From HP-UX 11.31 Security Technical Implementation Guide
Part of GEN003505
Associated with IA controls: ECLP-1
Associated with: CCI-000225
Process core dumps contain the memory in use by the process when it crashed. Any data the process was handling may be contained in the core file, and it must be protected accordingly. If the process core dump data directory has an extended ACL, unauthorized users may be able to view or to modify sensitive information contained any process core dumps in the directory.
View all coreadm configuration settings.
# coreadm
Or
View only if a directory is defined for process core dumps. If no information is returned, a directory has not been defined.
# coreadm | tr '\011' ' ' | tr -s ' ' | egrep -i "global core file pattern|global core dumps"
If the process core dump directory is undefined and core dumps are disabled, this is not applicable.
If the process core dump directory is defined and core dumps are enabled, check the permissions of the
If the core file dump pattern is undefined, ensure that core dumps are disabled.
# coreadm -d global
If the core file dump pattern is defined and core dumps are enabled and the core file directory permissions include a "+" (ACL), remove the optional ACL from the file.
# chacl -z
Lavender hyperlinks in small type off to the right (of CSS
class id
, if you view the page source) point to
globally unique URIs for each document and item. Copy the
link location and paste anywhere you need to talk
unambiguously about these things.
You can obtain data about documents and items in other
formats. Simply provide an HTTP header Accept:
text/turtle
or
Accept: application/rdf+xml
.
Powered by sagemincer