STIGhubSTIGhub
STIGsRMF ControlsCompare
STIGhub— A free STIG search and compliance tool·STIGs updated 3 days ago
Powered by Pylon·Privacy·Terms·© 2026 Beacon Cloud Solutions, Inc.
← Back to Crunchy Data PostgreSQL Security Technical Implementation Guide

V-233532

CAT II (Medium)

PostgreSQL must record time stamps, in audit records and application data that can be mapped to Coordinated Universal Time (UTC, formerly GMT).

Rule ID

SV-233532r961443_rule

STIG

Crunchy Data PostgreSQL Security Technical Implementation Guide

Version

V3R1

CCIs

CCI-001890

Discussion

If time stamps are not consistently applied and there is no common time reference, it is difficult to perform forensic analysis. Time stamps generated by PostgreSQL must include date and time. Time is commonly expressed in UTC, a modern continuation of GMT, or local time with an offset from UTC.

Check Content

When a PostgreSQL cluster is initialized using initdb, the PostgreSQL cluster will be configured to use the same time zone as the target server. 

As the database administrator (shown here as "postgres"), check the current log_timezone setting by running the following SQL:

$ sudo su - postgres
$ psql -c "SHOW log_timezone"

log_timezone
--------------
UTC
(1 row)

If log_timezone is not set to the desired time zone, this is a finding.

Fix Text

Note: The following instructions use the PGDATA and PGVER environment variables. See supplementary content APPENDIX-F for instructions on configuring PGDATA and APPENDIX-H for PGVER.

To change log_timezone in postgresql.conf to use a different time zone for logs, as the database administrator (shown here as "postgres"), run the following:

$ sudo su - postgres
$ vi ${PGDATA?}/postgresql.conf
log_timezone='UTC'

Next, restart the database:

$ sudo systemctl reload postgresql-${PGVER?}