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Solaris 11 SPARC Security Technical Implementation Guide

Overview

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Stig Description
This Security Technical Implementation Guide is published as a tool to improve the security of Department of Defense (DOD) information systems. The requirements are derived from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) 800-53 and related documents. Comments or proposed revisions to this document should be sent via email to the following address: disa.stig_spt@mail.mil.
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Findings - All

Finding ID Severity Title Description
V-219968 High The operating system must configure auditing to reduce the likelihood of storage capacity being exceeded. Overflowing the audit storage area can result in a denial of service or system outage.
V-219966 High The audit system must alert the System Administrator (SA) if there is any type of audit failure. Proper alerts to system administrators and Information Assurance (IA) officials of audit failures ensure a timely response to critical system issues.
V-216456 High SNMP communities, users, and passphrases must be changed from the default. Whether active or not, default SNMP passwords, users, and passphrases must be changed to maintain security. If the service is running with the default authenticators, then anyone can gather data about the system and the network and use the information to potentially compromise the integrity of the system or network(s).
V-216442 High The operating system must be a supported release. An operating system release is considered supported if the vendor continues to provide security patches for the product. With an unsupported release, it will not be possible to resolve security issues discovered in the system software.
V-216421 High There must be no user .rhosts files. Even though the .rhosts files are ineffective if support is disabled in /etc/pam.conf, they may have been brought over from other systems and could contain information useful to an attacker for those other systems.
V-216365 High The operating system must not allow logins for users with blank passwords. If the password field is blank and the system does not enforce a policy that passwords are required, it could allow login without proper authentication of a user.
V-216359 High The system must not allow autologin capabilities from the GNOME desktop. As automatic logins are a known security risk for other than "kiosk" types of systems, GNOME automatic login should be disabled in pam.conf.
V-216355 High Login must not be permitted with empty/null passwords for SSH. Permitting login without a password is inherently risky.
V-216311 High X displays must not be exported to the world. Open X displays allow an attacker to capture keystrokes and to execute commands remotely. Many users have their X Server set to xhost +, permitting access to the X Server by anyone, from anywhere.
V-216292 High The telnet service daemon must not be installed unless required. Telnet is an insecure protocol.
V-216291 High The TFTP service daemon must not be installed unless required. TFTP is an insecure protocol.
V-216290 High The FTP daemon must not be installed unless required. FTP is an insecure protocol.
V-216288 High The NIS package must not be installed. NIS is an insecure protocol.
V-216273 High The operating system must alert designated organizational officials in the event of an audit processing failure. Proper alerts to system administrators and IA officials of audit failures ensure a timely response to critical system issues.
V-233300 Medium The sshd server must bind the X11 forwarding server to the loopback address. As enabling X11 Forwarding on the host can permit a malicious user to secretly open another X11 connection to another remote client during the session and perform unobtrusive activities such as keystroke monitoring, if the X11 services are not required for the system's intended function, they should be disabled or...
V-224671 Medium The operating system must identify potentially security-relevant error conditions. Security functional testing involves testing the operating system for conformance to the operating system security function specifications, as well as for the underlying security model. The need to verify security functionality applies to all security functions. The conformance criteria state the conditions necessary for the operating system to exhibit the...
V-224670 Medium The operating system must prevent non-privileged users from circumventing malicious code protection capabilities. In order to minimize potential negative impact to the organization caused by malicious code, it is imperative that malicious code is identified and eradicated prior to entering protected enclaves via operating system entry and exit points. The requirement states that AV and malware protection applications must be used at entry...
V-219987 Medium The operating system must verify the correct operation of security functions in accordance with organization-defined conditions and in accordance with organization-defined frequency (if periodic verification). Security functional testing involves testing the operating system for conformance to the operating system security function specifications, as well as for the underlying security model. The need to verify security functionality applies to all security functions. The conformance criteria state the conditions necessary for the operating system to exhibit the...
V-219986 Medium The operating system must synchronize internal information system clocks with a server that is synchronized to one of the redundant United States Naval Observatory (USNO) time servers or a time server designated for the appropriate DOD network (NIPRNet/SIPRNet), and/or the Global Positioning System (GPS). To assure the accuracy of the system clock, it must be synchronized with an authoritative time source within DOD. Many system functions, including time-based login and activity restrictions, automated reports, system logs, and audit records depend on an accurate system clock. If there is no confidence in the correctness of...
V-219985 Medium The operating system must protect the audit records resulting from non-local accesses to privileged accounts and the execution of privileged functions. Protection of audit records and audit data is of critical importance. Care must be taken to ensure privileged users cannot circumvent audit protections put in place. Auditing might not be reliable when performed by an operating system which the user being audited has privileged access to. The privileged user could...
V-219984 Medium The operating system must protect the integrity of transmitted information. Ensuring the integrity of transmitted information requires the operating system take feasible measures to employ transmission layer security. This requirement applies to communications across internal and external networks.
V-219981 Medium The operating system must maintain the confidentiality of information during aggregation, packaging, and transformation in preparation for transmission. Ensuring that transmitted information remains confidential during aggregation, packaging, and transformation requires the operating system take feasible measures to employ transmission layer security. This requirement applies to communications across internal and external networks.
V-219980 Medium The operating system must employ cryptographic mechanisms to prevent unauthorized disclosure of information during transmission unless otherwise protected by alternative physical measures. Ensuring that transmitted information does not become disclosed to unauthorized entities requires the operating system take feasible measures to employ transmission layer security. This requirement applies to communications across internal and external networks.
V-219979 Medium The operating system must protect the confidentiality of transmitted information. Ensuring the confidentiality of transmitted information requires the operating system take feasible measures to employ transmission layer security. This requirement applies to communications across internal and external networks.
V-219978 Medium The operating system must maintain the integrity of information during aggregation, packaging, and transformation in preparation for transmission. Ensuring the integrity of transmitted information requires the operating system take feasible measures to employ transmission layer security. This requirement applies to communications across internal and external networks.
V-219977 Medium The operating system must employ cryptographic mechanisms to recognize changes to information during transmission unless otherwise protected by alternative physical measures. Ensuring that transmitted information is not altered during transmission requires the operating system take feasible measures to employ transmission layer security. This requirement applies to communications across internal and external networks.
V-219976 Medium The operating system must protect the integrity of transmitted information. Ensuring the integrity of transmitted information requires the operating system take feasible measures to employ transmission layer security. This requirement applies to communications across internal and external networks.
V-219975 Medium The operating system must employ FIPS-validate or NSA-approved cryptography to implement digital signatures. FIPS 140-2 is the current standard for validating cryptographic modules, and NSA Type-X (where X=1, 2, 3, 4) products are NSA-certified hardware based encryption modules.
V-219973 Medium The system must restrict the ability of users to assume excessive privileges to members of a defined group and prevent unauthorized users from accessing administrative tools. Allowing any user to elevate their privileges can allow them excessive control of the system tools.
V-219972 Medium The operating system must disable information system functionality that provides the capability for automatic execution of code on mobile devices without user direction. Mobile devices include portable storage media (e.g., USB memory sticks, external hard disk drives) and portable computing and communications devices with information storage capability (e.g., notebook/laptop computers, personal digital assistants, cellular telephones, digital cameras, audio recording devices). Auto execution vulnerabilities can result in malicious programs being automatically executed. Examples of...
V-219971 Medium The operating system must employ automated mechanisms to prevent program execution in accordance with the organization-defined specifications. Operating systems are capable of providing a wide variety of functions and services. Execution must be disabled based on organization-defined specifications.
V-219970 Medium The operating system must employ automated mechanisms, per organization-defined frequency, to detect the addition of unauthorized components/devices into the operating system. Addition of unauthorized code or packages may result in data corruption or theft.
V-219969 Medium The system must verify that package updates are digitally signed. Digitally signed packages ensure that the source of the package can be identified.
V-219967 Medium The operating system must allocate audit record storage capacity. Proper audit storage capacity is crucial to ensuring the ongoing logging of critical events.
V-219965 Medium The audit system must alert the SA when the audit storage volume approaches its capacity. Filling the audit storage area can result in a denial of service or system outage and can lead to events going undetected.
V-219964 Medium The audit system must be configured to audit the loading and unloading of dynamic kernel modules. Without auditing, individual system accesses cannot be tracked, and malicious activity cannot be detected and traced back to an individual account.
V-219963 Medium The audit system must be configured to audit all discretionary access control permission modifications. Without auditing, individual system accesses cannot be tracked, and malicious activity cannot be detected and traced back to an individual account.
V-219962 Medium The operating system must support the capability to compile audit records from multiple components within the system into a system-wide (logical or physical) audit trail that is time-correlated to within organization-defined level of tolerance. Without auditing, individual system accesses cannot be tracked, and malicious activity cannot be detected and traced back to an individual account. Without accurate time stamps, source, user, and activity information, malicious activity cannot be accurately tracked. Without an audit reduction and reporting capability, users find it difficult to identify specific...
V-219961 Medium The audit records must provide data for all auditable events defined at the organizational level for the organization-defined information system components. Without auditing, individual system accesses cannot be tracked, and malicious activity cannot be detected and traced back to an individual account. Without accurate time stamps, source, user, and activity information, malicious activity cannot be accurately tracked. Without an audit reduction and reporting capability, users find it difficult to identify specific...
V-219960 Medium The audit system records must be able to be used by a report generation capability. Enabling the audit system will produce records for use in report generation. Without an audit reporting capability, users find it difficult to identify specific patterns of attack.
V-219959 Medium The audit system must support an audit reduction capability. Using the audit system will utilize the audit reduction capability. Without an audit reduction capability, users find it difficult to identify specific patterns of attack.
V-216479 Medium The operating system must monitor for unauthorized connections of mobile devices to organizational information systems. Mobile devices include portable storage media (e.g., USB memory sticks, external hard disk drives) and portable computing and communications devices with information storage capability (e.g., notebook/laptop computers, personal digital assistants, cellular telephones, digital cameras, audio recording devices). Organization-controlled mobile devices include those devices for which the organization has the authority...
V-216476 Medium The systems physical devices must not be assigned to non-global zones. Solaris non-global zones can be assigned physical hardware devices. This increases the risk of such a non-global zone having the capability to compromise the global zone.
V-216473 Medium The operating system must manage excess capacity, bandwidth, or other redundancy to limit the effects of information flooding types of denial of service attacks. In the case of denial of service attacks, care must be taken when designing the operating system so as to ensure that the operating system makes the best use of system resources.
V-216469 Medium The operating system must back up audit records at least every seven days onto a different system or system component than the system or component being audited. Protection of log data includes assuring log data is not accidentally lost or deleted. Backing up audit records to a different system or onto separate media than the system being audited on an organizationally defined frequency helps to assure in the event of a catastrophic system failure, the audit records...
V-216467 Medium The operating system must employ malicious code protection mechanisms at workstations, servers, or mobile computing devices on the network to detect and eradicate malicious code transported by electronic mail, electronic mail attachments, web accesses, removable media, or other common means. In order to minimize potential negative impact to the organization caused by malicious code, it is imperative that malicious code is identified and eradicated prior to entering protected enclaves via operating system entry and exit points. The requirement states that AV and malware protection applications must be used at entry...
V-216465 Medium The operating system must employ PKI solutions at workstations, servers, or mobile computing devices on the network to create, manage, distribute, use, store, and revoke digital certificates. Without the use of PKI systems to manage digital certificates, the operating system or other system components may be unable to securely communicate on a network or reliably verify the identity of a user via digital signatures.
V-216464 Medium The operating system must prevent the execution of prohibited mobile code. Decisions regarding the employment of mobile code within operating systems are based on the potential for the code to cause damage to the system if used maliciously. Mobile code technologies include Java, JavaScript, ActiveX, PDF, Postscript, Shockwave movies, Flash animations, and VBScript. Usage restrictions and implementation guidance apply to both...
V-216463 Medium The operating system must conduct backups of operating system documentation including security-related documentation per organization-defined frequency to conduct backups that is consistent with recovery time and recovery point objectives. Operating system backup is a critical step in maintaining data assurance and availability. System documentation is data generated for/by the host (such as logs) and/or administrative users. Backups shall be consistent with organizational recovery time and recovery point objectives.
V-216462 Medium The operating system must conduct backups of system-level information contained in the information system per organization-defined frequency to conduct backups that are consistent with recovery time and recovery point objectives. Operating system backup is a critical step in maintaining data assurance and availability. System-level information is data generated for/by the host (such as configuration settings) and/or administrative users. Backups shall be consistent with organizational recovery time and recovery point objectives.
V-216461 Medium The operating system must conduct backups of user-level information contained in the operating system per organization-defined frequency to conduct backups consistent with recovery time and recovery point objectives. Operating system backup is a critical step in maintaining data assurance and availability. User-level information is data generated by information system and/or application users. Backups shall be consistent with organizational recovery time and recovery point objectives.
V-216459 Medium Direct logins must not be permitted to shared, default, application, or utility accounts. Shared accounts (accounts where two or more people log in with the same user identification) do not provide identification and authentication. There is no way to provide for non-repudiation or individual accountability.
V-216457 Medium A file integrity baseline must be created, maintained, and reviewed at least weekly to determine if unauthorized changes have been made to important system files located in the root file system. A file integrity baseline is a collection of file metadata used to evaluate the integrity of the system. A minimal baseline must contain metadata for all device files, setuid files, setgid files, system libraries, system binaries, and system configuration files. The minimal metadata must consist of the mode, owner, group...
V-216455 Medium The operating system must implement transaction recovery for transaction-based systems. Recovery and reconstitution constitutes executing an operating system contingency plan comprised of activities to restore essential missions and business functions. Transaction rollback and transaction journaling are examples of mechanisms supporting transaction recovery. While this is typically a database function, operating systems could be transactional in nature with respect to file...
V-216453 Medium The kernel core dump data directory must have mode 0700 or less permissive. Kernel core dumps may contain the full contents of system memory at the time of the crash. As the system memory may contain sensitive information, it must be protected accordingly. If the mode of the kernel core dump data directory is more permissive than 0700, unauthorized users may be able...
V-216452 Medium The kernel core dump data directory must be group-owned by root. Kernel core dumps may contain the full contents of system memory at the time of the crash. As the system memory may contain sensitive information, it must be protected accordingly. If the kernel core dump data directory is not group-owned by a system group, the core dumps contained in the...
V-216451 Medium The kernel core dump data directory must be owned by root. Kernel core dumps may contain the full contents of system memory at the time of the crash. As the system memory may contain sensitive information, it must be protected accordingly. If the kernel core dump data directory is not owned by root, the core dumps contained in the directory may...
V-216450 Medium Kernel core dumps must be disabled unless needed. Kernel core dumps may contain the full contents of system memory at the time of the crash. Kernel core dumps may consume a considerable amount of disk space and may result in denial of service by exhausting the available space on the target file system. The kernel core dump process...
V-216449 Medium The centralized process core dump data directory must have mode 0700 or less permissive. Process core dumps contain the memory in use by the process when it crashed. Any data the process was handling may be contained in the core file, and it must be protected accordingly. If the process core dump data directory has a mode more permissive than 0700, unauthorized users may...
V-216448 Medium The centralized process core dump data directory must be group-owned by root, bin, or sys. Process core dumps contain the memory in use by the process when it crashed. Any data the process was handling may be contained in the core file, and it must be protected accordingly. If the centralized process core dump data directory is not group-owned by a system group, the core...
V-216447 Medium The centralized process core dump data directory must be owned by root. Process core dumps contain the memory in use by the process when it crashed. Any data the process was handling may be contained in the core file, and it must be protected accordingly. If the centralized process core dump data directory is not owned by root, the core dumps contained...
V-216446 Medium The system must be configured to store any process core dumps in a specific, centralized directory. Specifying a centralized location for core file creation allows for the centralized protection of core files. Process core dumps contain the memory in use by the process when it crashed. Any data the process was handling may be contained in the core file, and it must be protected accordingly. If...
V-216445 Medium Process core dumps must be disabled unless needed. Process core dumps contain the memory in use by the process when it crashed. Process core dump files can be of significant size and their use can result in file systems filling to capacity, which may result in denial of service. Process core dumps can be useful for software debugging.
V-216443 Medium The system must implement non-executable program stacks. A common type of exploit is the stack buffer overflow. An application receives, from an attacker, more data than it is prepared for and stores this information on its stack, writing beyond the space reserved for it. This can be designed to cause execution of the data written on the...
V-216441 Medium The operator must document all file system objects that have non-standard access control list settings. Access Control Lists allow an object owner to expand permissions on an object to specific users and groups in addition to the standard permission model. Non-standard Access Control List settings can allow unauthorized users to modify critical files.
V-216438 Medium The root account must be the only account with GID of 0. All accounts with a GID of 0 have root group privileges and must be limited to the group account only.
V-216436 Medium The operating system must have no unowned files. A new user who is assigned a deleted user's user ID or group ID may then end up owning these files, and thus have more access on the system than was intended.
V-216434 Medium World-writable files must not exist. Data in world-writable files can be read, modified, and potentially compromised by any user on the system. World-writable files may also indicate an incorrectly written script or program that could potentially be the cause of a larger compromise to the system's integrity.
V-216433 Medium The system must not allow users to configure .forward files. Use of the .forward file poses a security risk in that sensitive data may be inadvertently transferred outside the organization. The .forward file also poses a secondary risk as it can be used to execute commands that may perform unintended actions.
V-216432 Medium User .netrc files must not exist. The .netrc file presents a significant security risk since it stores passwords in unencrypted form.
V-216431 Medium Duplicate group names must not exist. If a group is assigned a duplicate group name, it will create and have access to files with the first GID for that group in group. Effectively, the GID is shared, which is a security risk.
V-216430 Medium Duplicate user names must not exist. If a user is assigned a duplicate user name, it will create and have access to files with the first UID for that username in passwd.
V-216429 Medium Reserved UIDs 0-99 must only be used by system accounts. If a user is assigned a UID that is in the reserved range, even if it is not presently in use, security exposures can arise if a subsequently installed application uses the same UID.
V-216428 Medium Duplicate Group IDs (GIDs) must not exist for multiple groups. User groups must be assigned unique GIDs for accountability and to ensure appropriate access protections.
V-216427 Medium Duplicate UIDs must not exist for multiple non-organizational users. Non-organizational users must be assigned unique UIDs for accountability and to ensure appropriate access protections.
V-216426 Medium Duplicate User IDs (UIDs) must not exist for users within the organization. Users within the organization must be assigned unique UIDs for accountability and to ensure appropriate access protections.
V-216425 Medium All home directories must be owned by the respective user assigned to it in /etc/passwd. Since the user is accountable for files stored in the user's home directory, the user must be the owner of the directory.
V-216422 Medium Groups assigned to users must exist in the /etc/group file. Groups defined in passwd but not in group file pose a threat to system security since group permissions are not properly managed.
V-216420 Medium Permissions on user .netrc files must be 750 or less permissive. .netrc files may contain unencrypted passwords that can be used to attack other systems.
V-216419 Medium Permissions on user . (hidden) files must be 750 or less permissive. Group-writable or world-writable user configuration files may enable malicious users to steal or modify other users' data or to gain another user's system privileges.
V-216418 Medium Permissions on user home directories must be 750 or less permissive. Group-writable or world-writable user home directories may enable malicious users to steal or modify other users' data or to gain another user's system privileges.
V-216417 Medium The sticky bit must be set on all world writable directories. Files in directories that have had the "sticky bit" enabled can only be deleted by users that have both write permissions for the directory in which the file resides, as well as ownership of the file or directory, or have sufficient privileges. As this prevents users from overwriting each others'...
V-216411 Medium The operating system must use cryptographic mechanisms to protect and restrict access to information on portable digital media. When data is written to portable digital media, such as thumb drives, floppy diskettes, compact disks, and magnetic tape, etc., there is risk of data loss. An organizational assessment of risk guides the selection of media and associated information contained on the media requiring restricted access. Organizations need to document...
V-216410 Medium The operating system must implement DoD-approved encryption to protect the confidentiality of remote access sessions. Remote access is any access to an organizational information system by a user (or an information system) communicating through an external, non-organization-controlled network (e.g., the Internet). Examples of remote access methods include dial-up, broadband, and wireless. Using cryptography ensures confidentiality of the remote access connections. The system will attempt to...
V-216402 Medium The operating system must use mechanisms for authentication to a cryptographic module meeting the requirements of applicable federal laws, Executive orders, directives, policies, regulations, standards, and guidance for such authentication. Encryption is only as good as the encryption modules utilized. Unapproved cryptographic module algorithms cannot be verified, and cannot be relied upon to provide confidentiality or integrity, and DoD data may be compromised due to weak algorithms. Applications utilizing encryption are required to use approved encryption modules meeting the requirements...
V-216401 Medium Wireless network adapters must be disabled. The use of wireless networking can introduce many different attack vectors into the organization’s network. Common attack vectors such as malicious association and ad hoc networks will allow an attacker to spoof a wireless access point (AP), allowing validated systems to connect to the malicious AP and enabling the attacker...
V-216400 Medium The operating system must prevent internal users from sending out packets which attempt to manipulate or spoof invalid IP addresses. Manipulation of IP addresses can allow untrusted systems to appear as trusted hosts, bypassing firewall and other security mechanism and resulting in system penetration.
V-216399 Medium The operating system must terminate all sessions and network connections when nonlocal maintenance is completed. Nonlocal maintenance and diagnostic activities are those activities conducted by individuals communicating through a network, either an external network (e.g., the internet) or an internal network. The operating system needs to ensure all sessions and network connections are terminated when nonlocal maintenance is completed.
V-216387 Medium The boundary protection system (firewall) must be configured to deny network traffic by default and must allow network traffic by exception (i.e., deny all, permit by exception). A firewall that relies on a deny all, permit by exception strategy requires all traffic to have explicit permission before traversing an interface on the host. The firewall must incorporate stateful packet filtering and logging. Nonlocal maintenance and diagnostic communications often contain sensitive information and must be protected. The security...
V-216380 Medium The system must disable network routing unless required. The network routing daemon, in.routed, manages network routing tables. If enabled, it periodically supplies copies of the system's routing tables to any directly connected hosts and networks and picks up routes supplied to it from other networks and hosts. Routing Internet Protocol (RIP) is a legacy protocol with a number...
V-216378 Medium The system must set maximum number of half-open TCP connections to 4096. This setting controls how many half-open connections can exist for a TCP port. It is necessary to control the number of completed connections to the system to provide some protection against denial of service attacks.
V-216375 Medium The system must set strict multihoming. These settings control whether a packet arriving on a non-forwarding interface can be accepted for an IP address that is not explicitly configured on that interface. This rule is NA for documented systems that have interfaces that cross strict networking domains (for example, a firewall, a router, or a VPN...
V-216372 Medium The system must not respond to broadcast ICMP echo requests. ICMP echo requests can be useful for reconnaissance of systems and for denial of service attacks.
V-216366 Medium The operating system must prevent remote devices that have established a non-remote connection with the system from communicating outside of the communication path with resources in external networks. This control enhancement is implemented within the remote device (e.g., notebook/laptop computer) via configuration settings not configurable by the user of the device. An example of a non-remote communications path from a remote device is a virtual private network. When a non-remote connection is established using a virtual private network,...
V-216364 Medium The operating system session lock mechanism, when activated on a device with a display screen, must place a publicly viewable pattern onto the associated display, hiding what was previously visible on the screen. A session time-out lock is a temporary action taken when a user stops work and moves away from the immediate physical vicinity of the system but does not log out because of the temporary nature of the absence. The session lock will also include an obfuscation of the display screen...
V-216363 Medium The operating system must provide the capability for users to directly initiate session lock mechanisms. A session lock is a temporary action taken when a user stops work and moves away from the immediate physical vicinity of the system but does not want to log out because of the temporary nature of the absence. Rather than be forced to wait for a period of time...
V-216361 Medium Logins to the root account must be restricted to the system console only. Use an authorized mechanism such as RBAC and the "su" command to provide administrative access to unprivileged accounts. These mechanisms provide an audit trail in the event of problems.
V-216360 Medium Unauthorized use of the at or cron capabilities must not be permitted. On many systems, only the system administrator needs the ability to schedule jobs. Even though a given user is not listed in the "cron.allow" file, cron jobs can still be run as that user. The "cron.allow" file only controls administrative access to the "crontab" command for scheduling and modifying cron...
V-216358 Medium The use of FTP must be restricted. FTP is an insecure protocol that transfers files and credentials in clear text, and can be replaced by using SFTP. However, if FTP is permitted for use in the environment, it is important to ensure that the default "system" accounts are not permitted to transfer files via FTP, especially the...
V-216357 Medium Host-based authentication for login-based services must be disabled. The use of .rhosts authentication is an insecure protocol and can be replaced with public-key authentication using Secure Shell. As automatic authentication settings in the .rhosts files can provide a malicious user with sensitive system credentials, the use of .rhosts files should be disabled.
V-216354 Medium Direct root account login must not be permitted for SSH access. The system should not allow users to log in as the root user directly, as audited actions would be non-attributable to a specific user.
V-216353 Medium The rhost-based authentication for SSH must be disabled. Setting this parameter forces users to enter a password when authenticating with SSH.
V-216351 Medium X11 forwarding for SSH must be disabled. As enabling X11 Forwarding on the host can permit a malicious user to secretly open another X11 connection to another remote client during the session and perform unobtrusive activities such as keystroke monitoring, if the X11 services are not required for the system's intended function, they should be disabled or...
V-216350 Medium The nobody access for RPC encryption key storage service must be disabled. If login by the user "nobody" is allowed for secure RPC, there is an increased risk of system compromise. If keyserv holds a private key for the "nobody" user, it will be used by key_encryptsession to compute a magic phrase which can be easily recovered by a malicious user.
V-216349 Medium Access to a logical domain console must be restricted to authorized users. A logical domain is a discrete, logical grouping with its own operating system, resources, and identity within a single computer system. Access to the logical domain console provides system-level access to the OBP of the domain.
V-216348 Medium Access to a domain console via telnet must be restricted to the local host. Telnet is an insecure protocol.
V-216347 Medium Login services for serial ports must be disabled. Login services should not be enabled on any serial ports that are not strictly required to support the mission of the system. This action can be safely performed even when console access is provided using a serial port.
V-216344 Medium User accounts must be locked after 35 days of inactivity. Attackers that are able to exploit an inactive account can potentially obtain and maintain undetected access to an application. Owners of inactive accounts will not notice if unauthorized access to their user account has been obtained. Operating systems need to track periods of user inactivity and disable accounts after 35...
V-216341 Medium The default umask for system and users must be 077. Setting a very secure default value for umask ensures that users make a conscious choice about their file permissions.
V-216340 Medium The operating system must require individuals to be authenticated with an individual authenticator prior to using a group authenticator. Allowing any user to elevate their privileges can allow them excessive control of the system tools.
V-216338 Medium The system must prevent the use of dictionary words for passwords. The use of common words in passwords simplifies password-cracking attacks.
V-216337 Medium Graphical desktop environments provided by the system must automatically lock after 15 minutes of inactivity. Allowing access to a graphical environment when the user is not attending the system can allow unauthorized users access to the system.
V-216336 Medium The system must require users to re-authenticate to unlock a graphical desktop environment. Allowing access to a graphical environment when the user is not attending the system can allow unauthorized users access to the system.
V-216335 Medium The delay between login prompts following a failed login attempt must be at least 4 seconds. As an immediate return of an error message, coupled with the capability to try again, may facilitate automatic and rapid-fire brute-force password attacks by a malicious user.
V-216334 Medium The system must disable accounts after three consecutive unsuccessful login attempts. Allowing continued access to accounts on the system exposes them to brute-force password-guessing attacks.
V-216333 Medium Systems must employ cryptographic hashes for passwords using the SHA-2 family of algorithms or FIPS 140-2 approved successors. Cryptographic hashes provide quick password authentication while not actually storing the password.
V-216332 Medium The system must not have accounts configured with blank or null passwords. Complex passwords can reduce the likelihood of success of automated password-guessing attacks.
V-216330 Medium The system must require passwords to contain at least one special character. Complex passwords can reduce the likelihood of success of automated password-guessing attacks.
V-216329 Medium The system must require passwords to contain at least one numeric character. Complex passwords can reduce the likelihood of success of automated password-guessing attacks.
V-216328 Medium The operating system must enforce password complexity requiring that at least one lowercase character is used. Complex passwords can reduce the likelihood of success of automated password-guessing attacks.
V-216327 Medium The system must require passwords to contain at least one uppercase alphabetic character. Complex passwords can reduce the likelihood of success of automated password-guessing attacks.
V-216326 Medium The system must require at least eight characters be changed between the old and new passwords during a password change. To ensure password changes are effective in their goals, the system must ensure old and new passwords have significant differences. Without significant changes, new passwords may be easily guessed based on the value of a previously compromised password.
V-216324 Medium User passwords must be at least 15 characters in length. Password complexity, or strength, is a measure of the effectiveness of a password in resisting guessing and brute-force attacks. Password length is one factor of several that helps to determine strength and how long it takes to crack a password. The shorter the password is, the lower the number of...
V-216323 Medium The operating system must enforce minimum password lifetime restrictions. Passwords need to be changed at specific policy-based intervals; however, if the information system or application allows the user to immediately and continually change their password, then the password could be repeatedly changed in a short period of time, defeating the organization's policy regarding password reuse. Solaris 11.4 introduced new...
V-216321 Medium User passwords must be changed at least every 60 days. Limiting the lifespan of authenticators limits the period of time an unauthorized user has access to the system while using compromised credentials and reduces the period of time available for password-guessing attacks to run against a single password. Solaris 11.4 introduced new password security features that allow for a more...
V-216318 Medium TCP Wrappers must be enabled and configured per site policy to only allow access by approved hosts and services. TCP Wrappers are a host-based access control system that allows administrators to control who has access to various network services based on the IP address of the remote end of the connection. TCP Wrappers also provide logging information via syslog about both successful and unsuccessful connections.
V-216315 Medium The graphical login service provides the capability of logging into the system using an X-Windows type interface from the console. If graphical login access for the console is required, the service must be in local-only mode. Externally accessible graphical desktop software may open the system to remote attacks.
V-216314 Medium X Window System connections that are not required must be disabled. If unauthorized clients are permitted access to the X server, a user's X session may be compromised.
V-216313 Medium The .Xauthority utility must only permit access to authorized hosts. If unauthorized clients are permitted access to the X server, a user's X session may be compromised.
V-216312 Medium .Xauthority or X*.hosts (or equivalent) file(s) must be used to restrict access to the X server. If access to the X server is not restricted, a user's X session may be compromised.
V-216310 Medium The .Xauthority files must not have extended ACLs. .Xauthority files ensure the user is authorized to access the specific X Windows host. Extended ACLs may permit unauthorized modification of these files, which could lead to Denial of Service to authorized access or allow unauthorized access to be obtained.
V-216309 Medium All .Xauthority files must have mode 0600 or less permissive. .Xauthority files ensure the user is authorized to access the specific X Windows host. Excessive permissions may permit unauthorized modification of these files, which could lead to Denial of Service to authorized access or allow unauthorized access to be obtained.
V-216308 Medium Any X Windows host must write .Xauthority files. .Xauthority files ensure the user is authorized to access the specific X Windows host. If .Xauthority files are not used, it may be possible to obtain unauthorized access to the X Windows host.
V-216307 Medium System start-up files must only execute programs owned by a privileged UID or an application. System start-up files executing programs owned by other than root (or another privileged user) or an application indicates the system may have been compromised.
V-216306 Medium All system start-up files must be group-owned by root, sys, or bin. If system start-up files do not have a group owner of root or a system group, the files may be modified by malicious users or intruders.
V-216305 Medium All system start-up files must be owned by root. System start-up files not owned by root could lead to system compromise by allowing malicious users or applications to modify them for unauthorized purposes. This could lead to system and network compromise.
V-216304 Medium Run control scripts must not execute world writable programs or scripts. World writable files could be modified accidentally or maliciously to compromise system integrity.
V-216303 Medium Run control scripts lists of preloaded libraries must contain only authorized paths. The library preload list environment variable contains a list of libraries for the dynamic linker to load before loading the libraries required by the binary. If this list contains paths to libraries to the current working directory that have not been authorized, unintended libraries may be preloaded. This variable is...
V-216302 Medium Run control scripts library search paths must contain only authorized paths. The library search path environment variable(s) contain a list of directories for the dynamic linker to search to find libraries. If this path includes the current working directory or other relative paths, libraries in these directories may be loaded instead of system libraries. This variable is formatted as a colon-separated...
V-216301 Medium Run control scripts executable search paths must contain only authorized paths. The executable search path (typically the PATH environment variable) contains a list of directories for the shell to search to find executables. If this path includes the current working directory or other relative paths, executables in these directories may be executed instead of system commands. This variable is formatted as...
V-216300 Medium All run control scripts must have no extended ACLs. If the startup files are writable by other users, these users could modify the startup files to insert malicious commands into the startup files.
V-216299 Medium All run control scripts must have mode 0755 or less permissive. If the startup files are writable by other users, these users could modify the startup files to insert malicious commands into the startup files.
V-216297 Medium The operating system must be configured to provide essential capabilities. Operating systems are capable of providing a wide variety of functions and services. Execution must be disabled based on organization-defined specifications.
V-216295 Medium The VNC server package must not be installed unless required. The VNC service uses weak authentication capabilities and provides the user complete graphical system access.
V-216294 Medium The rpcbind service must be configured for local only services unless organizationally defined. The portmap and rpcbind services increase the attack surface of the system and should only be used when needed. The portmap or rpcbind services are used by a variety of services using remote procedure calls (RPCs). The organization may define and document the limited use of services (for example NFS)...
V-216287 Medium The legacy remote network access utilities daemons must not be installed. Legacy remote access utilities allow remote control of a system without proper authentication.
V-216285 Medium System packages must be configured with the vendor-provided files, permissions, and ownerships. Failure to maintain system configurations may result in privilege escalation.
V-216284 Medium The operating system must protect audit tools from unauthorized deletion. Failure to maintain system configurations may result in privilege escalation.
V-216283 Medium The operating system must protect audit tools from unauthorized modification. Failure to maintain system configurations may result in privilege escalation.
V-216282 Medium The operating system must protect audit tools from unauthorized access. Failure to maintain system configurations may result in privilege escalation.
V-216280 Medium The System packages must be up to date with the most recent vendor updates and security fixes. Failure to install security updates can provide openings for attack.
V-216277 Medium The operating system must protect audit information from unauthorized access. If audit data were to become compromised, then competent forensic analysis and discovery of the true source of potentially malicious system activity is difficult, if not impossible, to achieve. To ensure the veracity of audit data, the operating system must protect audit information from unauthorized access. Satisfies: SRG-OS-000057, SRG-OS-000058, SRG-OS-000059
V-216276 Medium The operating system must shut down by default upon audit failure (unless availability is an overriding concern). Continuing to operate a system without auditing working properly can result in undocumented access or system changes.
V-216264 Medium The audit system must be configured to audit all administrative, privileged, and security actions. Without auditing, individual system accesses cannot be tracked, and malicious activity cannot be detected and traced back to an individual account.
V-216263 Medium The operating system must ensure unauthorized, security-relevant configuration changes detected are tracked. Without auditing, malicious activity cannot be detected.
V-216262 Medium The operating system must automatically audit account termination. Without auditing, malicious activity cannot be detected.
V-216261 Medium The operating system must automatically audit account disabling actions. Without auditing, malicious activity cannot be detected.
V-216260 Medium The audit system must be configured to audit account modification. Without auditing, malicious activity cannot be detected.
V-216259 Medium The audit system must be configured to audit account creation. Without auditing, malicious activity cannot be detected.
V-216258 Medium The audit system must be configured to audit file deletions. Without auditing, malicious activity cannot be detected.
V-216257 Medium Audit records must include the outcome (success or failure) of the events that occurred. Tracking both the successful and unsuccessful attempts aids in identifying threats to the system.
V-216256 Medium Audit records must include the sources of the events that occurred. Without accurate source information malicious activity cannot be accurately tracked.
V-216255 Medium Audit records must include where the events occurred. Without auditing, individual system accesses cannot be tracked, and malicious activity cannot be detected and traced back to an individual account. Without accurate time stamps, source, user, and activity information, malicious activity cannot be accurately tracked. Without an audit reduction and reporting capability, users find it difficult to identify specific...
V-216254 Medium Audit records must include when (date and time) the events occurred. Without accurate time stamps malicious activity cannot be accurately tracked.
V-216253 Medium Audit records must include what type of events occurred. Without proper system auditing, individual system accesses cannot be tracked, and malicious activity cannot be detected and traced back to an individual account.
V-216251 Medium The operating system must generate audit records for the selected list of auditable events as defined in DoD list of events. Without auditing, individual system accesses cannot be tracked, and malicious activity cannot be detected and traced back to an individual account. Without accurate time stamps, source, user, and activity information, malicious activity cannot be accurately tracked. Without an audit reduction and reporting capability, users find it difficult to identify specific...
V-216249 Medium The operating system must provide the capability to automatically process audit records for events of interest based upon selectable, event criteria. Without an audit reporting capability, users find it difficult to identify specific patterns of attack.
V-216246 Medium The audit system must produce records containing sufficient information to establish the identity of any user/subject associated with the event. Enabling the audit system will produce records with accurate time stamps, source, user, and activity information. Without this information malicious activity cannot be accurately tracked.
V-219983 Low The operating system must employ cryptographic mechanisms to prevent unauthorized disclosure of information at rest unless otherwise protected by alternative physical measures. When data is written to digital media, such as hard drives, mobile computers, external/removable hard drives, personal digital assistants, flash/thumb drives, etc., there is risk of data loss and data compromise. An organizational assessment of risk guides the selection of media and associated information contained on the media requiring restricted...
V-219982 Low The operating system must employ cryptographic mechanisms to protect information in storage. When data is written to digital media, such as hard drives, mobile computers, external/removable hard drives, personal digital assistants, flash/thumb drives, etc., there is risk of data loss and data compromise. An organizational assessment of risk guides the selection of media and associated information contained on the media requiring restricted...
V-216478 Low The audit system must maintain a central audit trail for all zones. Centralized auditing simplifies the investigative process to determine the cause of a security event.
V-216477 Low The audit system must identify in which zone an event occurred. Tracking the specific Solaris zones in the audit trail reduces the time required to determine the cause of a security event.
V-216475 Low The limitpriv zone option must be set to the vendor default or less permissive. Solaris zones can be assigned privileges generally reserved for the global zone using the "limitpriv" zone option. Any privilege assignments in excess of the vendor defaults may provide the ability for a non-global zone to compromise the global zone.
V-216474 Low The /etc/zones directory, and its contents, must have the vendor default owner, group, and permissions. Incorrect ownership can result in unauthorized changes or theft of data.
V-216470 Low All manual editing of system-relevant files shall be done using the pfedit command, which logs changes made to the files. Editing a system file with common tools such as vi, emacs, or gedit does not allow the auditing of changes made by an operator. This reduces the capability of determining which operator made security-relevant changes to the system.
V-216460 Low The system must not have any unnecessary accounts. Accounts providing no operational purpose provide additional opportunities for system compromise. Unnecessary accounts include user accounts for individuals not requiring access to the system and application accounts for applications not installed on the system.
V-216454 Low The system must require passwords to change the boot device settings. (SPARC) Setting the EEPROM password helps prevent attackers who gain physical access to the system console from booting from an external device (such as a CD-ROM or floppy).
V-216444 Low Address Space Layout Randomization (ASLR) must be enabled. Modification of memory area can result in executable code vulnerabilities. ASLR can reduce the likelihood of these attacks. ASLR activates the randomization of key areas of the process such as stack, brk-based heap, memory mappings, and so forth.
V-216439 Low The operating system must reveal error messages only to authorized personnel. Proper file permissions and ownership ensures that only designated personnel in the organization can access error messages.
V-216437 Low The operating system must have no files with extended attributes. Attackers or malicious users could hide information, exploits, etc. in extended attribute areas. Since extended attributes are rarely used, it is important to find files with extended attributes set and correct these attributes.
V-216435 Low All valid SUID/SGID files must be documented. There are valid reasons for SUID/SGID programs, but it is important to identify and review such programs to ensure they are legitimate.
V-216424 Low All user accounts must be configured to use a home directory that exists. If the user's home directory does not exist, the user will be placed in "/" and will not be able to write any files or have local environment variables set.
V-216423 Low Users must have a valid home directory assignment. All users must be assigned a home directory in the passwd file. Failure to have a home directory may result in the user being put in the root directory.
V-216415 Low The operating system must use cryptographic mechanisms to protect the integrity of audit information. Protection of audit records and audit data is of critical importance. Cryptographic mechanisms are the industry established standard used to protect the integrity of audit data.
V-216413 Low The operating system must protect the confidentiality and integrity of information at rest. When data is written to digital media, such as hard drives, mobile computers, external/removable hard drives, personal digital assistants, flash/thumb drives, etc., there is risk of data loss and data compromise. An organizational assessment of risk guides the selection of media and associated information contained on the media requiring restricted...
V-216398 Low The FTP service must display the DoD approved system use notification message or banner before granting access to the system. Warning messages inform users who are attempting to log in to the system of their legal status regarding the system and must include the name of the organization that owns the system and any monitoring policies that are in place. As implementing a logon banner to deter inappropriate use can...
V-216397 Low The GNOME service must display the DoD approved system use notification message or banner before granting access to the system. Warning messages inform users who are attempting to log in to the system of their legal status regarding the system and must include the name of the organization that owns the system and any monitoring policies that are in place. As implementing a logon banner to deter inappropriate use can...
V-216396 Low The operating system must display the DoD approved system use notification message or banner for SSH connections. Warning messages inform users who are attempting to log in to the system of their legal status regarding the system and must include the name of the organization that owns the system and any monitoring policies that are in place. As implementing a logon banner to deter inappropriate use can...
V-216395 Low The operating system must display the DoD approved system use notification message or banner before granting access to the system for general system logons. Warning messages inform users who are attempting to log in to the system of their legal status regarding the system and must include the name of the organization that owns the system and any monitoring policies that are in place. As implementing a logon banner to deter inappropriate use can...
V-216394 Low The system must prevent local applications from generating source-routed packets. Source-routed packets allow the source of the packet to suggest that routers forward the packet along a different path than configured on the router, which can be used to bypass network security measures.
V-216381 Low The system must implement TCP Wrappers. TCP Wrappers is a host-based access control system that allows administrators to control who has access to various network services based on the IP address of the remote end of the connection. TCP Wrappers also provides logging information via syslog about both successful and unsuccessful connections. TCP Wrappers provides granular...
V-216379 Low The system must set maximum number of incoming connections to 1024. This setting controls the maximum number of incoming connections that can be accepted on a TCP port limiting exposure to denial of service attacks.
V-216377 Low The system must disable TCP reverse IP source routing. If enabled, reverse IP source routing would allow an attacker to more easily complete a three-way TCP handshake and spoof new connections.
V-216376 Low The system must disable ICMP redirect messages. A malicious user can exploit the ability of the system to send ICMP redirects by continually sending packets to the system, forcing the system to respond with ICMP redirect messages, resulting in an adverse impact on the CPU performance of the system.
V-216374 Low The system must ignore ICMP redirect messages. Ignoring ICMP redirect messages reduces the likelihood of denial of service attacks.
V-216373 Low The system must not respond to multicast echo requests. Multicast echo requests can be useful for reconnaissance of systems and for denial of service attacks.
V-216371 Low The system must not respond to ICMP broadcast netmask requests. By determining the netmasks of various computers in your network, an attacker can better map your subnet structure and infer trust relationships.
V-216370 Low The system must not respond to ICMP broadcast timestamp requests. By accurately determining the system's clock state, an attacker can more effectively attack certain time-based pseudorandom number generators (PRNGs) and the authentication systems that rely on them.
V-216369 Low The system must not respond to ICMP timestamp requests. By accurately determining the system's clock state, an attacker can more effectively attack certain time-based pseudorandom number generators (PRNGs) and the authentication systems that rely on them.
V-216368 Low The system must disable directed broadcast packet forwarding. This parameter must be disabled to reduce the risk of denial of service attacks.
V-216367 Low The operating system must limit the number of concurrent sessions for each account to an organization-defined number of sessions. Limiting the number of allowed users and sessions per user can limit risks related to denial of service attacks. The organization may define the maximum number of concurrent sessions for an information system account globally, by account type, by account, or by a combination thereof. This requirement addresses concurrent sessions...
V-216362 Low The operating system, upon successful logon, must display to the user the date and time of the last logon (access). Users need to be aware of activity that occurs regarding their account. Providing users with information regarding the date and time of their last successful login allows the user to determine if any unauthorized activity has occurred and gives them an opportunity to notify administrators.
V-216356 Low The operating system must terminate the network connection associated with a communications session at the end of the session or after 10 minutes of inactivity. This requirement applies to both internal and external networks. Terminating network connections associated with communications sessions means de-allocating associated TCP/IP address/port pairs at the operating system level. The time period of inactivity may, as the organization deems necessary, be a set of time periods by type of network access or...
V-216352 Low Consecutive login attempts for SSH must be limited to 3. Setting the authentication login limit to a low value will disconnect the attacker and force a reconnect, which severely limits the speed of such brute-force attacks.
V-216343 Low The value mesg n must be configured as the default setting for all users. The "mesg n" command blocks attempts to use the "write" or "talk" commands to contact users at their terminals, but has the side effect of slightly strengthening permissions on the user's TTY device.
V-216342 Low The default umask for FTP users must be 077. Setting a very secure default value for umask ensures that users make a conscious choice about their file permissions.
V-216331 Low The system must require passwords to contain no more than three consecutive repeating characters. Complex passwords can reduce the likelihood of success of automated password-guessing attacks.
V-216322 Low The operating system must automatically terminate temporary accounts within 72 hours. If temporary user accounts remain active when no longer needed or for an excessive period, these accounts may be used to gain unauthorized access. To mitigate this risk, automated termination of all temporary accounts must be set upon account creation. Temporary accounts are established as part of normal account activation...
V-216317 Low Systems services that are not required must be disabled. Services that are enabled but not required by the mission may provide excessive access or additional attack vectors to penetrate the system.
V-216316 Low Generic Security Services (GSS) must be disabled. This service should be disabled if it is not required.
V-216293 Low The UUCP service daemon must not be installed unless required. UUCP is an insecure protocol.
V-216289 Low The pidgin IM client package must not be installed. Instant messaging is an insecure protocol.
V-216286 Low The finger daemon package must not be installed. Finger is an insecure protocol.
V-216270 Low The auditing system must not define a different auditing level for specific users. Without auditing, individual system accesses cannot be tracked, and malicious activity cannot be detected and traced back to an individual account.
V-216269 Low The operating system must protect against an individual falsely denying having performed a particular action. In order to do so the system must be configured to send audit records to a remote audit server. Keeping audit records on a remote system reduces the likelihood of audit records being changed or corrupted. Duplicating and protecting the audit trail on a separate system reduces the likelihood of an individual being able to deny performing an action. Solaris has supported rsyslog since version 11.1 and the differences...
V-216268 Low The audit system must be configured to audit failed attempts to access files and programs. Without auditing, individual system accesses cannot be tracked, and malicious activity cannot be detected and traced back to an individual account.
V-216265 Low The audit system must be configured to audit login, logout, and session initiation. Without auditing, individual system accesses cannot be tracked, and malicious activity cannot be detected and traced back to an individual account.