143: <dd>
                    144: Begins with the basic commands and finishes with advanced programming
                    145: techniques. Offers strong coverage of systems calls.
                    146: <p>
                    147: <dt>
                    148: <i>An Introduction to Berkeley Unix and ANSI C</i>
                    149: <dd>by Jack Hodges
                    150: <dd>
                    151: An introduction to the operating system and the programming language.  Intended
                    152: for self-study, requires no previous knowledge of Unix.  Covers the fundamentals
                    153: of programming; the correct use of syntax; programming style, debugging, logic,
                    154: and system programming with C.
                    155: <p>
                    156: <dt>
                    157: <dt>
                    158: <i>4.4 BSD User's Reference Manual (URM)</i>
                    159: <dd>published by O'Reilly, 1994
                    160: <dd>
1.12      ian       161: This is just a reprint of the man pages for users.
1.2       ian       162: Your OpenBSD distribution includes the online man pages,
                    163: which are specific to OpenBSD, and more up-to-date. So
1.13      deraadt   164: you don't need this one: use the <em>man</em> command instead.
                    165: <p>
1.15      philen    166: <dt>
                    167: <dt>
                    168: <i>4.4 BSD System Manager's Manual (SMM)</i>
                    169: <dd>published by O'Reilly, 1994
                    170: <dd>
                    171: This book details what you need to know to run a BSD system.
1.2       ian       172: Quite a bit of this material is relevant to OpenBSD.
                    173: Unfortunately it is currently out of print.
1.13      deraadt   174: Worse, due to licensing restrictions from AT&amp;T,
                    175: the electronic editions of these were not included in the
1.86      lum       176: 4.4BSD distributions.
                    177: They are not included with OpenBSD.
1.17      louis     178: <p>
                    179: <dt>
                    180: <dt>
                    181: <i>BSD mit Methode</i>
1.23      horacio   182: <dd>published by C&amp;L Computer- und Literaturverlag GmbH, 1998
1.17      louis     183: <dd>
1.78      deraadt   184: A book in German on all
1.17      louis     185: three freenix BSDs covering the essentials of installation, X configuration
                    186: and system administration, as well as PERL programming and tips on
                    187: LaTeX/Lyx. The book also covers the KDE desktop environment.
                    188: <br>Includes older versions of OpenBSD on the two included CD-ROMs.
1.85      deraadt   189: <br><a href="http://www.lob.de/cgi-bin/work/frameset?flag=jfl&amp;frame=yes&amp;id=38effe1813566">
                    190: Lehmann's Online Bookshop</a>. However, you might want to pick up a <a
1.36      jufi      191: href="http://www.lob.de/cgi-bin/work/frameset?flag=jfl&amp;frame=yes&amp;id=38effe1813566">more
1.17      louis     192: recent version of the CD-ROM</a>.
1.61      grunk     193:
                    194: <p>
                    195: <dt>
                    196: <dt>
                    197: <i>The OpenBSD PF Packet Filter Book</i>
                    198: <dd>
                    199: published by Reed Media Services
                    200: <dd>
                    201: August 2006, 193 pp.
                    202: <dd>
1.62      steven    203: This book is an expanded, cross-referenced, indexed, edited, and reformatted
                    204: version of the <a href="faq/pf/index.html">PF User's Guide</a>.
1.61      grunk     205: It also covers spamd and introduces the setup and differences of PF
                    206: on NetBSD, DragonFly, and FreeBSD.
                    207: <br />The official book website with table of contents, index, and
                    208: configuration examples can be found at
                    209: <a href="http://www.reedmedia.net/books/pf-book/">http://www.reedmedia.net/books/pf-book/</a>.
1.15      philen    210: </dl>
                    211: <hr>
1.2       ian       212:
1.91    ! deraadt   213: <h3>Unix user guides</h3>
1.15      philen    214: <dl>
                    215: <dt><i>Unix Made Easy</i>
                    216: <dd>by John Muster
                    217: <dd>A general Unix book that covers all areas of the system.
                    218: <p>
                    219: <dt><i>UNIX Power Tools</i>
                    220: <dd>by Jerry D. Peek, Tim O'Reilly, and Mike Loukides
                    221: <dd>
1.58      grunk     222: This book is now in its third edition. It discusses
1.15      philen    223: hundreds of neat tricks, little-known techniques, and add-on utilities.
                    224: Be aware that many of the utilities are either included with OpenBSD
                    225: or, more commonly, are already available as ports or packages.
                    226: So most of section 52.03, complaining about how hard it is to port
                    227: software to different UNIXes, can be disregarded if you learn about the
1.80      steven    228: <a href="faq/ports/index.html">Ports Mechanism</a>
1.15      philen    229: that is part of OpenBSD.
1.18      ericj     230: <p>
                    231: <dt><i><a href="http://www.rodsbooks.com/multiboot/">The Multi-Boot Configuration Handbook</a></i>
                    232: <dd>by Rod Smith
                    233: <dd>
                    234: <dd>
                    235: Book explaining techniques for Multi-booting.
1.15      philen    236: </dl>
                    237: <hr>
1.1       ian       238:
1.91    ! deraadt   239: <h3>Unix administration</h3>
1.15      philen    240: <dl>
                    241: <dt><i>UNIX System Administration Handbook</i>
                    242: <dd>by Evi Nemeth, Garth Snyder, Scott Seebass, Trent R. Hein
                    243: <dd>
                    244: This is an excellent book on Unix system administration.
                    245: <p>
                    246: <dt><i>Essential System Administration</i>
                    247: <dd>by AEleen Frisch
                    248: <dd>
                    249: This book covers many fundamental tasks in system administration.  It includes
                    250: examples for a wide range of Unix operating systems, including BSD.
                    251: </dl>
                    252: <hr>
1.1       ian       253:
1.91    ! deraadt   254: <h3>Unix programming</h3>
1.15      philen    255: <dl>
                    256: <dt><i>Unix Systems for Modern Architectures</i>
                    257: <dd>by Curt Schimmel
                    258: <dd>
1.24      ian       259: This book leads its reader through all the low-level kernel models for
1.53      jsg       260: multi-processing architectures.
1.15      philen    261: <p>
                    262: <dt><i>Lions' Commentary on UNIX 6th Edition with Source Code</i>
                    263: <dd>by John Lions
                    264: <dd>
1.2       ian       265: Although the UNIX described in this book is to BSD as a Model T Ford
1.1       ian       266: is to a 70's Mustang or Thunderbird, UNIX inventor Ken Thompson
                    267: claims that "After 20 years, this is still the best exposition
                    268: of the workings of a 'real' operating system." Originally circulated
                    269: in illicit photocopies, this is the book that most first- and second-generation
                    270: UNIX hackers cut their code-teeth on. Recommended as a good introduction
                    271: to how a timesharing OS works, if you've not been inside one before.
                    272: Substantially shorter than the McKusick book above.
1.15      philen    273: <p>
                    274: <dt><i>The Practice of Programming</i>
                    275: <dd>by Brian W. Kernighan and Rob Pike
                    276: <dd>
                    277: Brian Kernighan had a hand in two other books which we recommend even though they're not UNIX specific, but are useful to programmers on UNIX and elsewhere.
                    278: This book covers practical programming considerations for C, C++ and Java.
                    279: Highly recommended.
1.46      david     280: <p>
1.15      philen    281: <dt><i>The Elements of Programming Style</i>
                    282: <dd>by Brian W. Kernighan and P. J. Plauger
                    283: <dd>
                    284: This book is similar to <i>The Practice of Programming</i>, but older.  The
                    285: examples are given in Fortran and PL/I.
1.16      chris     286: <p>
1.60      grunk     287: <dt><i>Advanced Programming in the Unix Environment (2nd Edition)</i>
                    288: <dd>by W. Richard Stevens, Stephen A. Rago
1.16      chris     289: <dd>
                    290: This is a very detailed and easy to read book.  It has several examples
                    291: that you can learn from.  There is plenty of information about library and
                    292: system calls, and associated information so that you can use them.
                    293: This book along with the OpenBSD manual pages
                    294: make an excellent combination.
1.36      jufi      295: <p>
1.25      chris     296: <dt><i>The C Programming Language</i>
                    297: <dd>by Brian W. Kernighan and Dennis M. Ritchie
                    298: <dd>
                    299: This is a clear and concise guide to the C programming language,
                    300: perhaps the only one you will ever need.  It focuses strictly on the C language,
                    301: not how to use your compiler or anything else.
1.36      jufi      302: <p>
1.46      david     303: <dt><i>C: A Reference Manual</i>
1.25      chris     304: <dd>by Samuel P. Harbison and Guy L. Steele
                    305: <dd>
1.46      david     306: If you only had two books on C, then along with <i>The C Programming Language</i>, this would be your second one!
1.25      chris     307: This book is not a tutorial (hence the title), it deals with syntax, data types,
                    308: ISO C library functions, and C/C++ compatibility.
1.36      jufi      309: <p>
1.64      steven    310: <dt><i>The Art of Software Security Assessment</i>
1.63      otto      311: <dd>by Mark Dowd, John McDonald and Justin Schuh
                    312: <dd>Covers code auditing, design and operational review, types of
                    313: vulnerabilities, privilege models, signals,
                    314: interprocess communication, synchronization, networking and more.
                    315: Lots of examples and real world code snippets.
1.15      philen    316: </dl>
1.25      chris     317:
1.15      philen    318: <hr>
                    319:
1.91    ! deraadt   320: <h3>Network administration</h3>
1.15      philen    321: <dl>
1.68      grunk     322: <dt><i><a name="book6" href="http://www.sshbuch.de/">Das SSH-Buch</a></i>
                    323: (German)
1.67      grunk     324: <dd>by Timo Dotzauer and Tobias L&uuml;tticke
                    325: <dd>ISBN 3-938626-03-8
                    326: <dd>Millin Verlag, December 2006, 600p.
                    327: <dd>This book covers the theory behind OpenSSH (protocol, channels, standards
                    328: documents) as well as using OpenSSH as an end user.
                    329: Although using Linux as a reference OS, many of the examples also have
                    330: a description how to get things done under BSD.
                    331: In a separate cookbook chapter, several scenarios from daily work are solved
                    332: using OpenSSH.
                    333: Furthermore, this book is the first German book to cover VPN via OpenSSH.
1.77      deraadt   334: <dd>
1.67      grunk     335: <p>
1.22      aaron     336: <dt><i>SSH, The Secure Shell.</i>
                    337: <dd>by Daniel J. Barrett and Richard Silverman
                    338: <dd>The Definitive Guide.  OpenSSH is covered in detail.
                    339: <p>
1.15      philen    340: <dt><i>TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1</i>
                    341: <dd>by W. Richard Stevens
                    342: <dd>
                    343: "Network administration" is really an inappropriate heading for this book.  It
                    344: is an encyclopedia of the TCP/IP protocol suite.  This book provides information,
1.35      pvalchev  345: and diagrams useful to understand the suite to its lowest level.
1.15      philen    346: Home enthusiasts, developers, and network administrators alike will enjoy this
                    347: book.
                    348: <p>
1.20      chris     349: <dt><i>Kerberos: A Network Authentication System</i>
                    350: <dd>by Brian Tung
                    351: <dd>
                    352: A guide for administrators of Kerberos-based networks.  Explains concepts of
                    353: the Kerberos system, as well as the installation and administration of it.
                    354: <p>
1.34      miod      355: <dt><i>IPsec: The New Security Standard for the Internet, Intranets and Virtual
1.20      chris     356: Private Networks</i>
                    357: <dd>by Naganand Doraswamy and Dan Harkins
                    358: <dd>
1.34      miod      359: This book explains the IPsec protocol suite.  It also describes its relation
1.20      chris     360: to the current deployments, such as VPNs, and future ideas.
1.36      jufi      361: <p>
1.20      chris     362: <dt><i>Computer Networks</i>
                    363: <dd>by Andy Tanenbaum
                    364: <dd>
                    365: This book is an high-level guide to modern computer networking.  It presents
                    366: a wide range of protocols, concepts, and technologies.  It covers technologies
                    367: from fiber to wireless, LANs, Mobile IP, and a lot more.
1.36      jufi      368: <p>
1.15      philen    369: <dt><i>DNS and BIND</i>
                    370: <dd>by Paul Albitz and Cricket Liu
                    371: <dd>
                    372: This book is an excellent introduction to DNS and BIND, useful for
                    373: anyone who has to implement DNS under OpenBSD.
                    374: <p>
                    375: <dt><i>DHCP</i>
                    376: <dd>by Ted Lemon and Ralph E. Droms
                    377: <dd>
1.46      david     378: Recommended by the <a href="http://www.isc.org/">Internet Software Consortium</a>,
1.15      philen    379: which is the organization that produces the DHCP client/server software
                    380: included with OpenBSD.
                    381: <p>
                    382: <dt><i>Managing NFS and NIS</i>
                    383: <dd>by Hal Stern
                    384: <dd>
                    385: Gives essential information with examples on managing NFS and NIS.
1.37      dhartmei  386: <p>
                    387: <dt><i>802.11 Security</i>
                    388: <dd>by Bruce Potter and Bob Fleck
                    389: <dd>
                    390: Provides information on the fundamentals of wireless security, including
                    391: practical solutions for setting up clients, access points and gateways
                    392: under several operating systems. Two chapters are dedicated to OpenBSD 3.1,
                    393: covering wi, bridge, pf and altq.
1.25      chris     394: </dl>
1.21      chris     395:
1.25      chris     396: <hr>
1.91    ! deraadt   397: <h3>Cryptography</h3>
1.21      chris     398: <dl>
                    399: <dt><i>Applied Cryptography: Protocols, Algorithms, and Source Code in C</i>
                    400: <dd>by Bruce Schneier
                    401: <dd>
                    402: A comprehensive explanation of Cryptography, with information
                    403: about its history, protocols, and algorithms.  This book is a great
                    404: introduction to cryptography, with the necessary basics
                    405: to understand the field.  Also, it has a very extensive reference section.
1.36      jufi      406: <br>
                    407: <p>
1.30      jsyn      408: <dt><i>Handbook of Applied Cryptography</i>
1.26      ian       409: <dd>by Alfred J. Menezes, Paul C. van Oorschot and Scott A. Vanstone
                    410: <dd>A new and detailed look at Cryptography.  The authors write:
                    411: <dd>
                    412: ...  Public-key cryptographic techniques
                    413: are now in widespread use, especially in the financial services
                    414: industry, in the public sector, and by individuals for their personal
                    415: privacy, such as in electronic mail. This Handbook will serve as a
                    416: valuable reference for the novice as well as for the expert who
                    417: needs a wider scope of coverage within the area of cryptography.
                    418: It is a necessary and timely guide for professionals who practice
                    419: the art of cryptography.
                    420: <dd>The entire book is
1.55      grunk     421: <a href="http://www.cacr.math.uwaterloo.ca/hac/">
1.26      ian       422: available for free downloading</a> (for personal use only)
                    423: from the book authors' site, in PDF or PostScript.
                    424: <dd>
                    425: <p>
1.25      chris     426: <dt><i>SSL and TLS Essentials: Securing the Web</i>
                    427: <dd>by Stephen A. Thomas
                    428: <dd>
                    429: This book offers introductory coverage of the SSL and TLS protocols, with
                    430: examples.  The SSL protocol
                    431: is currently the basis of secure data transfer and secure transactions
                    432: on the Internet.  Aside from encryption, this book also covers data
                    433: integrity and details the SSL protocol.
                    434: <dd>
                    435: <p>
1.39      jose      436: <dt><i>SSL and TLS: Designing and Building Secure Systems</i>
                    437: <dd>by Eric Rescorla
                    438: <dd>
                    439: This book offers comprehensive information about the SSL and TLS protocols,
                    440: covering their operation and security,
                    441: together with usage and implementation details.
                    442: There are also chapters about HTTP over SSL, and SMTP over TLS (STARTTLS).
                    443: Eric Rescorla is the author of <tt>ssldump</tt>, a utility that can be
                    444: used to monitor SSL connections.
                    445: He has written several commercial and free SSL implementations.
                    446: <dd>
                    447: <p>
1.25      chris     448: <dt><i>Big Book of IPsec RFCs: Internet Security Architecture</i>
                    449: <dd>compiled by Pete Loshin
                    450: <dd>
1.54      nick      451: A complete reprint of the IPsec RFCs with an extensive index and
                    452: glossary.
1.25      chris     453: <dd>
1.15      philen    454: </dl>
                    455:
1.76      deraadt   456: <hr>
1.36      jufi      457: <a href="index.html"><img height="24" width="24" src="back.gif" border="0" alt="OpenBSD"></a>
1.44      austin    458: <a href="mailto:www@openbsd.org">www@openbsd.org</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
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1.91    ! deraadt   460: <br><small>$OpenBSD: books.html,v 1.90 2013/03/16 16:47:01 deraadt Exp $</small>
1.13      deraadt   461:
                    462: </body>
                    463: </html>