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 SUSE Linux Enterprise Server v11 for System z Security Technical Implementation Guide

V-22365

CAT II (Medium)

All shell files must be group-owned by root, bin, sys, or system.

Rule ID

SV-45173r1_rule

STIG

SUSE Linux Enterprise Server v11 for System z Security Technical Implementation Guide

Version

V1R12

CCIs

CCI-000225

Discussion

If shell files are group-owned by users other than root or a system group, they could be modified by intruders or malicious users to perform unauthorized actions.

Check Content

If /etc/shells exists, check the group ownership of each shell referenced.

Procedure:
# cat /etc/shells | xargs -n1 ls -l

Otherwise, check any shells found on the system.
Procedure:
# find / -name "*sh" | xargs -n1 ls -l

If a shell is not group-owned by root, bin, sys, or system, this is a finding.

Fix Text

Change the group-owner of the shell to root, bin, sys, or system.

Procedure:
# chgrp root <shell>