Vulnerability Discussion
If the system allows a user to boot into single-user or maintenance mode without authentication, any user that invokes single-user or maintenance mode is granted privileged access to all system information.
Check
Verify that the SUSE operating system has set an encrypted root password.
Note: If the system does not use UEFI, this requirement is Not Applicable.
Check that the encrypted password is set for root with the following command:
> sudo cat /boot/efi/EFI/sles/grub.cfg | grep -i password
password_pbkdf2 root grub.pbkdf2.sha512.10000.VeryLongString
If the root password entry does not begin with "password_pbkdf2", this is a finding.
Fix
Note: If the system does not use UEFI, this requirement is Not Applicable.
Configure the SUSE operating system to encrypt the boot password.
Generate an encrypted (GRUB2) password for root with the following command:
> grub2-mkpasswd-pbkdf2
Enter Password:
Reenter Password:
PBKDF2 hash of your password is grub.pbkdf2.sha512.10000.MFU48934NJD84NF8NSD39993JDHF84NG
Using the hash from the output, modify the "/etc/grub.d/40_custom" file and add the following two lines to add a boot password for the root entry:
set superusers="root"
password_pbkdf2 root grub.pbkdf2.sha512.VeryLongString
Generate an updated "grub.conf" file with the new password using the following commands:
> sudo grub2-mkconfig --output=/tmp/grub2.cfg
> sudo mv /tmp/grub2.cfg /boot/efi/EFI/sles/grub.cfg