NIST Special Publication 800-171 Revision 2
Date Published: January 28th, 2021
Withdrawn on May 14, 2024. Superseded by SP 800-171 Rev. 3
Author(s): Ron Ross (NIST), Victoria Pillitteri (NIST), Kelley Dempsey (NIST), Mark Riddle (NARA), Gary Guissanie (IDA)
Note: A Class Deviation is in effect as of May 2, 2024 (DEVIATION 2024O0013). The deviation clause requires contractors, who are subject to 252.204-7012, to comply with National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Special Publication (SP) 800-171 Revision 2, instead of the version of NIST SP 800-171 in effect at the time the solicitation is issued or as authorized by the contracting officer. Click Here
3.4.2 Establish and enforce security configuration settings for information technology products employed in organizational systems.
Control Family: Configuration Management
Control Type: Basic
SPRS Value: 5
SPRS Supplemental Guidance: N/A
CMMC Level(s): CM.L2-3.4.2
Top Ten Failed Requirement: No
Referenced in:
DFARS 252.204-7012
Derived From: NIST SP 800-53r4
CM-2
CM-6
CM-8
CM-8(1)
NIST Supplemental Guidance:
[SP 800-70]
[SP 800-128]
Discussion:
Configuration settings are the set of parameters that can be changed in hardware, software, or firmware components of the system that affect the security posture or functionality of the system. Information technology products for which security-related configuration settings can be defined include mainframe computers, servers, workstations, input and output devices (e.g., scanners, copiers, and printers), network components (e.g., firewalls, routers, gateways, voice and data switches, wireless access points, network appliances, sensors), operating systems, middleware, and applications. Security parameters are those parameters impacting the security state of systems including the parameters required to satisfy other security requirements.
Security parameters include: registry settings; account, file, directory permission settings; and settings for functions, ports, protocols, and remote connections. Organizations establish organization-wide configuration settings and subsequently derive specific configuration settings for systems. The established settings become part of the systems configuration baseline.
Common secure configurations (also referred to as security configuration checklists, lockdown and hardening guides, security reference guides, security technical implementation guides) provide recognized, standardized, and established benchmarks that stipulate secure configuration settings for specific information technology platforms/products and instructions for configuring those system components to meet operational requirements. Common secure configurations can be developed by a variety of organizations including information technology product developers, manufacturers, vendors, consortia, academia, industry, federal agencies, and other organizations in the public and private sectors.
[SP 800-70] and [SP 800-128] provide guidance on security configuration settings.
Upon assessment, assessors must determine if-
3.4.2[a] security configuration settings for information technology products employed
in the system are established and included in the baseline configuration.
3.4.2[b] security configuration settings for information technology products employed
in the system are enforced.
Assessors are instructed to-
Examine: [SELECT FROM: Configuration management policy; baseline configuration; procedures addressing configuration settings for the system; configuration management plan; system security plan; system design documentation; system configuration settings and associated documentation; security configuration checklists; evidence supporting approved deviations from established configuration settings; change control records; system audit logs and records; other relevant documents or records].
Interview: [SELECT FROM: Personnel with security configuration management responsibilities; personnel with information security responsibilities; system or network administrators].
Test: [SELECT FROM: Organizational processes for managing configuration settings; mechanisms that implement, monitor, and/or control system configuration settings; mechanisms that identify and/or document deviations from established configuration settings; processes for managing baseline configurations; mechanisms supporting configuration control of baseline configurations].
FURTHER DISCUSSION
Information security is an integral part of a company’s configuration management process. Security-related configuration settings are customized to satisfy the company’s security requirements and are applied them to all systems once tested and approved. The configuration settings must reflect the most restrictive settings that are appropriate for the system. Any required deviations from the baseline are reviewed, documented, and approved.
Example
You manage baseline configurations for your company’s systems, including those that process, store, and transmit CUI. As part of this, you download a secure configuration guide for each of your asset types (servers, workstations, network components, operating systems, middleware, and applications) from a well-known and trusted IT security organization. You then apply all of the settings that you can while still ensuring the assets can perform the role for which they are needed. Once you have the configuration settings identified and tested, you document them to ensure all applicable machines can be configured the same way [a,b].
Potential Assessment Considerations
Do security settings reflect the most restrictive settings appropriate [a]?
Are changes or deviations to security settings documented [b]?