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10-10-2006 08:33 AM
10-10-2006 08:33 AM
Hi,
I have some question regarding the options described in the
security defaults configuration file /etc/default/security
1. Do HP-UX 11.00 and 11.11 (both in trusted mode) support PASSWORD_MAXDAYS, PASSWORD_MINDAYS, PASSWORD_WARNDAYS ? I know I can set these configurations in a trusted system with modprpw/modprdef but I dont know if these variables work in these versions.
2. How these configurations(including MIN_PASSWORD_LENGTH now) work with the trusted system? If I have different configurations on the trusted directory (/tcb/*) and on the configuration file (/etc/default/security, which one takes preference? If I prefer using /etc/default/security will it keep in sync with the tcb directory?
Thanks!
I have some question regarding the options described in the
security defaults configuration file /etc/default/security
1. Do HP-UX 11.00 and 11.11 (both in trusted mode) support PASSWORD_MAXDAYS, PASSWORD_MINDAYS, PASSWORD_WARNDAYS ? I know I can set these configurations in a trusted system with modprpw/modprdef but I dont know if these variables work in these versions.
2. How these configurations(including MIN_PASSWORD_LENGTH now) work with the trusted system? If I have different configurations on the trusted directory (/tcb/*) and on the configuration file (/etc/default/security, which one takes preference? If I prefer using /etc/default/security will it keep in sync with the tcb directory?
Thanks!
Solved! Go to Solution.
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10-11-2006 08:09 AM
10-11-2006 08:09 AM
Solution
1. I believe a patch is required to enable this functionality. If I recall correctly, the trusted mode implementation supports the equivalent of MAXDAYS and MINDAYS, but WARN days was slightly different depending on shadow vs. trusted. In trusted mode, you would use commands like modprdef to set these options rather than the /etc/default/security file (and I think the values in /etc/default/security will be overridden by tcb)
2. Trusted systems use the older /tcb file structure to retain this type of information. /etc/default/security and other recent enhancements allow you to get the trusted mode functionality without having to convert to a different "mode". Setting the options in one way will not necessarily sync with the other.
Suggestion: you can set values like this in SAM/secweb (general configuration) or HP-UX Bastille (hardening wizard, task focused), and whichever tool you use should put the system into a self-consistent state. SAM will require you to convert to trusted mode to get into account security policies, which was what you had to do at 11.00 initial release. Bastille will determine based on the features you request and the OS version whether or not it needs to convert to trusted mode to get you those settings.
Hope that helps.
-Keith
2. Trusted systems use the older /tcb file structure to retain this type of information. /etc/default/security and other recent enhancements allow you to get the trusted mode functionality without having to convert to a different "mode". Setting the options in one way will not necessarily sync with the other.
Suggestion: you can set values like this in SAM/secweb (general configuration) or HP-UX Bastille (hardening wizard, task focused), and whichever tool you use should put the system into a self-consistent state. SAM will require you to convert to trusted mode to get into account security policies, which was what you had to do at 11.00 initial release. Bastille will determine based on the features you request and the OS version whether or not it needs to convert to trusted mode to get you those settings.
Hope that helps.
-Keith
The opinions expressed above are the personal opinions of the authors, not of Hewlett Packard Enterprise. By using this site, you accept the Terms of Use and Rules of Participation.
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