RHEL 9 library directories must be group-owned by root or a system account.
Severity | Group ID | Group Title | Version | Rule ID | Date | STIG Version |
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medium | V-257923 | SRG-OS-000259-GPOS-00100 | RHEL-09-232215 | SV-257923r1044991_rule | 2025-02-27 | 2 |
Description |
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If RHEL 9 allowed any user to make changes to software libraries, then those changes might be implemented without undergoing the appropriate testing and approvals that are part of a robust change management process. This requirement applies to RHEL 9 with software libraries that are accessible and configurable, as in the case of interpreted languages. Software libraries also include privileged programs that execute with escalated privileges. |
ℹ️ Check |
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Verify the systemwide shared library directories are group-owned by "root" with the following command: $ sudo find /lib /lib64 /usr/lib /usr/lib64 ! -group root -type d -exec stat -c "%G %n" {} \; If any systemwide shared library directory is returned and is not group-owned by a required system account, this is a finding. |
✔️ Fix |
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Configure the systemwide shared library directories (/lib, /lib64, /usr/lib and /usr/lib64) to be protected from unauthorized access. Run the following command, replacing "[DIRECTORY]" with any library directory not group-owned by "root". $ sudo chgrp root [DIRECTORY] |