8.1 Ensure that the Expiration Date is set for all Keys in RBAC Key Vaults

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Information

Ensure that all Keys in Role Based Access Control (RBAC) Azure Key Vaults have an expiration date set.

Rationale:

Azure Key Vault enables users to store and use cryptographic keys within the Microsoft Azure environment. The exp (expiration date) attribute identifies the expiration date on or after which the key MUST NOT be used for encryption of new data, wrapping of new keys, and signing. By default, keys never expire. It is thus recommended that keys be rotated in the key vault and set an explicit expiration date for all keys to help enforce the key rotation. This ensures that the keys cannot be used beyond their assigned lifetimes.

Impact:

Keys cannot be used beyond their assigned expiration dates respectively. Keys need to be rotated periodically wherever they are used.

NOTE: Nessus has provided the target output to assist in reviewing the benchmark to ensure target compliance.

Solution

From Azure Portal:

Go to Key vaults.

For each Key vault, click on Keys.

In the main pane, ensure that an appropriate Expiration date is set for any keys that are Enabled.

From Azure CLI:
Update the Expiration date for the key using the below command:

az keyvault key set-attributes --name <keyName> --vault-name <vaultName> --expires Y-m-d'T'H:M:S'Z'

Note:
To view the expiration date on all keys in a Key Vault using Microsoft API, the 'List' Key permission is required.
To update the expiration date for the keys:

Go to the Key vault, click on Access Control (IAM).

Click on Add role assignment and assign the role of Key Vault Crypto Officer to the appropriate user.

From PowerShell:

Set-AzKeyVaultKeyAttribute -VaultName <VaultName> -Name <KeyName> -Expires <DateTime>

Default Value:

By default, keys do not expire.

See Also

https://workbench.cisecurity.org/benchmarks/10624