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The IDPS must produce audit records containing information to establish the outcome of events associated with detected harmful or potentially harmful traffic, including, at a minimum, capturing all associated communications traffic.


Overview

Finding ID Version Rule ID IA Controls Severity
V-34544 SRG-NET-000078-IDPS-00063 SV-45386r2_rule Medium
Description
Associating event outcome with detected events in the log provides a means of investigating an attack or suspected attack. While auditing and logging are closely related, they are not the same. Logging is recording data about events that take place in a system, while auditing is the use of log records to identify security-relevant information such as system or user accesses. In short, log records are audited to establish an accurate history. Without logging, it would be impossible to establish an audit trail. The logs should identify what servers, destination addresses, applications, or databases were potentially attacked by logging communications traffic between the target and the attacker. All commands that were entered by the attacker (such as account creations, changes in permissions, files accessed, etc.) during the session should also be logged.
STIG Date
Intrusion Detection and Prevention Systems (IDPS) Security Requirements Guide 2020-06-12

Details

Check Text ( C-42735r5_chk )
Verify the entries sent to the audit log include, at a minimum, capturing all associated communications traffic.

If the audit log event records do not include, at a minimum, capturing all associated communications traffic, this is a finding.
Fix Text (F-38783r5_fix)
Configure the IDPS components to ensure entries sent to the audit log include, at a minimum, capturing all associated communications traffic.