Rules Related To 'crypto-policies'

Component overview

Relevant packages:

Relevant groups:

Changelog:

No changes recorded.

Relevant rules:

Rule details

Configure BIND to use System Crypto Policy

configure_bind_crypto_policy

Description

Crypto Policies provide a centralized control over crypto algorithms usage of many packages. BIND is supported by crypto policy, but the BIND configuration may be set up to ignore it. To check that Crypto Policies settings are configured correctly, ensure that the /etc/named.conf includes the appropriate configuration: In the options section of /etc/named.conf, make sure that the following line is not commented out or superseded by later includes: include "/etc/crypto-policies/back-ends/bind.config";

Rationale

Overriding the system crypto policy makes the behavior of the BIND service violate expectations, and makes system configuration more fragmented.

Configure System Cryptography Policy

configure_crypto_policy

Description

To configure the system cryptography policy to use ciphers only from the $var_system_crypto_policy policy, run the following command:

$ sudo update-crypto-policies --set $var_system_crypto_policy
The rule checks if settings for selected crypto policy are configured as expected. Configuration files in the /etc/crypto-policies/back-ends are either symlinks to correct files provided by Crypto-policies package or they are regular files in case crypto policy customizations are applied. Crypto policies may be customized by crypto policy modules, in which case it is delimited from the base policy using a colon.

Rationale

Centralized cryptographic policies simplify applying secure ciphers across an operating system and the applications that run on that operating system. Use of weak or untested encryption algorithms undermines the purposes of utilizing encryption to protect data.

Configure GnuTLS library to use DoD-approved TLS Encryption

configure_gnutls_tls_crypto_policy

Description

Crypto Policies provide a centralized control over crypto algorithms usage of many packages. GnuTLS is supported by system crypto policy, but the GnuTLS configuration may be set up to ignore it. To check that Crypto Policies settings are configured correctly, ensure that /etc/crypto-policies/back-ends/gnutls.config contains the following line and is not commented out: +VERS-ALL:-VERS-DTLS0.9:-VERS-SSL3.0:-VERS-TLS1.0:-VERS-TLS1.1:-VERS-DTLS1.0

Rationale

Overriding the system crypto policy makes the behavior of the GnuTLS library violate expectations, and makes system configuration more fragmented.

Configure Kerberos to use System Crypto Policy

configure_kerberos_crypto_policy

Description

Crypto Policies provide a centralized control over crypto algorithms usage of many packages. Kerberos is supported by crypto policy, but it's configuration may be set up to ignore it. To check that Crypto Policies settings for Kerberos are configured correctly, examine that there is a symlink at /etc/krb5.conf.d/crypto-policies targeting /etc/cypto-policies/back-ends/krb5.config. If the symlink exists, Kerberos is configured to use the system-wide crypto policy settings.

Rationale

Overriding the system crypto policy makes the behavior of Kerberos violate expectations, and makes system configuration more fragmented.

Configure Libreswan to use System Crypto Policy

configure_libreswan_crypto_policy

Description

Crypto Policies provide a centralized control over crypto algorithms usage of many packages. Libreswan is supported by system crypto policy, but the Libreswan configuration may be set up to ignore it. To check that Crypto Policies settings are configured correctly, ensure that the /etc/ipsec.conf includes the appropriate configuration file. In /etc/ipsec.conf, make sure that the following line is not commented out or superseded by later includes: include /etc/crypto-policies/back-ends/libreswan.config

Rationale

Overriding the system crypto policy makes the behavior of the Libreswan service violate expectations, and makes system configuration more fragmented.

Configure OpenSSL library to use System Crypto Policy

configure_openssl_crypto_policy

Description

Crypto Policies provide a centralized control over crypto algorithms usage of many packages. OpenSSL is supported by crypto policy, but the OpenSSL configuration may be set up to ignore it. To check that Crypto Policies settings are configured correctly, you have to examine the OpenSSL config file available under /etc/pki/tls/openssl.cnf. This file has the ini format, and it enables crypto policy support if there is a [ crypto_policy ] section that contains the .include /etc/crypto-policies/back-ends/opensslcnf.config directive.

Rationale

Overriding the system crypto policy makes the behavior of the Java runtime violates expectations, and makes system configuration more fragmented.

Configure OpenSSL library to use TLS Encryption

configure_openssl_tls_crypto_policy

Description

Crypto Policies are means of enforcing certain cryptographic settings for selected applications including OpenSSL. OpenSSL is by default configured to modify its configuration based on currently configured Crypto Policy. Editing the Crypto Policy back-end is not recommended. Check the crypto-policies(7) man page and choose a policy that configures TLS protocol to version 1.2 or higher, for example DEFAULT, FUTURE or FIPS policy. Or create and apply a custom policy that restricts minimum TLS version to 1.2. For example for versions prior to crypto-policies-20210617-1.gitc776d3e.el8.noarch this is expected:

$ sudo grep -i MinProtocol /etc/crypto-policies/back-ends/opensslcnf.config

MinProtocol = TLSv1.2
Or for version crypto-policies-20210617-1.gitc776d3e.el8.noarch and newer this is expected:
$ sudo grep -i MinProtocol /etc/crypto-policies/back-ends/opensslcnf.config

TLS.MinProtocol = TLSv1.2
DTLS.MinProtocol = DTLSv1.2

Rationale

Without cryptographic integrity protections, information can be altered by unauthorized users without detection.

Configure SSH to use System Crypto Policy

configure_ssh_crypto_policy

Description

Crypto Policies provide a centralized control over crypto algorithms usage of many packages. SSH is supported by crypto policy, but the SSH configuration may be set up to ignore it. To check that Crypto Policies settings are configured correctly, ensure that the CRYPTO_POLICY variable is either commented or not set at all in the /etc/sysconfig/sshd.

Rationale

Overriding the system crypto policy makes the behavior of the SSH service violate expectations, and makes system configuration more fragmented.

Harden OpenSSL Crypto Policy

harden_openssl_crypto_policy

Description

Crypto Policies are means of enforcing certain cryptographic settings for selected applications including OpenSSL. OpenSSL is by default configured to modify its configuration based on currently configured Crypto Policy. However, in certain cases it might be needed to override the Crypto Policy specific to OpenSSL and leave rest of the Crypto Policy intact. This can be done by dropping a file named opensslcnf-xxx.config, replacing xxx with arbitrary identifier, into /etc/crypto-policies/local.d. This has to be followed by running update-crypto-policies so that changes are applied. Changes are propagated into /etc/crypto-policies/back-ends/opensslcnf.config. This rule checks if this file contains predefined Ciphersuites variable configured with predefined value.

Rationale

The Common Criteria requirements specify that certain parameters for OpenSSL are configured e.g. cipher suites. Currently particular requirements specified by CC are stricter compared to any existing Crypto Policy.

Harden SSH client Crypto Policy

harden_ssh_client_crypto_policy

Description

Crypto Policies are means of enforcing certain cryptographic settings for selected applications including OpenSSH client. To override the system wide crypto policy for Openssh client, place a file in the /etc/ssh/ssh_config.d/ so that it is loaded before the 05-redhat.conf. In this case it is file named 02-ospp.conf containing parameters which need to be changed with respect to the crypto policy. This rule checks if the file exists and if it contains required parameters and values which modify the Crypto Policy. During the parsing process, as soon as Openssh client parses some configuration option and its value, it remembers it and ignores any subsequent overrides. The customization mechanism provided by crypto policies appends eventual customizations at the end of the system wide crypto policy. Therefore, if the crypto policy customization overrides some parameter which is already configured in the system wide crypto policy, the SSH client will not honor that customized parameter.

Rationale

The Common Criteria requirements specify how certain parameters for OpenSSH Client are configured. Particular parameters are RekeyLimit, GSSAPIAuthentication, Ciphers, PubkeyAcceptedKeyTypes, MACs and KexAlgorithms. Currently particular requirements specified by CC are stricter compared to any existing Crypto Policy.

Configure SSH Client to Use FIPS 140-2 Validated Ciphers: openssh.config

harden_sshd_ciphers_openssh_conf_crypto_policy

Description

Crypto Policies provide a centralized control over crypto algorithms usage of many packages. OpenSSH is supported by system crypto policy, but the OpenSSH configuration may be set up incorrectly. To check that Crypto Policies settings for ciphers are configured correctly, ensure that /etc/crypto-policies/back-ends/openssh.config contains the following line and is not commented out:

Ciphers $sshd_approved_ciphers

Rationale

Overriding the system crypto policy makes the behavior of the OpenSSH client violate expectations, and makes system configuration more fragmented. By specifying a cipher list with the order of ciphers being in a “strongest to weakest” orientation, the system will automatically attempt to use the strongest cipher for securing SSH connections.

Configure SSH Server to Use FIPS 140-2 Validated Ciphers: opensshserver.config

harden_sshd_ciphers_opensshserver_conf_crypto_policy

Description

Crypto Policies provide a centralized control over crypto algorithms usage of many packages. OpenSSH is supported by system crypto policy, but the OpenSSH configuration may be set up incorrectly. To check that Crypto Policies settings for ciphers are configured correctly, ensure that /etc/crypto-policies/back-ends/opensshserver.config contains the following text and is not commented out:

-oCiphers=$sshd_approved_ciphers

Rationale

Overriding the system crypto policy makes the behavior of the OpenSSH server violate expectations, and makes system configuration more fragmented. By specifying a cipher list with the order of ciphers being in a “strongest to weakest” orientation, the system will automatically attempt to use the strongest cipher for securing SSH connections.

Harden SSHD Crypto Policy

harden_sshd_crypto_policy

Description

Crypto Policies are means of enforcing certain cryptographic settings for selected applications including OpenSSH server. The SSHD service is by default configured to modify its configuration based on currently configured Crypto-Policy. However, in certain cases it might be needed to override the Crypto Policy specific to OpenSSH Server and leave rest of the Crypto Policy intact. This can be done by dropping a file named opensshserver-xxx.config, replacing xxx with arbitrary identifier, into /etc/crypto-policies/local.d. This has to be followed by running update-crypto-policies so that changes are applied. Changes are propagated into /etc/crypto-policies/back-ends/opensshserver.config. This rule checks if this file contains predefined CRYPTO_POLICY environment variable configured with predefined value.

Rationale

The Common Criteria requirements specify that certain parameters for OpenSSH Server are configured e.g. supported ciphers, accepted host key algorithms, public key types, key exchange algorithms, HMACs and GSSAPI key exchange is disabled. Currently particular requirements specified by CC are stricter compared to any existing Crypto Policy.

Configure SSH Client to Use FIPS 140-2 Validated MACs: openssh.config

harden_sshd_macs_openssh_conf_crypto_policy

Description

Crypto Policies provide a centralized control over crypto algorithms usage of many packages. OpenSSH is supported by system crypto policy, but the OpenSSH configuration may be set up incorrectly. To check that Crypto Policies settings are configured correctly, ensure that /etc/crypto-policies/back-ends/openssh.config contains the following line and is not commented out: MACs $sshd_approved_macs

Rationale

Overriding the system crypto policy makes the behavior of the OpenSSH client violate expectations, and makes system configuration more fragmented.

Configure SSH Server to Use FIPS 140-2 Validated MACs: opensshserver.config

harden_sshd_macs_opensshserver_conf_crypto_policy

Description

Crypto Policies provide a centralized control over crypto algorithms usage of many packages. OpenSSH is supported by system crypto policy, but the OpenSSH configuration may be set up incorrectly. To check that Crypto Policies settings are configured correctly, ensure that /etc/crypto-policies/back-ends/opensshserver.config contains the following text and is not commented out: -oMACS=$sshd_approved_macs

Rationale

Overriding the system crypto policy makes the behavior of the OpenSSH server violate expectations, and makes system configuration more fragmented.

OpenSSL uses strong entropy source

openssl_use_strong_entropy

Description

By default, OpenSSL doesn't always use a SP800-90A compliant random number generator. A way to configure OpenSSL to always use a strong source is to setup a wrapper that defines a shell function that shadows the actual openssl binary, and that ensures that the -rand /dev/random option is added to every openssl invocation. To do so, place the following shell snippet exactly as-is to /etc/profile.d/openssl-rand.sh:

# provide a default -rand /dev/random option to openssl commands that
# support it

# written inefficiently for maximum shell compatibility
openssl()
(
  openssl_bin=/usr/bin/openssl

  case "$*" in
    # if user specified -rand, honor it
    *\ -rand\ *|*\ -help*) exec $openssl_bin "$@" ;;
  esac

  cmds=`$openssl_bin list -digest-commands -cipher-commands | tr '\n' ' '`
  for i in `$openssl_bin list -commands`; do
    if $openssl_bin list -options "$i" | grep -q '^rand '; then
      cmds=" $i $cmds"
    fi
  done

  case "$cmds" in
    *\ "$1"\ *)
      cmd="$1"; shift
      exec $openssl_bin "$cmd" -rand /dev/random "$@" ;;
  esac

  exec $openssl_bin "$@"
)

Rationale

This rule ensures that openssl invocations always uses SP800-90A compliant random number generator as a default behavior.

Install crypto-policies package

package_crypto-policies_installed

Description

The crypto-policies package can be installed with the following command:

$ apt-get install crypto-policies

Rationale

Centralized cryptographic policies simplify applying secure ciphers across an operating system and the applications that run on that operating system. Use of weak or untested encryption algorithms undermines the purposes of utilizing encryption to protect data.