RHEL 9 must be configured in the password-auth file to prohibit password reuse for a minimum of five generations.

STIG ID: RHEL-09-611015  |  SRG: SRG-OS-000077-GPOS-00045 | Severity: medium |  CCI: CCI-000200

Vulnerability Discussion

Password complexity, or strength, is a measure of the effectiveness of a password in resisting attempts at guessing and brute-force attacks. If the information system or application allows the user to reuse their password consecutively when that password has exceeded its defined lifetime, the end result is a password that is not changed per policy requirements.

RHEL 9 uses "pwhistory" consecutively as a mechanism to prohibit password reuse. This is set in both:
/etc/pam.d/password-auth
/etc/pam.d/system-auth

Note that manual changes to the listed files may be overwritten by the "authselect" program.

Check

Verify RHEL 9 is configured in the password-auth file to prohibit password reuse for a minimum of five generations with the following command:

$ grep -i remember /etc/pam.d/password-auth

password required pam_pwhistory.so use_authtok remember=5 retry=3

If the line containing "pam_pwhistory.so" does not have the "remember" module argument set, is commented out, or the value of the "remember" module argument is set to less than "5", this is a finding.

Fix

Configure the RHEL 9 password-auth file to prohibit password reuse for a minimum of five generations.

Add the following line in "/etc/pam.d/password-auth" (or modify the line to have the required value):

password required pam_pwhistory.so use_authtok remember=5 retry=3