Finding ID | Version | Rule ID | IA Controls | Severity |
---|---|---|---|---|
V-50831 | OL6-00-000261 | SV-65037r1_rule | Low |
Description |
---|
Mishandling crash data could expose sensitive information about vulnerabilities in software executing on the local machine, as well as sensitive information from within a process's address space or registers. |
STIG | Date |
---|---|
Oracle Linux 6 Security Technical Implementation Guide | 2018-03-01 |
Check Text ( C-53303r1_chk ) |
---|
To check that the "abrtd" service is disabled in system boot configuration, run the following command: # chkconfig "abrtd" --list Output should indicate the "abrtd" service has either not been installed, or has been disabled at all runlevels, as shown in the example below: # chkconfig "abrtd" --list "abrtd" 0:off 1:off 2:off 3:off 4:off 5:off 6:off Run the following command to verify "abrtd" is disabled through current runtime configuration: # service abrtd status If the service is disabled the command will return the following output: abrtd is stopped If the service is running, this is a finding. |
Fix Text (F-55625r1_fix) |
---|
The Automatic Bug Reporting Tool ("abrtd") daemon collects and reports crash data when an application crash is detected. Using a variety of plugins, abrtd can email crash reports to system administrators, log crash reports to files, or forward crash reports to a centralized issue-tracking system such as the operating system vendor's centralized issue-tracking system. The "abrtd" service can be disabled with the following commands: # chkconfig abrtd off # service abrtd stop |