Volume 11

V11 N6 Pages 4-9

December 2013


Security Engineering Lessons Learned for Migrating Independent LANs to an Enterprise Environment


Robert L. Marchant
Penn State University
University Park, PA 16802, USA

Thomas Bonneau
Sotera Defense Solutions
Herndon, VA 20171, USA

Abstract: Transition from small, independent LANs into larger enterprise managed infrastructures is becoming more prominent in academia, business and government. Consolidation of IT resources into larger, more disciplined, and more professionally managed environments has significant advantages however they do bring their own unique issues to solve in order to make the transition for the organizations involved easier. The topics covered under this paper are critical areas of concern organizations and their administrator staff needs to consider and resolve in order that transition and migration can be as painless as possible. Loosely using NIST SP 800.53 controls as a reference, the areas presented within this paper include access control mechanisms, patch management considerations, the need to address difference in hardware and software monitoring, baselines and licensing.

Keywords: Access control., LAN migration, Data Center Consolidation, Patch Management

Download this article: ISEDJ - V11 N6 Page 4.pdf


Recommended Citation: Marchant, R. L., Bonneau, T. (2013). Security Engineering Lessons Learned for Migrating Independent LANs to an Enterprise Environment. Information Systems Education Journal, 11(6) pp 4-9. http://isedj.org/2013-11/ ISSN: 1545-679X. (A preliminary version appears in The Proceedings of ISECON 2012)