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The Cisco switch must be configured to only permit management traffic that ingresses and egresses the out-of-band management (OOBM) interface.


Overview

Finding ID Version Rule ID IA Controls Severity
V-220453 CISC-RT-000450 SV-220453r622190_rule Medium
Description
The OOBM access switch will connect to the management interface of the managed network elements. The management interface can be a true OOBM interface or a standard interface functioning as the management interface. In either case, the management interface of the managed network element will be directly connected to the OOBM network. An OOBM interface does not forward transit traffic, thereby providing complete separation of production and management traffic. Since all management traffic is immediately forwarded into the management network, it is not exposed to possible tampering. The separation also ensures that congestion or failures in the managed network do not affect the management of the device. If the device does not have an OOBM port, the interface functioning as the management interface must be configured so that management traffic does not leak into the managed network and production traffic does not leak into the management network.
STIG Date
Cisco IOS Switch RTR Security Technical Implementation Guide 2023-09-13

Details

Check Text ( C-22168r508438_chk )
This requirement is only applicable where management access to the switch is via an OOBM interface, which is not a true OOBM interface.

Step 1: Verify that the managed interface has an inbound and outbound access control list (ACL) configured.

interface GigabitEthernet0/7
no switchport
description link to OOBM access switch
ip address 10.11.1.22 255.255.255.0
ip access-group INGRESS_MANAGEMENT_ACL in
ip access-group EGRESS_MANAGEMENT_ACL in

Step 2: Verify that the ingress ACL only allows management and ICMP traffic.

ip access-list extended INGRESS_MANAGEMENT_ACL
permit tcp any host 10.11.1.22 eq tacacs
permit tcp any host 10.11.1.22 eq 22
permit udp any host 10.11.1.22 eq snmp
permit udp any host 10.11.1.22 eq snmptrap
permit udp any host 10.11.1.22 eq ntp
permit icmp any host 10.11.1.22
deny ip any any log-input

Step 3: Verify that the egress ACL blocks any transit traffic.

ip access-list extended EGRESS_MANAGEMENT_ACL
deny ip any any log-input

Note: On Cisco switches, local generated packets are not inspected by outgoing interface access lists. Hence, the above configuration would drop any packets not generated by the switch, blocking any transit traffic.

If the switch does not restrict traffic that ingresses and egresses the management interface, this is a finding.
Fix Text (F-22157r508439_fix)
If the management interface is not a dedicated OOBM interface, it must be configured with both an ingress and egress ACL.

Step 1: Configure an ingress ACL as shown in the example below:

SW1(config)#ip access-list extended INGRESS_MANAGEMENT_ACL
SW1(config-ext-nacl)#permit tcp any host 10.11.1.22 eq tacacs
SW1(config-ext-nacl)#permit tcp any host 10.11.1.22 eq 22
SW1(config-ext-nacl)#permit udp any host 10.11.1.22 eq snmp
SW1(config-ext-nacl)#permit udp any host 10.11.1.22 eq snmptrap
SW1(config-ext-nacl)#permit udp any host 10.11.1.22 eq ntp
SW1(config-ext-nacl)#permit icmp any host 10.11.1.22
SW1(config-ext-nacl)#deny ip any any log-input
SW1(config-ext-nacl)#exit

Step 2: Configure an egress ACL as shown in the example below:

SW1(config)#ip access-list extended EGRESS_MANAGEMENT_ACL
SW1(config-ext-nacl)#deny ip any any log-input
SW1(config-ext-nacl)#exit

Step 3: Apply the ACLs to the OOBM interfaces.

SW1(config)#int g0/7
SW1(config-if)#ip access-group INGRESS_MANAGEMENT_ACL in
SW1(config-if)#ip access-group EGRESS_MANAGEMENT_ACL out