Vulnerability Discussion
Failure to restrict network connectivity only to authorized systems permits inbound connections from malicious systems. It also permits outbound connections that may facilitate exfiltration of DoD data.
RHEL 8 incorporates the "firewalld" daemon, which allows for many different configurations. One of these configurations is zones. Zones can be utilized to a deny-all, allow-by-exception approach. The default "drop" zone will drop all incoming network packets unless it is explicitly allowed by the configuration file or is related to an outgoing network connection.
Check
Verify "firewalld" is configured to employ a deny-all, allow-by-exception policy for allowing connections to other systems with the following commands:
$ sudo firewall-cmd --state
running
$ sudo firewall-cmd --get-active-zones
[custom]
interfaces: ens33
$ sudo firewall-cmd --info-zone=[custom] | grep target
target: DROP
If no zones are active on the RHEL 8 interfaces or if the target is set to a different option other than "DROP", this is a finding.
Fix
Configure the "firewalld" daemon to employ a deny-all, allow-by-exception with the following commands:
$ sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --new-zone=[custom]
$ sudo cp /usr/lib/firewalld/zones/drop.xml /etc/firewalld/zones/[custom].xml
This will provide a clean configuration file to work with that employs a deny-all approach. Next, add the exceptions that are required for mission functionality.
$ sudo firewall-cmd --set-default-zone=[custom]
Note: This is a runtime and permanent change.