Arista MLS EOS 4.X L2S Security Technical Implementation Guide

Overview

VersionDateFinding Count (18)Downloads
22025-05-19CAT I (High): 1CAT II (Medium): 14CAT III (Low): 3
STIG Description
This Security Technical Implementation Guide is published as a tool to improve the security of Department of Defense (DOD) information systems. The requirements are derived from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) 800-53 and related documents. Comments or proposed revisions to this document should be sent via email to the following address: disa.stig_spt@mail.mil.
ClassifiedPublicSensitive
I - Mission Critical ClassifiedI - Mission Critical PublicI - Mission Critical Sensitive
II - Mission Support ClassifiedII - Mission Support PublicII - Mission Support Sensitive
III - Administrative ClassifiedIII - Administrative PublicIII - Administrative Sensitive

Findings - MAC II - Mission Support Public

Finding IDSeverityTitleDescription
V-255969
LOWMEDIUMHIGH
The Arista MLS layer 2 switch must be configured for Storm Control to limit the effects of packet flooding types of denial-of-service (DoS) attacks.Denial of service is a condition when a resource is not available for legitimate users. Packet flooding distributed DoS (DDoS) attacks are referred to...
V-255971
LOWMEDIUMHIGH
The Arista MLS layer 2 switch must have BPDU Guard enabled on all switch ports connecting to access layer switches and hosts.If a rogue switch is introduced into the topology and transmits a Bridge Protocol Data Unit (BPDU) with a lower bridge priority than the existing root...
V-255972
LOWMEDIUMHIGH
The Arista MLS switch must have STP Loop Guard enabled on all nondesignated STP switch ports.The Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) loop guard feature provides additional protection against STP loops. An STP loop is created when an STP blocking port...
V-255973
LOWMEDIUMHIGH
The Arista MLS layer 2 switch must have DHCP snooping for all user VLANs to validate DHCP messages from untrusted sources.In an enterprise network, devices under administrative control are trusted sources. These devices include the switches, routers, and servers in the ne...
V-255974
LOWMEDIUMHIGH
The Arista MLS layer 2 switch must have IP Source Guard enabled on all user-facing or untrusted access switch ports.IP Source Guard (IPSG) provides source IP address filtering on a layer 2 port to prevent a malicious host from impersonating a legitimate host by assu...
V-255975
LOWMEDIUMHIGH
The Arista MLS layer 2 switch must have Dynamic Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) Inspection (DAI) enabled on all user VLANs.DAI intercepts Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) requests and verifies that each of these packets has a valid IP-to-MAC address binding before updatin...
V-255977
LOWMEDIUMHIGH
The Arista MLS layer 2 Arista MLS switch must implement Rapid STP where VLANs span multiple switches with redundant links.Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) is implemented on bridges and switches to prevent layer 2 loops when a broadcast domain spans multiple bridges and switch...
V-255979
LOWMEDIUMHIGH
The Arista MLS layer 2 switch must have all trunk links enabled statically.When trunk negotiation is enabled via Dynamic Trunk Protocol (DTP), considerable time can be spent negotiating trunk settings (802.1q or ISL) when a n...
V-255980
LOWMEDIUMHIGH
The Arista MLS layer 2 switch must have all disabled switch ports assigned to an unused VLAN.It is possible that a disabled port that is assigned to a user or management VLAN becomes enabled by accident or by an attacker and as a result gains ...
V-255981
LOWMEDIUMHIGH
The Arista MLS layer 2 switch must not have the default VLAN assigned to any host-facing switch ports.In a VLAN-based network, switches use the default VLAN (i.e., VLAN 1) for in-band management and to communicate with other networking devices using Sp...
V-255982
LOWMEDIUMHIGH
The Arista MLS layer 2 switch must have the default VLAN pruned from all trunk ports that do not require it.The default VLAN (i.e., VLAN 1) is a special VLAN used for control plane traffic such as Spanning-Tree Protocol (STP), Dynamic Trunking Protocol (DTP)...
V-255983
LOWMEDIUMHIGH
The Arista MLS layer 2 switch must not use the default VLAN for management traffic.Switches use the default VLAN (i.e., VLAN 1) for in-band management and to communicate with directly connected switches using Spanning-Tree Protocol (...
V-255984
LOWMEDIUMHIGH
The Arista MLS layer 2 switch must have all user-facing or untrusted ports configured as access switch ports.Double encapsulation can be initiated by an attacker who has access to a switch port belonging to the native VLAN of the trunk port. Knowing the victi...
V-255985
LOWMEDIUMHIGH
The Arista MLS layer 2 switch must have the native VLAN assigned to an ID other than the default VLAN for all 802.1q trunk links.VLAN hopping can be initiated by an attacker who has access to a switch port belonging to the same VLAN as the native VLAN of the trunk link connectin...
V-255970
LOWMEDIUMHIGH
The Arista MLS switch must have Root Guard enabled on all switch ports connecting to access layer switches and hosts.Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) does not provide any means for the network administrator to securely enforce the topology of the switched network. Any sw...
V-255976
LOWMEDIUMHIGH
The Arista MLS layer 2 switch must have IGMP or MLD Snooping configured on all VLANs.IGMP and MLD snooping provides a way to constrain multicast traffic at Layer 2. By monitoring the IGMP or MLD membership reports sent by hosts within ...
V-255986
LOWMEDIUMHIGH
The Arista MLS layer 2 switch must not have any switch ports assigned to the native VLAN.Double encapsulation can be initiated by an attacker who has access to a switch port belonging to the native VLAN of the trunk port. Knowing the victi...
V-255968
LOWMEDIUMHIGH
The Arista MLS layer 2 switch must uniquely identify all network-connected endpoint devices before establishing any connection.Controlling LAN access via 802.1x authentication can assist in preventing a malicious user from connecting an unauthorized PC to a switch port to inje...