Information
Complex passwords contain one character from each of the following classes: English uppercase letters, English lowercase letters, Westernized Arabic numerals, and non-alphanumeric characters.
Ensure that a number or numeric value is part of the password policy on the computer.
Rationale:
The more complex a password, the more resistant it will be against persons seeking unauthorized access to a system.
Impact:
Password policy should be in effect to reduce the risk of exposed services being compromised easily through dictionary attacks or other social engineering attempts.
Solution
Terminal Method:
Run the following command to set passwords to require at least one number:
$ /usr/bin/sudo /usr/bin/pwpolicy -n /Local/Default -setglobalpolicy -setaccountpolicies 'requiresNumeric=<value>=1>'
example:
$ /usr/bin/sudo /usr/bin/pwpolicy -n /Local/Default -setglobalpolicy 'requiresNumeric=2'
Profile Method:
Create or edit a configuration profile with the following information:
The PayloadType string is com.apple.mobiledevice.passwordpolicy
The key to include is requireAlphanumeric
The key must be set to <true/>
Note: This profile sets a requirement of both an alphabetical and a numeric character.
Note: The profile method is the preferred method for setting password policy since -setglobalpolicy in pwpolicy is deprecated and will likely be removed in a future macOS release.
Additional Information:
Note: The CIS macOS community has decided to not require the additional password complexity settings (Recommendations 5.3 - 5.6). Because of that, we have left the complexity recommendations as a manual assessment. Since there are a large amount of admins in the greater macOS world that do need these settings, we include both the guidance for the proper setting as well as probes for CIS-CAT to test.