From Apache Server 2.4 UNIX Server Security Technical Implementation Guide
Part of SRG-APP-000224-WSR-000137
Associated with: CCI-001188
Generating a session identifier (ID) that is not easily guessed through brute force is essential to deter several types of session attacks. By knowing the session ID, an attacker can hijack a user session that has already been user authenticated by the hosted application. The attacker does not need to guess user identifiers and passwords or have a secure token since the user session has already been authenticated.
Review the web server documentation and deployed configuration to determine the length of the generated session identifiers. First ensure that "mod_session_crypto" is enabled: httpd -M |grep session_crypto If the above command returns "session_crypto", the module is enabled in the running server. Determine the location of the "HTTPD_ROOT" directory and the "httpd.conf" file: # httpd -V | egrep -i 'httpd_root|server_config_file' -D HTTPD_ROOT="/etc/httpd" -D SERVER_CONFIG_FILE="conf/httpd.conf" Review the "httpd.conf" file. If the "SessionCryptoCipher" is not used or "SessionCryptoCipher" is not set to "aes256", this is a finding.
Configure the web server to generate session identifiers that are at least 128 bits in length. Ensure that "mod_session_crypto" is enabled. Determine the location of the "httpd.conf" file by running the following command: httpd -V Review the "HTTPD_ROOT" path. Navigate to the "HTTPD_ROOT"/conf directory. Edit the "httpd.conf" file. SessionCryptoCipher aes256 Restart Apache: apachectl restart
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