The smb.conf file must be group-owned by root, bin, or sys.

From SOLARIS 10 X86 SECURITY TECHNICAL IMPLEMENTATION GUIDE

Part of GEN006120

Associated with: CCI-000225

SV-39890r3_rule The smb.conf file must be group-owned by root, bin, or sys.

Vulnerability discussion

If the group owner of the smb.conf file is not root or a system group, the file may be maliciously modified and the Samba configuration could be compromised.

Check content

Check the group ownership of the smb.conf file. Default locations for this file include /etc, /etc/sfw, /etc/samba, and /etc/sfw/samba. If the system has Samba installed in non-standard locations, also check the smb.conf in those locations. Procedure: # ls -l /etc/smb.conf /etc/sfw/smb.conf /etc/samba/smb.conf /etc/sfw/samba/smb.conf If an smb.conf file is not group-owned by root, bin, or sys, this is a finding.

Fix text

Change the group owner of the smb.conf file. Procedure: # chgrp root /etc/smb.conf /etc/sfw/smb.conf /etc/samba/smb.conf /etc/sfw/samba/smb.conf

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