| V-239873 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to produce audit records containing sufficient information to establish what type of event occurred. | Without establishing what type of event occurred, it would be difficult to establish, correlate, and investigate the events leading up to an outage or... |
| V-239874 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to produce audit records containing information to establish when the events occurred. | Without establishing the time (date/time) an event occurred, it would be difficult to establish, correlate, and investigate the events leading up to a... |
| V-239875 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to produce audit records containing information to establish where the event was detected. | Associating where the event was detected with the event log entries provides a means of investigating an attack or identifying an improperly configure... |
| V-239876 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to produce audit records containing information to establish the source of the event. | Associating the source of the event with detected events in the logs provides a means of investigating an attack or suspected attack.
While auditing ... |
| V-239877 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to produce audit records containing information to establish the outcome of events associated with detected harmful or potentially harmful traffic. | Associating event outcome with detected events in the log provides a means of investigating an attack or suspected attack.
While auditing and logging... |
| V-239878 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to log events based on policy access control rules, signatures, and anomaly analysis. | Without the capability to generate audit records, it would be difficult to establish, correlate, and investigate the events relating to an incident, o... |
| V-239879 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to off-load log records to a centralized log server. | Information stored in one location is vulnerable to accidental or incidental deletion or alteration. Off-loading ensures audit information does not ge... |
| V-239880 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to send log records to the syslog server for specific facility and severity level. | Without the capability to generate audit records with a severity code it is difficult to track and handle detection events.
While auditing and loggin... |
| V-239881 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to queue log records locally In the event that the central audit server is down or not reachable. | It is critical that when the IDPS is at risk of failing to process audit logs as required, it take action to mitigate the failure.
Audit processing f... |
| V-239882 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to block outbound traffic containing denial-of-service (DoS) attacks by ensuring an intrusion prevention policy has been applied to outbound communications traffic. | The IDPS must include protection against DoS attacks that originate from inside the enclave which can affect either internal or external systems. Thes... |
| V-239883 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to use Advanced Malware Protection (AMP) features to detect and block the transmission of malicious software and malware. | Mobile code is defined as software modules obtained from remote systems, transferred across a network, and then downloaded and executed on a local sys... |
| V-239884 | | The Cisco ASA must block any prohibited mobile code at the enclave boundary when it is detected. | Mobile code is defined as software modules obtained from remote systems, transferred across a network, and then downloaded and executed on a local sys... |
| V-239885 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to install updates for signature definitions and vendor-provided rules. | Failing to update malicious code protection mechanisms, including application software files, signature definitions, and vendor-provided rules, leaves... |
| V-239886 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to block malicious code. | Configuring the IDPS to delete and/or quarantine based on local organizational incident handling procedures minimizes the impact of this code on the n... |
| V-239887 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to block traffic from IP addresses that have a known bad reputation based on the latest reputation intelligence. | Configuring the network element to delete and/or quarantine based on local organizational incident handling procedures minimizes the impact of this co... |
| V-239888 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to send an alert to organization-defined personnel and/or the firewall administrator when malicious code is detected. | Without an alert, security personnel may be unaware of an impending failure of the audit capability, and the ability to perform forensic analysis and ... |
| V-239889 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to automatically install updates to signature definitions and vendor-provided rules. | Failing to automatically update malicious code protection mechanisms, including application software files, signature definitions, and vendor-provided... |
| V-239890 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to block inbound traffic containing unauthorized activities or conditions. | If inbound communications traffic is not continuously monitored for unusual/unauthorized activities or conditions, there will be times when hostile ac... |
| V-239891 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to block outbound traffic containing unauthorized activities or conditions. | If outbound communications traffic is not continuously monitored for unusual/unauthorized activities or conditions, there will be times when hostile a... |
| V-239892 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to send an alert to organization-defined personnel and/or the firewall administrator when intrusion events are detected. | Without an alert, security personnel may be unaware of intrusion detection incidents that require immediate action and this delay may result in the lo... |
| V-239893 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to send an alert to organization-defined personnel and/or the firewall administrator when threats are detected. | Without an alert, security personnel may be unaware of an impending failure of the audit capability, and the ability to perform forensic analysis and ... |
| V-239894 | | The Cisco ASA must be configured to send an alert to organization-defined personnel and/or the firewall administrator when DoS incidents are detected. | Without an alert, security personnel may be unaware of major detection incidents that require immediate action and this delay may result in the loss o... |
| V-239895 | | The Cisco ASA must generate an alert to organization-defined personnel and/or the firewall administrator when active propagation of malware or malicious code is detected. | Without an alert, security personnel may be unaware of major detection incidents that require immediate action and this delay may result in the loss o... |