An application with a long history, Tiger [1] was first developed to help secure Unix systems on the Texas A&M University campus. It was released in 1994, around the same time that many other well-known classic security tools appeared, such as COPS, SATAN, and John the Ripper. Since then, the project has forked and ceased development, only to be revived in recent years as a convenient framework for modern security requirements on Unix-like operating systems.
Summarizing Tiger is a challenge. Basically, Tiger is a collection of Bourne shell scripts, C code, and data files. The Debian version includes 43 modules, seeming to cover every aspect of a Linux system imaginable, with the exception of kernels. From networks, Apache, and printers in external connections to boot managers, logs, configuration files, passwords,…