Finding ID | Version | Rule ID | IA Controls | Severity |
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V-29248 | GEN002760-9 | SV-45339r1_rule | Medium |
Description |
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If the system is not configured to audit certain activities and write them to an audit log, it is more difficult to detect and track system compromises and damages incurred during a system compromise. |
STIG | Date |
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SUSE Linux Enterprise Server v11 for System z | 2016-12-20 |
Check Text ( C-42688r1_chk ) |
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Check the auditing configuration of the system. Procedure: # cat /etc/audit/audit.rules | grep -e "-a exit,always" | grep -i "sched_setparam" If the result does not contain "-S sched_setparam", this is a finding. |
Fix Text (F-38735r1_fix) |
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The "-F arch= On single architecture systems, the "-F arch= Any restrictions (such as with "-F") beyond those provided in the example rules are not in strict compliance with this requirement, and are a finding unless justified and documented appropriately. The use of audit keys consistent with the provided example is encouraged to provide for uniform audit logs, however omitting the audit key or using an alternate audit key is not a finding. Procedure: A Real Time Operating System (RTOS) provides specialized system scheduling which causes an inordinate number of messages to be produced when the sched_setparam and set_setscheduler are audited. This not only may degrade the system speed to an unusable level but obscures any forensic information which may otherwise have been useful. Unless the operating system is a Red Hat 5 based RTOS (including MRG and AS5300) the following should also be present in /etc/audit/audit.rules -a exit,always -F arch= Restart the auditd service. # rcauditd restart OR # service auditd restart |