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Redis Enterprise DBMS must offload audit data to a separate log management facility; this must be continuous and in near real time for systems with a network connection to the storage facility, and weekly or more often for stand-alone systems.

An XCCDF Rule

Description

<VulnDiscussion>Information stored in one location is vulnerable to accidental or incidental deletion or alteration. Offloading is a common process in information systems with limited audit storage capacity. The DBMS may write audit records to database tables, to files in the file system, to other kinds of local repository, or directly to a centralized log management system. Whatever the method used, it must be compatible with offloading the records to the centralized system. For more information, refer to: https://docs.redislabs.com/latest/rs/administering/logging/rsyslog-logging/ and https://redislabs.com/blog/sending-redis-cluster-alerts-to-slack-with-syslog/</VulnDiscussion><FalsePositives></FalsePositives><FalseNegatives></FalseNegatives><Documentable>false</Documentable><Mitigations></Mitigations><SeverityOverrideGuidance></SeverityOverrideGuidance><PotentialImpacts></PotentialImpacts><ThirdPartyTools></ThirdPartyTools><MitigationControl></MitigationControl><Responsibility></Responsibility><IAControls></IAControls>

ID
SV-251196r961860_rule
Severity
Medium
References
Updated



Remediation - Manual Procedure

Configure Redis Enterprise to offload log entries onto a separate log server by configuring the redislabs.conf and ensuring that all server logs from syslog are offloaded to a centralized backup server.

To configure Redis Enterprise to use syslog for all logs generated, ensure that redislabs.conf exists and is configured.

Create the file as shown here:
/etc/rsyslog.d/redislabs.conf