The Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP) is a transport layer protocol used to support message oriented communication, with several streams of messages in one connection. It serves a similar function as TCP and UDP, incorporating features of both. It is message-oriented like UDP, and ensures reliable in-sequence transport of messages with congestion control like TCP. Rationale: If the protocol is not being used, it is recommended that kernel module not be loaded, disabling the service to reduce the potential attack surface.
Solution
Run the following script to disable sctp: #!/usr/bin/env bash { l_mname='sctp' # set module name if ! modprobe -n -v '$l_mname' | grep -P -- '^h*install /bin/(true|false)'; then echo -e ' - setting module: '$l_mname' to be not loadable' echo -e 'install $l_mname /bin/false' >> /etc/modprobe.d/'$l_mname'.conf fi if lsmod | grep '$l_mname' > /dev/null 2>&1; then echo -e ' - unloading module '$l_mname'' modprobe -r '$l_mname' fi if ! grep -Pq -- '^h*blacklisth+$l_mnameb' /etc/modprobe.d/*; then echo -e ' - deny listing '$l_mname'' echo -e 'blacklist $l_mname' >> /etc/modprobe.d/'$l_mname'.conf fi }