The TSIG keys used with the BIND 9.x implementation must be owned by a privileged account.
Severity | Group ID | Group Title | Version | Rule ID | Date | STIG Version |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| medium | V-207563 | SRG-APP-000176-DNS-000018 | BIND-9X-001110 | SV-207563r879613_rule | 2024-02-15 | 2 |
Description
Incorrect ownership of a TSIG key file could allow an adversary to modify the file, thus defeating the security objective.
ℹ️ Check
With the assistance of the DNS Administrator, identify all of the TSIG keys used by the BIND 9.x implementation.
Identify the account that the "named" process is running as:
# ps -ef | grep named
named 3015 1 0 12:59 ? 00:00:00 /usr/sbin/named -u named -t /var/named/chroot
With the assistance of the DNS Administrator, determine the location of the TSIG keys used by the BIND 9.x implementation.
# ls –al <TSIG_Key_Location>
-rw-------. 1 named named 76 May 10 20:35 tsig-example.key
If any of the TSIG keys are not owned by the above account, this is a finding.
✔️ Fix
Change the ownership of the TSIG keys to the named process is running as.
# chown <named_proccess_owner> <TSIG_key_file>.