BackTrack

Linux distribution From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

BackTrack

BackTrack was a Linux distribution that focused on security, based on the Knoppix Linux distribution aimed at digital forensics and penetration testing use.[4] In March 2013, the Offensive Security team rebuilt BackTrack around the Debian distribution and released it under the name Kali Linux.[5]

Quick Facts Developer, OS family ...
BackTrack
Backtrack
Backtrack
BackTrack 5 R3
DeveloperOffensive Security[1]
  • Mati Aharoni
  • Devon Kearns
OS familyLinux (Unix-like)
Working stateDiscontinued
Source modelOpen source
Initial releaseMay 26, 2006; 18 years ago (2006-05-26)
Final release5 R3 / August 13, 2012; 12 years ago (2012-08-13)
Platformsi386 (x86), AMD64 (x86-64), ARM
Kernel typeMonolithic
Default
user interface
Bash, KDE Plasma Desktop, Fluxbox,[2][3] GNOME
LicenseVarious
Preceded by
  • WHAX
  • Auditor Security Collection
Succeeded byKali Linux
Official websitewww.backtrack-linux.org
Close

History

The BackTrack distribution originated from the merger of two formerly competing distributions which focused on penetration testing:

  • WHAX: a Slax-based Linux distribution developed by Mati Aharoni, a security consultant. Earlier versions of WHAX were called Whoppix and were based on Knoppix.[6]
  • Auditor Security Collection: a Live CD based on Knoppix developed by Max Moser which included over 300 tools organized in a user-friendly hierarchy.[7][8]

On January 9, 2010, BackTrack 4 improved hardware support, and added official FluxBox support.[4] The overlap with Auditor and WHAX in purpose and in collection of tools partly led to the merger. The overlap came about as Backtrack 5, released on May 10, 2011. This version also seen the base OS changed from Slackware to Ubuntu.[4][9]

Tools

Summarize
Perspective

BackTrack provided users with easy access to a comprehensive and large collection of security-related tools ranging from port scanners to Security Audit.[10] Support for Live CD and Live USB functionality allowed users to boot BackTrack directly from portable media without requiring installation,[11] though permanent installation to hard disk and network was also an option.

BackTrack included many well known security tools including:[12]

BackTrack arranged tools into 12 categories:[12][13]

Releases

More information Date, Release ...
Date Release
May 26, 2006 First stable release of BackTrack based on Slackware[9][14][15]
October 13, 2006 BackTrack 2 beta #1 released[16][17]
November 19, 2006 BackTrack 2 beta #2 released[18]
March 6, 2007 BackTrack 2 final released[9][19][20]
December 14, 2007 BackTrack 3 beta released[21][19]
June 19, 2008 BackTrack 3 final released (Linux kernel 2.6.21.5)[9][19]
February 11, 2009 BackTrack 4 beta released[22]
January 9, 2010 BackTrack 4 final release (Linux kernel 2.6.30.9 and base OS changed to Ubuntu)[9][23][24]
May 8, 2010 BackTrack 4 R1 release[25]
November 22, 2010 BackTrack 4 R2 release[26]
May 10, 2011 BackTrack 5 release (Linux kernel 2.6.38)[9][27]
August 18, 2011 BackTrack 5 R1 release (Linux kernel 2.6.39.5)[28]
March 1, 2012 BackTrack 5 R2 release (Linux kernel 3.2.6)[29]
August 13, 2012 BackTrack 5 R3 release[30]
Close

Whenever a new version of BackTrack was released, older versions would lose their support and service from the BackTrack development team. There are currently no supported versions of BackTrack.[31]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.