Vulnerability Discussion
Kernel core dumps may contain the full contents of system memory at the time of the crash. Kernel core dumps consume a considerable amount of disk space and may result in denial of service by exhausting the available space on the target file system partition. Unless the system is used for kernel development or testing, there is little need to run the kdump service.
Check
Verify that the kdump service is disabled in system boot configuration with the following command:
$ systemctl is-enabled kdump
disabled
Verify that the kdump service is not active (i.e., not running) through current runtime configuration with the following command:
$ systemctl is-active kdump
inactive
Verify that the kdump service is masked with the following command:
$ sudo systemctl show kdump | grep "LoadState\|UnitFileState"
LoadState=masked
UnitFileState=masked
If the "kdump" service is loaded or active, and is not masked, this is a finding.
Fix
Disable and mask the kdump service on RHEL 9.
To disable the kdump service run the following command:
$ sudo systemctl disable --now kdump
To mask the kdump service run the following command:
$ sudo systemctl mask --now kdump