Vulnerability Discussion
Use of a complex password helps to increase the time and resources required to compromise the password. Password complexity, or strength, is a measure of the effectiveness of a password in resisting attempts at guessing and brute-force attacks.
Password complexity is one factor of several that determines how long it takes to crack a password. The more complex the password, the greater the number of possible combinations that need to be tested before the password is compromised.
RHEL 8 utilizes pwquality as a mechanism to enforce password complexity. Note that in order to require uppercase characters, without degrading the "minlen" value, the credit value must be expressed as a negative number in "/etc/security/pwquality.conf".
Check
Verify the value for "ucredit" with the following command:
$ sudo grep -r ucredit /etc/security/pwquality.conf*
/etc/security/pwquality.conf:ucredit = -1
If the value of "ucredit" is a positive number or is commented out, this is a finding.
If conflicting results are returned, this is a finding.
Fix
Configure the operating system to enforce password complexity by requiring that at least one uppercase character be used by setting the "ucredit" option.
Add the following line to /etc/security/pwquality.conf (or modify the line to have the required value):
ucredit = -1
Remove any configurations that conflict with the above value.