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← Back to BIND 9.x Security Technical Implementation Guide

V-272388

CAT II (Medium)

Permissions assigned to the dnssec-keygen keys used with the BIND 9.x implementation must enforce read-only access to the key owner and deny access to all other users.

Rule ID

SV-272388r1124010_rule

STIG

BIND 9.x Security Technical Implementation Guide

Version

V3R2

CCIs

CCI-000366

Discussion

To enable zone transfer (requests and responses) through authenticated messages, it is necessary to generate a key for every pair of name servers. The key also can be used for securing other transactions such as dynamic updates, DNS queries, and responses. The binary key string that is generated by most key generation utilities used with DNSSEC is Base64 encoded. A TSIG is a string used to generate the message authentication hash stored in a TSIG RR and used to authenticate an entire DNS message. Weak permissions could allow an adversary to modify the file(s), thus defeating the security objective.

Check Content

With the assistance of the DNS administrator, identify all dnssec-keygen key files that reside on the BIND 9.x server.

An example dnssec-keygen key file will look like the following:

Kns1.example.com_ns2.example.com.+161+28823.key
OR
Kns1.example.com_ns2.example.com.+161+28823.private

For each key file identified, verify that the key file is owned by "named" and permissions are set to 400:

# ls -al
-r-------- 1 named named 77 Jul 1 15:00 Kns1.example.com_ns2.example.com+161+28823.key

If the key files are not owned by “named”, this is a finding.

If the key files are more permissive than 400, this is a finding.

Fix Text

Change the permissions of the dnssec-keygen key files:

# chmod 400 <key_file>