10.1 Ensure SELinux Is Enabled in Enforcing Mode - current mode

Information

SELinux (Security-Enhanced Linux) is a Linux kernel security module that provides mandatory access control security policies with type enforcement that are checked after the traditional discretionary access controls. It was created by the US National Security Agency and can enforce rules on files and processes in a Linux system, and restrict actions, based on defined policies.

Rationale:

DNS servers act as a foundation for most of the internet and internal traffic. Web and mobile applications, email, cloud services and VPN connections, internal LAN connections all depend on DNS to translate names and route traffic to the correct destination. With DNS being such a critical service, it is a ripe target for attacks which may allow black-hat criminals to gain access to information and servers. The threat is especially high because DNS servers are often externally accessible and continue to have serious vulnerabilities. The SELinux mandatory access controls provide a much stronger security model which can be used to implement a deny-by-default model which only allows what is explicitly permitted.

Solution

Perform the following to implement the recommended state:

If SELinux is not enabled in the configuration file, edit the file /etc/selinux/config and set the value of SELINUX as enforcing and reboot the system for the new configuration to be effective.

SELINUX=enforcing

If the current mode is not enforcing, and an immediate reboot is not possible, the current mode can be set to enforcing with the setenable command shown below.

# setenforce 1

Default Value:

SELinux is enforcing by default on some Linux distributions such as Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8.

See Also

https://workbench.cisecurity.org/files/2997