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The Ubuntu operating system must implement smart card logins for multifactor authentication for access to accounts.

An XCCDF Rule

Description

Without the use of multifactor authentication, the ease of access to privileged functions is greatly increased. Multifactor authentication requires using two or more factors to achieve authentication. Factors include: 1) something a user knows (e.g., password/PIN); 2) something a user has (e.g., cryptographic identification device, token); and 3) something a user is (e.g., biometric). A privileged account is defined as an information system account with authorizations of a privileged user. Network access is defined as access to an information system by a user (or a process acting on behalf of a user) communicating through a network (e.g., local area network, wide area network, or the Internet). The DoD CAC with DoD-approved PKI is an example of multifactor authentication. Satisfies: SRG-OS-000105-GPOS-00052, SRG-OS-000106-GPOS-00053, SRG-OS-000107-GPOS-00054, SRG-OS-000108-GPOS-00055, SRG-OS-000377-GPOS-00162

ID
SV-219317r853385_rule
Version
UBTU-18-010427
Severity
Medium
References
Updated

Remediation Templates

A Manual Procedure

Configure the Ubuntu operating system to use multifactor authentication for local access to accounts.

Add or update "pam_pkcs11.so" in "/etc/pam.d/common-auth" to match the following line:

auth [success=2 default=ignore] pam_pkcs11.so