UCF STIG Viewer Logo
Changes are coming to https://stigviewer.com. Take our survey to help us understand your usage and how we can better serve you in the future.
Take Survey

Cisco IOS-XE Switch RTR Security Technical Implementation Guide


Overview

Date Finding Count (94)
2022-09-13 CAT I (High): 8 CAT II (Med): 58 CAT III (Low): 28
STIG Description
This Security Technical Implementation Guide is published as a tool to improve the security of Department of Defense (DoD) information systems. The requirements are derived from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) 800-53 and related documents. Comments or proposed revisions to this document should be sent via email to the following address: disa.stig_spt@mail.mil.

Available Profiles



Findings (MAC III - Administrative Public)

Finding ID Severity Title
V-221007 High The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to deny network traffic by default and allow network traffic by exception.
V-221011 High The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to restrict it from accepting outbound IP packets that contain an illegitimate address in the source address field via egress filter or by enabling Unicast Reverse Path Forwarding (uRPF).
V-221037 High The Cisco PE switch must be configured to have each Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF) instance bound to the appropriate physical or logical interfaces to maintain traffic separation between all MPLS L3VPNs.
V-221038 High The Cisco PE switch must be configured to have each Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF) instance with the appropriate Route Target (RT).
V-221041 High The Cisco PE switch providing MPLS Virtual Private Wire Service (VPWS) must be configured to have the appropriate virtual circuit identification (VC ID) for each attachment circuit.
V-221042 High The Cisco PE switch providing Virtual Private LAN Services (VPLS) must be configured to have all attachment circuits defined to the virtual forwarding instance (VFI) with the globally unique VPN ID assigned for each customer VLAN.
V-221047 High The Cisco PE switch must be configured to block any traffic that is destined to the IP core infrastructure.
V-220996 High The Cisco switch must be configured to restrict traffic destined to itself.
V-237776 Medium The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to drop IPv6 packets containing the NSAP address option within Destination Option header.
V-221008 Medium The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to enforce approved authorizations for controlling the flow of information between interconnected networks in accordance with applicable policy.
V-221009 Medium The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to only allow incoming communications from authorized sources to be routed to authorized destinations.
V-221004 Medium The Cisco switch must be configured to produce audit records containing information to establish where the events occurred.
V-221005 Medium The Cisco switch must be configured to produce audit records containing information to establish the source of the events.
V-221000 Medium The Cisco switch must be configured to have Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) unreachable messages disabled on all external interfaces.
V-221001 Medium The Cisco switch must be configured to have Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) mask reply messages disabled on all external interfaces.
V-221002 Medium The Cisco switch must be configured to have Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) redirect messages disabled on all external interfaces.
V-220988 Medium The Cisco switch must be configured to use keys with a duration not exceeding 180 days for authenticating routing protocol messages.
V-221019 Medium The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to block all outbound management traffic.
V-221018 Medium The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to have Proxy ARP disabled on all external interfaces.
V-221015 Medium The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to block all packets with any IP options.
V-221014 Medium The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to filter egress traffic at the internal interface on an inbound direction.
V-221013 Medium The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to filter ingress traffic at the external interface on an inbound direction.
V-221012 Medium The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to filter traffic destined to the enclave in accordance with the guidelines contained in DoD Instruction 8551.1.
V-221010 Medium The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to block inbound packets with source Bogon IP address prefixes.
V-220986 Medium The Cisco switch must be configured to enforce approved authorizations for controlling the flow of information within the network based on organization-defined information flow control policies.
V-220987 Medium The Cisco switch must be configured to implement message authentication for all control plane protocols.
V-237756 Medium The Cisco switch must not be configured to use IPv6 Site Local Unicast addresses.
V-237750 Medium The Cisco switch must be configured to have Cisco Express Forwarding enabled.
V-237759 Medium The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to suppress Router Advertisements on all external IPv6-enabled interfaces.
V-220990 Medium The Cisco switch must be configured to authenticate all routing protocol messages using NIST-validated FIPS 198-1 message authentication code algorithm.
V-220993 Medium The Cisco switch must not be configured to have any feature enabled that calls home to the vendor.
V-220995 Medium The Cisco switch must be configured to protect against or limit the effects of denial-of-service (DoS) attacks by employing control plane protection.
V-221027 Medium The Cisco BGP switch must be configured to reject outbound route advertisements for any prefixes belonging to the IP core.
V-221024 Medium The Cisco BGP switch must be configured to reject inbound route advertisements for any prefixes belonging to the local autonomous system (AS).
V-221025 Medium The Cisco BGP switch must be configured to reject inbound route advertisements from a customer edge (CE) switch for prefixes that are not allocated to that customer.
V-220998 Medium The Cisco switch must be configured to have Gratuitous ARP disabled on all external interfaces.
V-237778 Medium The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to drop IPv6 packets containing a Hop-by-Hop or Destination Option extension header with an undefined option type.
V-221036 Medium The Cisco MPLS switch must be configured to have TTL Propagation disabled.
V-221030 Medium The Cisco BGP switch must be configured to use the maximum prefixes feature to protect against route table flooding and prefix de-aggregation attacks.
V-221039 Medium The Cisco PE switch must be configured to have each VRF with the appropriate Route Distinguisher (RD).
V-220989 Medium The Cisco switch must be configured to use encryption for routing protocol authentication.
V-221040 Medium The Cisco PE switch providing MPLS Layer 2 Virtual Private Network (L2VPN) services must be configured to authenticate targeted Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) sessions used to exchange virtual circuit (VC) information using a FIPS-approved message authentication code algorithm.
V-221044 Medium The Cisco PE switch providing Virtual Private LAN Services (VPLS) must be configured to have traffic storm control thresholds on CE-facing interfaces.
V-221046 Medium The Cisco PE switch must be configured to limit the number of MAC addresses it can learn for each Virtual Private LAN Services (VPLS) bridge domain.
V-221048 Medium The Cisco PE switch must be configured with Unicast Reverse Path Forwarding (uRPF) loose mode enabled on all CE-facing interfaces.
V-221049 Medium The Cisco PE switch must be configured to ignore or drop all packets with any IP options.
V-237766 Medium The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to drop IPv6 packets containing a Hop-by-Hop header with invalid option type values.
V-237764 Medium The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured drop IPv6 packets with a Routing Header type 0, 1, or 3-255.
V-237762 Medium The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to drop IPv6 undetermined transport packets.
V-221053 Medium The Cisco multicast switch must be configured to disable Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) on all interfaces that are not required to support multicast routing.
V-221052 Medium The Cisco switch must be configured to enforce a Quality-of-Service (QoS) policy to limit the effects of packet flooding denial-of-service (DoS) attacks.
V-221054 Medium The Cisco multicast switch must be configured to bind a Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) neighbor filter to interfaces that have PIM enabled.
V-237774 Medium The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to drop IPv6 packets containing an extension header with the Endpoint Identification option.
V-221059 Medium The Cisco multicast Rendezvous Point (RP) must be configured to rate limit the number of Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) Register messages.
V-237772 Medium The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to drop IPv6 packets containing a Destination Option header with invalid option type values.
V-221064 Medium The Cisco Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP) switch must be configured to only accept MSDP packets from known MSDP peers.
V-221065 Medium The Cisco Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP) switch must be configured to authenticate all received MSDP packets.
V-221062 Medium The Cisco multicast Designated switch (DR) must be configured to limit the number of mroute states resulting from Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) and Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) Host Membership Reports.
V-221063 Medium The Cisco multicast Designated switch (DR) must be configured to set the shortest-path tree (SPT) threshold to infinity to minimalize source-group (S, G) state within the multicast topology where Any Source Multicast (ASM) is deployed.
V-221061 Medium The Cisco multicast Designated switch (DR) must be configured to filter the Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) and Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) Report messages to allow hosts to join a multicast group only from sources that have been approved by the organization.
V-221022 Medium The Cisco BGP switch must be configured to use a unique key for each autonomous system (AS) that it peers with.
V-221023 Medium The Cisco BGP switch must be configured to reject inbound route advertisements for any Bogon prefixes.
V-221020 Medium The Cisco switch must be configured to only permit management traffic that ingresses and egresses the out-of-band management (OOBM) interface.
V-221026 Medium The Cisco BGP switch must be configured to reject outbound route advertisements for any prefixes that do not belong to any customers or the local autonomous system (AS).
V-220994 Medium The Cisco switch must not be configured to have any zero-touch deployment feature enabled when connected to an operational network.
V-220997 Medium The Cisco switch must be configured to drop all fragmented Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) packets destined to itself.
V-221006 Low The Cisco switch must be configured to disable the auxiliary port unless it is connected to a secured modem providing encryption and authentication.
V-221003 Low The Cisco switch must be configured to log all packets that have been dropped at interfaces via an ACL.
V-221017 Low The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to have Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) disabled on all external interfaces.
V-221016 Low The Cisco perimeter switch must be configured to have Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP) disabled on all external interfaces.
V-237752 Low The Cisco switch must be configured to advertise a hop limit of at least 32 in Switch Advertisement messages for IPv6 stateless auto-configuration deployments.
V-220991 Low The Cisco switch must be configured to have all inactive layer 3 interfaces disabled.
V-221021 Low The Cisco BGP switch must be configured to enable the Generalized TTL Security Mechanism (GTSM).
V-220999 Low The Cisco switch must be configured to have IP directed broadcast disabled on all interfaces.
V-221028 Low The Cisco BGP switch must be configured to reject route advertisements from BGP peers that do not list their autonomous system (AS) number as the first AS in the AS_PATH attribute.
V-221029 Low The Cisco BGP switch must be configured to reject route advertisements from CE switches with an originating AS in the AS_PATH attribute that does not belong to that customer.
V-221035 Low The MPLS switch with RSVP-TE enabled must be configured with message pacing to adjust maximum burst and maximum number of RSVP messages to an output queue based on the link speed and input queue size of adjacent core switches.
V-221034 Low The Cisco MPLS switch must be configured to synchronize Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP) and LDP to minimize packet loss when an IGP adjacency is established prior to LDP peers completing label exchange.
V-221031 Low The Cisco BGP switch must be configured to limit the prefix size on any inbound route advertisement to /24, or the least significant prefixes issued to the customer.
V-221033 Low The Cisco MPLS switch must be configured to use its loopback address as the source address for LDP peering sessions.
V-221032 Low The Cisco BGP switch must be configured to use its loopback address as the source address for iBGP peering sessions.
V-221043 Low The Cisco PE switch must be configured to enforce the split-horizon rule for all pseudowires within a Virtual Private LAN Services (VPLS) bridge domain.
V-221045 Low The Cisco PE switch must be configured to implement Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) or Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) snooping for each Virtual Private LAN Services (VPLS) bridge domain.
V-221051 Low The Cisco P switch must be configured to implement a Quality-of-Service (QoS) policy in accordance with the QoS GIG Technical Profile.
V-221050 Low The Cisco PE switch must be configured to enforce a Quality-of-Service (QoS) policy in accordance with the QoS GIG Technical Profile.
V-221057 Low The Cisco multicast Rendezvous Point (RP) switch must be configured to filter Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) Register messages received from the Designated switch (DR) for any undesirable multicast groups and sources.
V-221056 Low The Cisco multicast Rendezvous Point (RP) switch must be configured to limit the multicast forwarding cache so that its resources are not saturated by managing an overwhelming number of Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) and Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP) source-active entries.
V-221055 Low The Cisco multicast edge switch must be configured to establish boundaries for administratively scoped multicast traffic.
V-221058 Low The Cisco multicast Rendezvous Point (RP) switch must be configured to filter Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) Join messages received from the Designated Cisco switch (DR) for any undesirable multicast groups.
V-221066 Low The Cisco Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP) switch must be configured to filter received source-active multicast advertisements for any undesirable multicast groups and sources.
V-221067 Low The Cisco Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP) switch must be configured to filter source-active multicast advertisements to external MSDP peers to avoid global visibility of local-only multicast sources and groups.
V-221060 Low The Cisco multicast Designated switch (DR) must be configured to filter the Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) and Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) Report messages to allow hosts to join only multicast groups that have been approved by the organization.
V-221068 Low The Cisco Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP) switch must be configured to limit the amount of source-active messages it accepts on a per-peer basis.
V-221069 Low The Cisco Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP) switch must be configured to use a loopback address as the source address when originating MSDP traffic.