Finding ID | Version | Rule ID | IA Controls | Severity |
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V-38580 | RHEL-06-000202 | SV-50381r1_rule | Medium |
Description |
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The addition/removal of kernel modules can be used to alter the behavior of the kernel and potentially introduce malicious code into kernel space. It is important to have an audit trail of modules that have been introduced into the kernel. |
STIG | Date |
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 Security Technical Implementation Guide | 2013-06-03 |
Check Text ( C-46138r1_chk ) |
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To determine if the system is configured to audit calls to the "init_module" system call, run the following command: # auditctl -l | grep syscall | grep init_module If the system is configured to audit this activity, it will return a line. To determine if the system is configured to audit calls to the "delete_module" system call, run the following command: # auditctl -l | grep syscall | grep delete_module If the system is configured to audit this activity, it will return a line. If no line is returned, this is a finding. |
Fix Text (F-43528r2_fix) |
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Add the following to "/etc/audit/audit.rules" in order to capture kernel module loading and unloading events, setting ARCH to either b32 or b64 as appropriate for your system: -w /sbin/insmod -p x -k modules -w /sbin/rmmod -p x -k modules -w /sbin/modprobe -p x -k modules -a always,exit -F arch=[ARCH] -S init_module -S delete_module -k modules |