debian-cis/MANUAL.md
Thibault Ayanides 6ae05f3fa2
Add dealing with debian 11
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* FIX: fix debian version func to manage debian11
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fix #26
2021-02-08 13:54:24 +01:00

6.0 KiB

% CIS-HARDENING(8) % % 2016

NAME

cis-hardening - CIS Debian 9/10 Hardening

SYNOPSIS

hardening.sh RUN_MODE [OPTIONS]

DESCRIPTION

Modular Debian 9/10 security hardening scripts based on the CIS (https://www.cisecurity.org) recommendations.

We use it at OVHcloud (https://www.ovhcloud.com) to harden our PCI-DSS infrastructure.

SCRIPTS CONFIGURATION

Hardening scripts are in bin/hardening. Each script has a corresponding configuration file in etc/conf.d/[script_name].cfg.

Each hardening script can be individually enabled from its configuration file. For example, this is the default configuration file for disable_system_accounts:

# Configuration for script of same name
status=disabled
# Put here your exceptions concerning admin accounts shells separated by spaces
EXCEPTIONS=""

status parameter may take 3 values:

  • disabled (do nothing): The script will not run.
  • audit (RO): The script will check if any change should be applied.
  • enabled (RW): The script will check if any change should be done and automatically apply what it can.

Global configuration is in etc/hardening.cfg. This file controls the log level as well as the backup directory. Whenever a script is instructed to edit a file, it will create a timestamped backup in this directory.

RUN MODE

-h, --help
Display a friendly help message.
--apply
Apply hardening for enabled scripts. Beware that NO confirmation is asked whatsoever, which is why you're warmly advised to use --audit before, which can be regarded as a dry-run mode.
--audit
Audit configuration for enabled scripts. No modification will be made on the system, we'll only report on your system compliance for each script.
--audit-all
Same as --audit, but for all scripts, even disabled ones. This is a good way to peek at your compliance level if all scripts were enabled, and might be a good starting point.
--audit-all-enable-passed
Same as --audit-all, but in addition, will modify the individual scripts configurations to enable those which passed for your system. This is an easy way to enable scripts for which you're already compliant. However, please always review each activated script afterwards, this option should only be regarded as a way to kickstart a configuration from scratch. Don't run this if you have already customized the scripts enable/disable configurations, obviously.
--create-config-files-only
Create the config files in etc/conf.d Must be run as root, before running the audit with user secaudit
-set-hardening-level=level
Modifies the configuration to enable/disable tests given an hardening level, between 1 to 5. Don't run this if you have already customized the scripts enable/disable configurations. 1: very basic policy, failure to pass tests at this level indicates severe misconfiguration of the machine that can have a huge security impact 2: basic policy, some good practice rules that, once applied, shouldn't break anything on most systems 3: best practices policy, passing all tests might need some configuration modifications (such as specific partitioning, etc.) 4: high security policy, passing all tests might be time-consuming and require high adaptation of your workflow 5: placebo, policy rules that might be very difficult to apply and maintain, with questionable security benefits
--allow-service=service
Use with --set-hardening-level. Modifies the policy to allow a certain kind of services on the machine, such as http, mail, etc. Can be specified multiple times to allow multiple services. Use --allow-service-list to get a list of supported services.

OPTIONS

--allow-service-list
Get a list of supported service.
--only test-number
Modifies the RUN_MODE to only work on the test_number script. Can be specified multiple times to work only on several scripts. The test number is the numbered prefix of the script, i.e. the test number of 1.2_script_name.sh is 1.2.
--sudo
This option lets you audit your system as a normal user, but allows sudo escalation to gain read-only access to root files. Note that you need to provide a sudoers file with NOPASSWD option in /etc/sudoers.d/ because the -n option instructs sudo not to prompt for a password. Finally note that --sudo mode only works for audit mode.
--set-log-level=level
This option sets LOGLEVEL, you can choose : info, warning, error, ok, debug. Default value is : info
--batch
While performing system audit, this option sets LOGLEVEL to 'ok' and captures all output to print only one line once the check is done, formatted like : OK|KO OK|KO|WARN{subcheck results} [OK|KO|WARN{...}]

--allow-unsupported-distribution Must be specified manually in the command line to allow the run on non compatible version or distribution. If you want to mute the warning change the LOGLEVEL in /etc/hardening.cfg

AUTHORS

COPYRIGHT

Copyright 2020 OVHcloud

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at

   http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.

SEE ALSO