Require Re-Authentication When Using the sudo Command
Cette page n'est pas encore disponible en français, sa traduction est en cours.
Si vous avez des questions ou des retours sur notre projet de traduction actuel,
n'hésitez pas à nous contacter.
Description
The sudo timestamp_timeout
tag sets the amount of time sudo password prompt waits.
The default timestamp_timeout
value is 5 minutes.
The timestamp_timeout should be configured by making sure that the
timestamp_timeout
tag exists in
/etc/sudoers
configuration file or any sudo configuration snippets
in /etc/sudoers.d/
.
If the value is set to an integer less than 0, the user’s time stamp will not expire
and the user will not have to re-authenticate for privileged actions until the user’s session is terminated.
Rationale
Without re-authentication, users may access resources or perform tasks for which they
do not have authorization.
When operating systems provide the capability to escalate a functional capability, it
is critical that the user re-authenticate.
Shell script
The following script can be run on the host to remediate the issue.
#!/bin/bash
# Remediation is applicable only in certain platforms
if dpkg-query --show --showformat='${db:Status-Status}\n' 'sudo' 2>/dev/null | grep -q installed; then
var_sudo_timestamp_timeout='15'
if grep -Px '^[\s]*Defaults.*timestamp_timeout[\s]*=.*' /etc/sudoers.d/*; then
find /etc/sudoers.d/ -type f -exec sed -Ei "/^[[:blank:]]*Defaults.*timestamp_timeout[[:blank:]]*=.*/d" {} \;
fi
if /usr/sbin/visudo -qcf /etc/sudoers; then
cp /etc/sudoers /etc/sudoers.bak
if ! grep -P '^[\s]*Defaults.*timestamp_timeout[\s]*=[\s]*[-]?\w+.*$' /etc/sudoers; then
# sudoers file doesn't define Option timestamp_timeout
echo "Defaults timestamp_timeout=${var_sudo_timestamp_timeout}" >> /etc/sudoers
else
# sudoers file defines Option timestamp_timeout, remediate wrong values if present
if grep -qP "^[\s]*Defaults\s.*\btimestamp_timeout[\s]*=[\s]*(?!${var_sudo_timestamp_timeout}\b)[-]?\w+\b.*$" /etc/sudoers; then
sed -Ei "s/(^[[:blank:]]*Defaults.*timestamp_timeout[[:blank:]]*=)[[:blank:]]*[-]?\w+(.*$)/\1${var_sudo_timestamp_timeout}\2/" /etc/sudoers
fi
fi
# Check validity of sudoers and cleanup bak
if /usr/sbin/visudo -qcf /etc/sudoers; then
rm -f /etc/sudoers.bak
else
echo "Fail to validate remediated /etc/sudoers, reverting to original file."
mv /etc/sudoers.bak /etc/sudoers
false
fi
else
echo "Skipping remediation, /etc/sudoers failed to validate"
false
fi
else
>&2 echo 'Remediation is not applicable, nothing was done'
fi
Ansible playbook
The following playbook can be run with Ansible to remediate the issue.
- name: Gather the package facts
package_facts:
manager: auto
tags:
- NIST-800-53-IA-11
- PCI-DSSv4-2.2.6
- low_complexity
- low_disruption
- medium_severity
- no_reboot_needed
- restrict_strategy
- sudo_require_reauthentication
- name: XCCDF Value var_sudo_timestamp_timeout # promote to variable
set_fact:
var_sudo_timestamp_timeout: !!str 15
tags:
- always
- name: Require Re-Authentication When Using the sudo Command - Find /etc/sudoers.d/*
files containing 'Defaults timestamp_timeout'
ansible.builtin.find:
path: /etc/sudoers.d
patterns: '*'
contains: ^[\s]*Defaults\s.*\btimestamp_timeout[\s]*=.*
register: sudoers_d_defaults_timestamp_timeout
when: '"sudo" in ansible_facts.packages'
tags:
- NIST-800-53-IA-11
- PCI-DSSv4-2.2.6
- low_complexity
- low_disruption
- medium_severity
- no_reboot_needed
- restrict_strategy
- sudo_require_reauthentication
- name: Require Re-Authentication When Using the sudo Command - Remove 'Defaults timestamp_timeout'
from /etc/sudoers.d/* files
ansible.builtin.lineinfile:
path: '{{ item.path }}'
regexp: ^[\s]*Defaults\s.*\btimestamp_timeout[\s]*=.*
state: absent
with_items: '{{ sudoers_d_defaults_timestamp_timeout.files }}'
when: '"sudo" in ansible_facts.packages'
tags:
- NIST-800-53-IA-11
- PCI-DSSv4-2.2.6
- low_complexity
- low_disruption
- medium_severity
- no_reboot_needed
- restrict_strategy
- sudo_require_reauthentication
- name: Require Re-Authentication When Using the sudo Command - Ensure timestamp_timeout
has the appropriate value in /etc/sudoers
ansible.builtin.lineinfile:
path: /etc/sudoers
regexp: ^[\s]*Defaults\s(.*)\btimestamp_timeout[\s]*=[\s]*[-]?\w+\b(.*)$
line: Defaults \1timestamp_timeout={{ var_sudo_timestamp_timeout }}\2
validate: /usr/sbin/visudo -cf %s
backrefs: true
register: edit_sudoers_timestamp_timeout_option
when: '"sudo" in ansible_facts.packages'
tags:
- NIST-800-53-IA-11
- PCI-DSSv4-2.2.6
- low_complexity
- low_disruption
- medium_severity
- no_reboot_needed
- restrict_strategy
- sudo_require_reauthentication
- name: Require Re-Authentication When Using the sudo Command - Enable timestamp_timeout
option with correct value in /etc/sudoers
ansible.builtin.lineinfile:
path: /etc/sudoers
line: Defaults timestamp_timeout={{ var_sudo_timestamp_timeout }}
validate: /usr/sbin/visudo -cf %s
when:
- '"sudo" in ansible_facts.packages'
- |
edit_sudoers_timestamp_timeout_option is defined and not edit_sudoers_timestamp_timeout_option.changed
tags:
- NIST-800-53-IA-11
- PCI-DSSv4-2.2.6
- low_complexity
- low_disruption
- medium_severity
- no_reboot_needed
- restrict_strategy
- sudo_require_reauthentication
- name: Require Re-Authentication When Using the sudo Command - Remove timestamp_timeout
wrong values in /etc/sudoers
ansible.builtin.lineinfile:
path: /etc/sudoers
regexp: ^[\s]*Defaults\s.*\btimestamp_timeout[\s]*=[\s]*(?!{{ var_sudo_timestamp_timeout
}}\b)[-]?\w+\b.*$
state: absent
validate: /usr/sbin/visudo -cf %s
when: '"sudo" in ansible_facts.packages'
tags:
- NIST-800-53-IA-11
- PCI-DSSv4-2.2.6
- low_complexity
- low_disruption
- medium_severity
- no_reboot_needed
- restrict_strategy
- sudo_require_reauthentication