STIGhubSTIGhub
STIGsSearchCompare

STIGhub

A free tool to search and browse the entire DISA STIG library. Saves up to 75% in security compliance research time.

Navigation

  • Browse STIGs
  • Search
  • Compare Versions

Resources

  • About
  • Release Notes
  • VPAT
  • DISA STIG Library
STIGs updated 3 hours ago
Powered by Pylon
© 2026 Beacon Cloud Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.
← Back to VMware vSphere 8.0 ESXi Security Technical Implementation Guide

V-258779

CAT II (Medium)

The ESXi host must verify certificates for SSL syslog endpoints.

Rule ID

SV-258779r933398_rule

STIG

VMware vSphere 8.0 ESXi Security Technical Implementation Guide

Version

V1R1

CCIs

CCI-000366

Discussion

When sending syslog data to a remote host, ESXi can be configured to use any combination of TCP, UDP, and SSL transports. When using SSL, the server certificate must be validated to ensure that the host is connecting to a valid syslog server.

Check Content

If SSL is not used for a syslog target, this is not applicable.

From the vSphere Client, go to Hosts and Clusters.

Select the ESXi Host >> Configure >> System >> Advanced System Settings.

Select the "Syslog.global.logCheckSSLCerts" value and verify it is set to "true".

or

From a PowerCLI command prompt while connected to the ESXi host, run the following command:

Get-VMHost | Get-AdvancedSetting -Name Syslog.global.logCheckSSLCerts

If the "Syslog.global.logCheckSSLCerts" setting is not set to "true", this is a finding.

Fix Text

To configure SSL syslog endpoint certificate checking, it must be turned on and the trusted certificate chain must be added to ESXi's trusted store.

From the vSphere Client go to Hosts and Clusters.

Select the ESXi Host >> Configure >> System >> Advanced System Settings.

Click "Edit". Select the "Syslog.global.logCheckSSLCerts" value and configure it to "true".

Copy the PEM formatted trusted CA certificate so that is accessible to the host and append the contents to /etc/vmware/ssl/castore.pem by running the following command:

# <path/to/cacert> >> /etc/vmware/ssl/castore.pem

or

From a PowerCLI command prompt while connected to the ESXi host, run the following commands:

Get-VMHost | Get-AdvancedSetting -Name Syslog.global.logCheckSSLCerts | Set-AdvancedSetting -Value "true"

Copy the PEM formatted trusted CA certificate so that is accessible to the host.

$esxcli = Get-EsxCli -v2
$arguments = $esxcli.system.security.certificatestore.add.CreateArgs()
$arguments.filename = <path/to/cacert>
$esxcli.system.security.certificatestore.add.Invoke($arguments)