6.4 Ensure Log Storage and Rotation Is Configured Correctly - '/etc/logrotate.conf rotate > 52'

Information

It is important that there is adequate disk space on the partition that will hold all the log files, and that log rotation is configured to retain at least 3 months or 13 weeks if central logging is not used for storage.

Rationale:

Keep in mind that the generation of logs is under a potential attacker's control. So, do not hold any Apache log files on the root partition of the OS. This could result in a denial of service against your web server host by filling up the root partition and causing the system to crash. For this reason, it is recommended that the log files should be stored on a dedicated partition. Likewise consider that attackers sometimes put information into your logs which is intended to attack your log collection or log analysis processing software. So, it is important that they are not vulnerable. Investigation of incidents often require access to several months or more of logs, which is why it is important to keep at least 3 months available. Two common log rotation utilities include rotatelogs(8) which is bundled with Apache, and logrotate(8) commonly bundled on Linux distributions are described in the remediation section.

Solution

To implement the recommended state, do either option 'a' if using the Linux logrotate utility or option 'b' if using a piped logging utility such as the Apache rotatelogs:
a) File Logging with Logrotate:

Add or modify the web log rotation configuration to match your configured log files in /etc/logrotate.d/httpd to be similar to the following.

/var/log/httpd/*log {
missingok
notifempty
sharedscripts
postrotate
/bin/kill -HUP 'cat /var/run/httpd.pid 2>/dev/null' 2> /dev/null || true
endscript
}

Modify the rotation period and number of logs to keep so that at least 13 weeks or 3 months of logs are retained. This may be done as the default value for all logs in /etc/logrotate.conf or in the web specific log rotation configuration in /etc/logrotate.d/httpdto be similar to the following.

# rotate log files weekly
weekly
# keep 13 weeks of backlogs
rotate 13

For each virtual host configured with its own log files ensure that those log files are also included in a similar log rotation.

b) Piped Logging:

Configure the log rotation interval and log file names to a suitable interval such as daily.

CustomLog "|bin/rotatelogs -l /var/logs/logfile.%Y.%m.%d 86400" combined

Ensure the log file naming and any rotation scripts provide for retaining at least 3 months or 13 weeks of log files.

For each virtual host configured with its own log files ensure that those log files are also included in a similar log rotation.

Default Value:

The following is the default httpd log rotation configuration in /etc/logrotate.d/httpd:

/var/log/httpd/*log {

missingok

notifempty

sharedscripts

postrotate

/bin/kill -HUP 'cat /var/run/httpd.pid 2>/dev/null' 2> /dev/null || true

endscript

}

The default log retention configured in /etc/logrotate.conf:

# rotate log files weekly

weekly

# keep 4 weeks worth of backlogs

rotate 4

See Also

https://workbench.cisecurity.org/files/4548

Item Details

Category: AUDIT AND ACCOUNTABILITY

References: 800-53|AU-4, CSCv7|6.4

Plugin: Unix

Control ID: 5ce46d3cde20837728ae3e57ca16b7c2b43faf40fd38279658c5915fc04891f9