OFFICE OF TECHNOLOGY SERVICES
Guidelines and Standards
Firewall Management
TU must be able to protect critical business information
from inside and outside threats. To accomplish this feat
requires the use of strategically placed and managed
firewall technology. This document provides basic
guidelines for ensuring firewalls are maintained
according to state and federal guidelines.
Key Players
Information Security Officer (ISO)
Firewall Administrators
Perimeter Security Maintenance
Perimeter security for the university will be
maintained by a firewall. This firewall has a redundant
fail over unit to provide service continuity should the
primary firewall unit fail. The firewall(s) will inspect
packets and sessions to determine if they should be
transmitted or dropped. In effect, the firewalls will
act as a single point of network access where traffic can
be analyzed and controlled. This will forward
authentication requests to a radius server. Access to
the university's internal network will be based on
parameters such as (but not limited to):
- Application use.
- User authentication, authorization, and
accounting, for both incoming traffic from remote
users and outgoing traffic to the Internet.
- IP Address and port
Firewall Administration
All firewalls will be centrally managed by the
university firewall administrators. Two firewall
administrators (one primary and secondary) shall be
designated by the ISO or other manager, and shall be
responsible for the upkeep of the firewall. The primary
administrator shall make changes to the firewall and the
secondary shall only do so in the absence of the former
so that there is no simultaneous or contradictory access
to the firewall. Each firewall administrator shall
provide their home phone number, pager number, cellular
phone number and other numbers or codes in which they
can be contacted when support is required.
- Remote Administration
The preferred method for firewall administration is
directly from the attached terminal.
Physical access to the firewall terminal is limited
to the firewall administrator and backup
administrator. Where remote access for firewall
administration must be allowed, it should be limited
to access from other hosts on the TU internal
network. Such internal remote access requires the
use of strong authentication, such as one time
passwords and/or hardware tokens. Remote access over
untrusted networks such as the Internet requires end
to end encryption and strong authentication to be
employed.
- User Accounts
Only the firewall administrator and backup
administrators will be given user accounts on the TU
firewall. Any modification of the firewall system
software must be done by the firewall administrator
or backup administrator and requires approval of the
ISO. Enable password construction will be consistent
with the strong password creation practices utilized
in the department.
- Firewall Backup
The firewall (system software, configuration data,
database files, etc.) must be backed up daily,
weekly, and monthly so that in case of system
failure, data and configuration files can be
recovered. Backup files should be stored securely on
a read-only media so that data in storage is not
over-written inadvertently and locked up so that the
media is only accessible to the appropriate
personnel. At least one firewall shall be configured
and reserved (not-in-use) so that in case of a
firewall failure, this backup firewall can be
switched in to protect the network.
- System Integrity
The firewall’s system integrity database shall be
updated each time the firewall's configuration is
modified. System integrity files must be stored on
read only media or off-line storage. System
integrity shall be checked on a regular basis on the
firewall in order for the administrator to generate
a listing of all files that may have been modified,
replaced, or deleted.
- Documentation
All operational procedures for a firewall and its
configurable parameters be well documented, updated,
and kept in a safe and secure place.
- Firewall Physical Security
The TU firewall should be located in a controlled
environment, with access limited to the ISO, the
firewall administrator, and the backup firewall
administrator. The room in which the firewall is to
be physically located must be equipped with heat,
air-conditioner, and smoke alarms to assure the
proper working order of the room. The placement and
recharge status of the fire extinguishers shall be
checked on a regular basis. If uninterruptible power
service is available to any Internet-connected
systems, such service should be provided to the
firewall as well.
- Restorable Services
In case of a firewall break-in, the firewall
administrator(s) are responsible for reconfiguring
the firewall to address any vulnerabilities that
were exploited. The firewall shall be restored to
the state it was before the break-in so that the
network is not left wide open. While the restoration
is going on, the backup firewall shall be deployed.
- Firewall Upgrade
To optimize the performance of the firewall, all
vendor recommendations for processor and memory
capacities shall be followed. The firewall
administrator must evaluate each new release of the
firewall software to determine if an upgrade is
required. All security patches recommended by the
firewall vendor should be implemented in a timely
manner. Hardware and software components shall be
obtained from a list of vendor-recommended sources.
Any firewall specific upgrades shall be obtained
from the vendor. NFS shall not be used as a means of
obtaining hardware and software components. The use
of virus checked CDROM or FTP to a vendor’s site is
an appropriate method. The firewall administrator(s)
shall monitor the vendor’s firewall mailing list or
maintain some other form of contact with the vendor
to be aware of all required upgrades. Before an
upgrade of any of the firewall component, the
firewall administrator must verify with the vendor
that an upgrade is required. After any upgrade the
firewall shall be tested to verify proper operation
prior to going operational.
Auditing
The firewall will be configured to deny all services not
expressly permitted and will be regularly audited and
monitored to detect intrusions or misuse. The firewall
shall notify the system administrator in near-real-time
of any item that may need immediate attention such as a
break-in into the network, little disk space available,
or other related messages so that an immediate action
could be taken. The firewall software will run on a
dedicated computer - all non-firewall related software,
such as compilers, editors, communications software,
etc., will be deleted or disabled. The firewall will be
configured to deny all services not expressly permitted
and will be regularly audited and monitored to detect
intrusions or misuse.
Firewall Log Configuration and Maintenance
The firewall will be configured to use system logging
(syslog) to export its log messages to the System Log
Server (syslog) server(s). The firewall’s logs will be
base lined thirty (30) days to determine how best to
fine-tune message traffic information. At a minimum, the
firewall log will be configured to detect:
- Emergencies, such as system unusable messages
- Alerts, critical conditions, and Error message
- VPN sessions,
- Failed/unsuccessful login attempts
- Logon Access and configuration attempts made to
the firewall
The firewall logs will be backed up daily and
archived on a weekly basis, in accordance with current
practices implemented on the syslog server. In addition,
the firewall will be configured to send Simple Network
Management Protocol (SNMP) Traps to the network
management server. Construction of SNMP access lists and
community strings will be consistent with established
security practices.
Firewall Incident Handling
The firewall shall be configured to log all reports
on daily, weekly, and monthly bases so that the network
activity can be analyzed when needed. Firewall logs
should be examined on a weekly basis to determine if
attacks have been detected. The firewall administrator
shall be notified at anytime of any security alarm by
email, pager, or other means so that he may immediately
respond to such alarm. The firewall shall reject any
kind of probing or scanning tool that is directed to it
so that information being protected is not leaked out by
the firewall. In a similar fashion, the firewall shall
block all software types that are known to present
security threats to a network (such as Active X and
Java) to better tighten the security of the network.
Information Security Office
Office of Technology Services
Cook Library, 4
Hours: Monday - Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
E-mail:
infosec@towson.edu
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