Juniper EX Series Switches Router Security Technical Implementation Guide

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: [email protected].

Details

Version / Release: V1R3

Published: 2023-03-23

Updated At: 2023-05-04 00:35:05

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    Vuln Rule Version CCI Severity Title Description Status Finding Details Comments
    SV-253973r843952_rule JUEX-RT-000010 CCI-001368 MEDIUM The Juniper router must be configured to enforce approved authorizations for controlling the flow of information within the network based on organization-defined information flow control policies. Information flow control regulates where information is allowed to travel within a network and between interconnected networks. The flow of all network traffic must be monitored and controlled so it does not introduce any unacceptable risk to the network
    SV-253974r843955_rule JUEX-RT-000020 CCI-001368 MEDIUM The Juniper BGP router must be configured to reject inbound route advertisements for any Bogon prefixes. Accepting route advertisements for Bogon prefixes can result in the local autonomous system (AS) becoming a transit for malicious traffic as it will in turn advertise these prefixes to neighbor autonomous systems. The list of Bogon addresses can change,
    SV-253975r843958_rule JUEX-RT-000030 CCI-001368 MEDIUM The Juniper BGP router must be configured to reject inbound route advertisements for any prefixes belonging to the local autonomous system (AS). Accepting route advertisements belonging to the local AS can result in traffic looping, being black holed, or at a minimum using a nonoptimized path.
    SV-253976r843961_rule JUEX-RT-000040 CCI-001368 MEDIUM The Juniper BGP router must be configured to reject inbound route advertisements from a customer edge (CE) router for prefixes that are not allocated to that customer. As a best practice, a service provider should only accept customer prefixes that have been assigned to that customer and any peering autonomous systems. A multi-homed customer with BGP speaking routers connected to the internet or other external networks
    SV-253977r843964_rule JUEX-RT-000050 CCI-001368 MEDIUM The Juniper BGP router must be configured to reject outbound route advertisements for any prefixes that do not belong to any customers or the local autonomous system (AS). Advertisement of routes by an AS for networks that do not belong to any of its customers pulls traffic away from the authorized network. This causes a denial of service (DoS) on the network that allocated the block of addresses and may cause a DoS on the
    SV-253978r843967_rule JUEX-RT-000060 CCI-000032 LOW The Juniper BGP router must be configured to reject route advertisements from BGP peers that do not list their autonomous system (AS) number as the first AS in the AS_PATH attribute. Verifying the path a route has traversed will ensure the IP core is not used as a transit network for unauthorized or possibly even internet traffic. All autonomous system boundary routers (ASBRs) must ensure updates received from eBGP peers list their AS
    SV-253979r843970_rule JUEX-RT-000070 CCI-001368 LOW The Juniper router configured for Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP) must filter received source-active multicast advertisements for any undesirable multicast groups and sources. The interoperability of BGP extensions for interdomain multicast routing and MSDP enables seamless connectivity of multicast domains between autonomous systems. MP-BGP advertises the unicast prefixes of the multicast sources used by Protocol Independent M
    SV-253980r843973_rule JUEX-RT-000080 CCI-001368 LOW The Juniper router configured for Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP) must filter source-active multicast advertisements to external MSDP peers to avoid global visibility of local-only multicast sources and groups. To avoid global visibility of local information, there are a number of source-group (S, G) states in a PIM-SM domain that must not be leaked to another domain, such as multicast sources with private address, administratively scoped multicast addresses, an
    SV-253981r843976_rule JUEX-RT-000090 CCI-001368 LOW The Juniper router configured for MSDP must limit the amount of source-active messages it accepts on per-peer basis. To reduce any risk of a denial-of-service (DoS) attack from a rogue or misconfigured MSDP router, the router must be configured to limit the number of source-active messages it accepts from each peer.
    SV-253982r843979_rule JUEX-RT-000100 CCI-000032 LOW The Juniper router configured for BGP must reject route advertisements from CE routers with an originating AS in the AS_PATH attribute that does not belong to that customer. Verifying the path a route has traversed will ensure that the local AS is not used as a transit network for unauthorized traffic. To ensure that the local AS does not carry any prefixes that do not belong to any customers, all PE routers must be configure
    SV-253983r843982_rule JUEX-RT-000110 CCI-001414 LOW The Juniper router must be configured to disable the auxiliary port unless it is connected to a secured modem providing encryption and authentication. The use of POTS lines to modems connecting to network devices provides clear text of authentication traffic over commercial circuits that could be captured and used to compromise the network. Additional war dial attacks on the device could degrade the dev
    SV-253984r843985_rule JUEX-RT-000120 CCI-001414 MEDIUM The Juniper router must be configured to enforce approved authorizations for controlling the flow of information between interconnected networks in accordance with applicable policy. Information flow control regulates authorized information to travel within a network and between interconnected networks. Controlling the flow of network traffic is critical so it does not introduce any unacceptable risk to the network infrastructure or d
    SV-253985r843988_rule JUEX-RT-000130 CCI-001414 MEDIUM The Juniper router must be configured to disable Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) on all interfaces that are not required to support multicast routing. If multicast traffic is forwarded beyond the intended boundary, it is possible that it can be intercepted by unauthorized or unintended personnel. Limiting where, within the network, a given multicast group's data is permitted to flow is an important firs
    SV-253986r843991_rule JUEX-RT-000140 CCI-001414 MEDIUM The Juniper router must be configured to bind a Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) neighbor filter to interfaces that have PIM enabled. PIM is a routing protocol used to build multicast distribution trees for forwarding multicast traffic across the network infrastructure. PIM traffic must be limited to only known PIM neighbors by configuring and binding a PIM neighbor filter to those inte
    SV-253987r843994_rule JUEX-RT-000150 CCI-001414 LOW The Juniper multicast edge router must be configured to establish boundaries for administratively scoped multicast traffic. If multicast traffic is forwarded beyond the intended boundary, it is possible that it can be intercepted by unauthorized or unintended personnel. Administrative scoped multicast addresses are locally assigned and are to be used exclusively by the enterp
    SV-253988r843997_rule JUEX-RT-000160 CCI-001414 LOW The Juniper router must be configured to have all inactive interfaces disabled. An inactive interface is rarely monitored or controlled and may expose a network to an undetected attack on that interface. Unauthorized personnel with access to the communication facility could gain access to a router by connecting to a configured interf
    SV-253989r844000_rule JUEX-RT-000170 CCI-001414 HIGH The Juniper perimeter router must be configured to protect an enclave connected to an alternate gateway by using an inbound filter that only permits packets with destination addresses within the site's address space. Enclaves with alternate gateway connections must take additional steps to ensure there is no compromise on the enclave network or NIPRNet. Without verifying the destination address of traffic coming from the site's alternate gateway, the perimeter router
    SV-253990r844003_rule JUEX-RT-000180 CCI-001414 HIGH The Juniper perimeter router must not be configured to be a Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) peer to an alternate gateway service provider. ISPs use BGP to share route information with other autonomous systems (i.e., other ISPs and corporate networks). If the perimeter router was configured to BGP peer with an ISP, NIPRNet routes could be advertised to the ISP; thereby creating a backdoor con
    SV-253991r844006_rule JUEX-RT-000190 CCI-001414 LOW The Juniper perimeter router must not be configured to redistribute static routes to an alternate gateway service provider into BGP or an IGP peering with the NIPRNet or to other autonomous systems. If the static routes to the alternate gateway are being redistributed into an Exterior Gateway Protocol or Interior Gateway Protocol to a NIPRNet gateway, this could make traffic on NIPRNet flow to that particular router and not to the Internet Access Poi
    SV-253992r844009_rule JUEX-RT-000200 CCI-001414 MEDIUM The Juniper out-of-band management (OOBM) gateway router must be configured to have separate IGP instances for the managed network and management network. If the gateway router is not a dedicated device for the OOBM network, implementation of several safeguards for containment of management and production traffic boundaries must occur. Since the managed and management network are separate routing domains, c
    SV-253993r844012_rule JUEX-RT-000210 CCI-001414 MEDIUM The Juniper out-of-band management (OOBM) gateway router must not be configured to redistribute routes between the management network routing domain and the managed network routing domain. If the gateway router is not a dedicated device for the OOBM network, several safeguards must be implemented for containment of management and production traffic boundaries; otherwise, it is possible that management traffic will not be separated from prod
    SV-253994r844015_rule JUEX-RT-000220 CCI-001414 LOW The Juniper multicast Rendezvous Point (RP) router must be configured to filter Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) Register messages received from the Designated Router (DR) for any undesirable multicast groups and sources. Real-time multicast traffic can entail multiple large flows of data. An attacker can flood a network segment with multicast packets, over-using the available bandwidth and thereby creating a denial-of-service (DoS) condition. Hence, it is imperative that
    SV-253995r844018_rule JUEX-RT-000230 CCI-001414 LOW The Juniper multicast Rendezvous Point (RP) router must be configured to filter Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) Join messages received from the Designated Router (DR) for any undesirable multicast groups. Real-time multicast traffic can entail multiple large flows of data. An attacker can flood a network segment with multicast packets, over-using the available bandwidth and thereby creating a denial-of-service (DoS) condition. Hence, it is imperative that
    SV-253996r844021_rule JUEX-RT-000240 CCI-000132 MEDIUM The Juniper router must be configured to produce audit records containing information to establish where the events occurred. Without establishing where events occurred, it is impossible to establish, correlate, and investigate the events leading up to an outage or attack. To compile an accurate risk assessment and provide forensic analysis, it is essential for security personn
    SV-253997r844024_rule JUEX-RT-000250 CCI-000133 MEDIUM The Juniper router must be configured to produce audit records containing information to establish the source of the events. Without establishing the source of the event, it is impossible to establish, correlate, and investigate the events leading up to an outage or attack. To compile an accurate risk assessment and provide forensic analysis, security personnel need to know th
    SV-253998r844027_rule JUEX-RT-000260 CCI-000134 LOW The Juniper router must be configured to log all packets that have been dropped. Auditing and logging are key components of any security architecture. It is essential for security personnel to know what is being done or attempted to be done, and by whom, to compile an accurate risk assessment. Auditing the actions on network devices p
    SV-253999r844030_rule JUEX-RT-000270 CCI-000381 LOW The Juniper router must be configured to have all nonessential capabilities disabled. A compromised router introduces risk to the entire network infrastructure, as well as data resources that are accessible via the network. The perimeter defense has no oversight or control of attacks by malicious users within the network. Preventing networ
    SV-254000r844033_rule JUEX-RT-000280 CCI-002403 MEDIUM The Juniper router must not be configured to have any feature enabled that calls home to the vendor. Call home services will routinely send data such as configuration and diagnostic information to the vendor for routine or emergency analysis and troubleshooting. There is a risk that transmission of sensitive data sent to unauthorized persons could result
    SV-254001r844036_rule JUEX-RT-000290 CCI-000803 MEDIUM The Juniper router must be configured to use encryption for routing protocol authentication. A rogue router could send a fictitious routing update to convince a site's perimeter router to send traffic to an incorrect or even a rogue destination. This diverted traffic could be analyzed to learn confidential information about the site's network or
    SV-254002r904444_rule JUEX-RT-000300 CCI-000803 MEDIUM The Juniper router must be configured to authenticate all routing protocol messages using NIST-validated FIPS 198-1 message authentication code algorithm. A rogue router could send a fictitious routing update to convince a site's perimeter router to send traffic to an incorrect or even a rogue destination. This diverted traffic could be analyzed to learn confidential information about the site's network or
    SV-254003r844042_rule JUEX-RT-000310 CCI-001094 MEDIUM The Juniper PE router must be configured to limit the number of MAC addresses it can learn for each Virtual Private LAN Services (VPLS) bridge domain. VPLS defines an architecture that delivers Ethernet multipoint services over an MPLS network. Customer layer 2 frames are forwarded across the MPLS core via pseudowires using IEEE 802.1q Ethernet bridging principles. A pseudowire is a virtual bidirectiona
    SV-254004r844045_rule JUEX-RT-000320 CCI-001095 LOW The Juniper MPLS router with RSVP-TE enabled must be configured to enable refresh reduction features. RSVP-TE can be used to perform constraint-based routing when building LSP tunnels within the network core that will support QoS and traffic engineering requirements. RSVP-TE is also used to enable MPLS Fast Reroute, a network restoration mechanism that wi
    SV-254005r844048_rule JUEX-RT-000330 CCI-001095 MEDIUM The Juniper PE router providing Virtual Private LAN Services (VPLS) must be configured to have traffic storm control thresholds on CE-facing interfaces. A traffic storm occurs when packets flood a VPLS bridge, creating excessive traffic and degrading network performance. Traffic storm control prevents VPLS bridge disruption by suppressing traffic when the number of packets reaches configured threshold lev
    SV-254006r844051_rule JUEX-RT-000340 CCI-001095 MEDIUM The Juniper PE router must be configured to enforce a Quality-of-Service (QoS) policy to limit the effects of packet flooding denial-of-service (DoS) attacks. DoS is a condition when a resource is not available for legitimate users. Packet flooding distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks are referred to as volumetric attacks and have the objective of overloading a network or circuit to deny or seriously de
    SV-254007r844054_rule JUEX-RT-000350 CCI-001095 LOW The Juniper PE router must be configured to enforce a Quality-of-Service (QoS) policy in accordance with the QoS DODIN Technical Profile. Different applications have unique requirements and toleration levels for delay, jitter, bandwidth, packet loss, and availability. To manage the multitude of applications and services, a network requires a QoS framework to differentiate traffic and provid
    SV-254008r844057_rule JUEX-RT-000360 CCI-001095 LOW The Juniper P router must be configured to enforce a Quality-of-Service (QoS) policy in accordance with the QoS GIG Technical Profile. Different applications have unique requirements and toleration levels for delay, jitter, bandwidth, packet loss, and availability. To manage the multitude of applications and services, a network requires a QoS framework to differentiate traffic and provid
    SV-254009r844060_rule JUEX-RT-000370 CCI-001109 HIGH The Juniper perimeter router must be configured to deny network traffic by default and allow network traffic by exception. A deny-all, permit-by-exception network communications traffic policy ensures that only connections that are essential and approved are allowed. This requirement applies to both inbound and outbound network communications traffic. All inbound and outboun
    SV-254010r844063_rule JUEX-RT-000380 CCI-001097 HIGH The Juniper router must be configured to restrict traffic destined to itself. The routing engine (RE) handles traffic destined to the router—the key component used to build forwarding paths and is also instrumental with all network management functions. Hence, any disruption or DoS attack to the RE can result in mission critical
    SV-254011r844066_rule JUEX-RT-000390 CCI-001097 MEDIUM The Juniper router must be configured to drop all fragmented Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) packets destined to itself. Fragmented ICMP packets can be generated by hackers for DoS attacks such as Ping O' Death and Teardrop. It is imperative that all fragmented ICMP packets are dropped.
    SV-254012r844069_rule JUEX-RT-000400 CCI-001097 MEDIUM The Juniper perimeter router must be configured to filter traffic destined to the enclave in accordance with the guidelines contained in DoD Instruction 8551.1. Vulnerability assessments must be reviewed by the System Administrator, and protocols must be approved by the Information Assurance (IA) staff before entering the enclave. Stateless firewall filters are the first line of defense in a layered security app
    SV-254013r844072_rule JUEX-RT-000410 CCI-001097 MEDIUM The Juniper perimeter router must be configured to filter ingress traffic at the external interface on an inbound direction. Firewall filters are used to separate data traffic into that which it will route (permitted packets) and that which it will not route (denied packets). Secure configuration of routers makes use of firewall filters for restricting access to services on the
    SV-254014r844075_rule JUEX-RT-000420 CCI-001097 MEDIUM The Juniper perimeter router must be configured to filter egress traffic at the internal interface on an inbound direction. Firewall filters are used to separate data traffic into that which it will route (permitted packets) and that which it will not route (denied packets). Secure configuration of routers makes use of firewall filters for restricting access to services on the
    SV-254015r844078_rule JUEX-RT-000430 CCI-001097 MEDIUM The Juniper BGP router must be configured to reject outbound route advertisements for any prefixes belonging to the IP core. Outbound route advertisements belonging to the core can result in traffic either looping or being black holed, or at a minimum, using a nonoptimized path.
    SV-254016r844081_rule JUEX-RT-000440 CCI-001097 HIGH The Juniper PE router must be configured to block any traffic that is destined to IP core infrastructure. IP/MPLS networks providing VPN and transit services must provide, at the least, the same level of protection against denial-of-service (DoS) attacks and intrusions as layer 2 networks. Although the IP core network elements are hidden, security should neve
    SV-254017r844084_rule JUEX-RT-000450 CCI-001097 MEDIUM The Juniper PE router must be configured with Unicast Reverse Path Forwarding (uRPF) loose mode, or a firewall filter, enabled on all CE-facing interfaces. The uRPF feature, and ingress firewall filters, are defenses against spoofing and denial-of-service (DoS) attacks by verifying if the source address of any ingress packet is reachable. To mitigate attacks that rely on forged source addresses, all provider
    SV-254018r844087_rule JUEX-RT-000460 CCI-001097 MEDIUM The Juniper out-of-band management (OOBM) gateway must be configured to transport management traffic to the Network Operations Center (NOC) via dedicated circuit, MPLS/VPN service, or IPsec tunnel. Using dedicated paths, the OOBM backbone connects the OOBM gateway routers located at the edge of the managed network and at the NOC. Dedicated links can be deployed using provisioned circuits or MPLS layer 2 and layer 3 VPN services or implementing a sec
    SV-254019r844090_rule JUEX-RT-000470 CCI-001097 MEDIUM The Juniper out-of-band management (OOBM) gateway router must be configured to forward only authorized management traffic to the Network Operations Center (NOC). The OOBM network is an IP network used exclusively for the transport of OAM&P data from the network being managed to the OSS components located at the NOC. Its design provides connectivity to each managed network device, enabling network management traffi
    SV-254020r844093_rule JUEX-RT-000480 CCI-001097 MEDIUM The Juniper out-of-band management (OOBM) gateway router must be configured to block any traffic destined to itself that is not sourced from the OOBM network or the NOC. If the gateway router is not a dedicated device for the OOBM network, several safeguards must be implemented for containment of management and production traffic boundaries. It is imperative that hosts from the managed network are not able to access the O
    SV-254021r844096_rule JUEX-RT-000490 CCI-001097 MEDIUM The Juniper router must be configured to only permit management traffic that ingresses and egresses the OOBM interface. The OOBM access switch will connect to the management interface of the managed network elements. The management interface can be a true OOBM interface or a standard interface functioning as the management interface. In either case, the management interfac
    SV-254022r844099_rule JUEX-RT-000500 CCI-001094 HIGH The Juniper perimeter router must be configured to restrict it from accepting outbound IP packets that contain an illegitimate address in the source address field via egress filter or by enabling Unicast Reverse Path Forwarding (uRPF). A compromised host in an enclave can be used by a malicious platform to launch cyberattacks on third parties. This is a common practice in "botnets", which are a collection of compromised computers using malware to attack other computers or networks. DDoS
    SV-254023r844102_rule JUEX-RT-000510 CCI-002403 MEDIUM The Juniper perimeter router must be configured to block all packets with any IP options. Packets with IP options are not fast switched and must be punted to the route engine (RE). Hackers who initiate denial-of-service (DoS) attacks on routers commonly send large streams of packets with IP options. Dropping the packets with IP options reduces
    SV-254024r844105_rule JUEX-RT-000520 CCI-002403 MEDIUM The Juniper PE router must be configured to ignore or block all packets with any IP options. Packets with IP options are not fast switched and, therefore, must be punted to the route engine (RE). Hackers who initiate denial-of-service (DoS) attacks on routers commonly send large streams of packets with IP options. Dropping the packets with IP opt
    SV-254025r844108_rule JUEX-RT-000530 CCI-000366 MEDIUM The Juniper router must be configured to implement message authentication for all control plane protocols. A rogue router could send a fictitious routing update to convince a site's perimeter router to send traffic to an incorrect or even a rogue destination. This diverted traffic could be analyzed to learn confidential information about the site's network or
    SV-254026r844111_rule JUEX-RT-000540 CCI-000366 MEDIUM The Juniper BGP router must be configured to use a unique key for each autonomous system (AS) that it peers with. If the same keys are used between eBGP neighbors, the chance of a hacker compromising any of the BGP sessions increases. It is possible that a malicious user exists in one autonomous system who would know the key used for the eBGP session. This user would
    SV-254027r844114_rule JUEX-RT-000550 CCI-000366 MEDIUM The Juniper router must be configured to use keys with a duration not exceeding 180 days for authenticating routing protocol messages. If the keys used for routing protocol authentication are guessed, the malicious user could create havoc within the network by advertising incorrect routes and redirecting traffic. Some routing protocols allow the use of key chains for authentication. A ke
    SV-254028r844260_rule JUEX-RT-000560 CCI-001958 MEDIUM The router providing MPLS L2VPN services must be configured to authenticate targeted LDP sessions used to exchange VC information using a FIPS-approved message authentication code algorithm. Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) provides the signaling required for setting up and tearing down pseudowires (virtual circuits used to transport layer 2 frames) across an MPLS IP core network. Using a targeted LDP session, each PE router advertises a vir
    SV-254029r844120_rule JUEX-RT-000570 CCI-001958 MEDIUM The Juniper Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP) router must be configured to authenticate all received MSDP packets. MSDP peering with customer network routers presents additional risks to the core, whether from a rogue or misconfigured MSDP-enabled router. MSDP password authentication is used to validate each segment sent on the TCP connection between MSDP peers, prote
    SV-254030r844123_rule JUEX-RT-000580 CCI-002385 MEDIUM The Juniper router must not be configured to have any zero-touch deployment feature enabled when connected to an operational network. Network devices configured via a zero-touch deployment or auto-loading feature can have their startup configuration or image pushed to the device for installation via TFTP or Remote Copy (rcp). Loading an image or configuration file from the network is ta
    SV-254031r844126_rule JUEX-RT-000590 CCI-002385 MEDIUM The Juniper router must be configured to protect against or limit the effects of denial-of-service (DoS) attacks by employing control plane protection. The Routing Engine (RE) is critical to all network operations because it is the component used to build all forwarding paths for the data plane via control plane processes. It is also instrumental with ongoing network management functions that keep the ro
    SV-254032r844129_rule JUEX-RT-000600 CCI-002385 MEDIUM The Juniper router must be configured to have Gratuitous ARP disabled on all external interfaces. A gratuitous ARP is an ARP broadcast in which the source and destination MAC addresses are the same. It is used to inform the network about a host IP address. A spoofed gratuitous ARP message can cause network mapping information to be stored incorrectly,
    SV-254033r844132_rule JUEX-RT-000610 CCI-002385 LOW The Juniper router must be configured to have IP directed broadcast disabled on all interfaces. An IP directed broadcast is a datagram sent to the broadcast address of a subnet that is not directly attached to the sending machine. The directed broadcast is routed through the network as a unicast packet until it arrives at the target subnet, where it
    SV-254034r844135_rule JUEX-RT-000620 CCI-002385 MEDIUM The Juniper router must be configured to have Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) unreachable notifications disabled on all external interfaces. The ICMP supports IP traffic by relaying information about paths, routes, and network conditions. Routers automatically send ICMP messages under a wide variety of conditions. Host unreachable ICMP messages are commonly used by attackers for network mappin
    SV-254035r844138_rule JUEX-RT-000630 CCI-002385 MEDIUM The Juniper router must be configured to have Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) mask replies disabled on all external interfaces. The ICMP supports IP traffic by relaying information about paths, routes, and network conditions. Routers automatically send ICMP messages under a wide variety of conditions. Mask Reply ICMP messages are commonly used by attackers for network mapping and
    SV-254036r844141_rule JUEX-RT-000640 CCI-002385 MEDIUM The Juniper router must be configured to have Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) redirects disabled on all external interfaces. The ICMP supports IP traffic by relaying information about paths, routes, and network conditions. Routers automatically send ICMP messages under a wide variety of conditions. Redirect ICMP messages are commonly used by attackers for network mapping and di
    SV-254037r844144_rule JUEX-RT-000650 CCI-002385 MEDIUM The Juniper BGP router must be configured to use the prefix limit feature to protect against route table flooding and prefix deaggregation attacks. The effects of prefix deaggregation can degrade router performance due to the size of routing tables and also result in black-holing legitimate traffic. Initiated by an attacker or a misconfigured router, prefix deaggregation occurs when the announcement
    SV-254038r844147_rule JUEX-RT-000660 CCI-002385 LOW The Juniper BGP router must be configured to limit the prefix size on any inbound route advertisement to /24 or the least significant prefixes issued to the customer. The effects of prefix deaggregation can degrade router performance due to the size of routing tables and also result in black-holing legitimate traffic. Initiated by an attacker or a misconfigured router, prefix deaggregation occurs when the announcement
    SV-254039r844150_rule JUEX-RT-000670 CCI-002385 LOW The Juniper PE router must be configured to implement Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) or Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) snooping for each Virtual Private LAN Services (VPLS) bridge domain. IGMP snooping provides a way to constrain multicast traffic at layer 2. By monitoring the IGMP membership reports sent by hosts within the bridge domain, the snooping application can set up layer 2 multicast forwarding tables to deliver traffic only to po
    SV-254040r844261_rule JUEX-RT-000680 CCI-002385 LOW The Juniper multicast RP router must be configured to limit the multicast forwarding cache so that its resources are not saturated by managing an overwhelming number of PIM and MSDP source-active entries. MSDP peering between networks enables sharing of multicast source information. Enclaves with an existing multicast topology using PIM-SM can configure their RP routers to peer with MSDP routers. As a first step of defense against a denial-of-service (DoS)
    SV-254041r844156_rule JUEX-RT-000690 CCI-002385 MEDIUM The Juniper multicast Rendezvous Point (RP) must be configured to rate limit the number of Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) Register messages. When a new source starts transmitting in a PIM Sparse Mode network, the DR will encapsulate the multicast packets into register messages and forward them to the RP using unicast. This process can be taxing on the CPU for both the DR and the RP if the sour
    SV-254042r844159_rule JUEX-RT-000700 CCI-002385 MEDIUM The Juniper multicast Designated Router (DR) must be configured to limit the number of mroute states resulting from Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) and Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) Host Membership Reports. The current multicast paradigm can let any host join any multicast group at any time by sending an IGMP or MLD membership report to the DR. In a Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) Sparse Mode network, the DR will send a PIM Join message for the group to
    SV-254043r844162_rule JUEX-RT-000710 CCI-002385 MEDIUM The Juniper multicast Designated Router (DR) must be configured to increase the shortest-path tree (SPT) threshold or set it to infinity to minimalize source-group (S, G) state within the multicast topology where Any Source Multicast (ASM) is deployed. ASM can have many sources for the same groups (many-to-many). For many receivers, the path via the RP may not be ideal compared with the shortest path from the source to the receiver. By default, the last-hop router will initiate a switch from the shared
    SV-254044r844165_rule JUEX-RT-000720 CCI-002385 LOW The Juniper BGP router must be configured to enable the Generalized TTL Security Mechanism (GTSM). GTSM is designed to protect a router's IP-based control plane from DoS attacks. Many attacks focused on CPU load and line-card overload can be prevented by implementing GTSM on all Exterior Border Gateway Protocol speaking routers. GTSM is based on the
    SV-254045r844168_rule JUEX-RT-000730 CCI-002403 MEDIUM The Juniper perimeter router must be configured to only allow incoming communications from authorized sources to be routed to authorized destinations. Unrestricted traffic may contain malicious traffic that poses a threat to an enclave or to other connected networks. Additionally, unrestricted traffic may transit a network, which uses bandwidth and other resources. Traffic can be restricted directly by
    SV-254046r844171_rule JUEX-RT-000740 CCI-002403 MEDIUM The Juniper perimeter router must be configured to block inbound packets with source Bogon IP address prefixes. Bogons include IP packets on the public internet that contain addresses that are not in any range allocated or delegated by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) or a delegated regional Internet registry (RIR) and allowed for public internet use.
    SV-254047r844174_rule JUEX-RT-000750 CCI-002403 LOW The Juniper perimeter router must be configured to have Link Layer Discovery Protocols (LLDPs) disabled on all external interfaces. LLDPs are primarily used to obtain protocol addresses of neighboring devices and discover platform capabilities of those devices. Use of SNMP with the LLDP Management Information Base (MIB) allows network management applications to learn the device type a
    SV-254048r844177_rule JUEX-RT-000760 CCI-002403 MEDIUM The Juniper perimeter router must be configured to have Proxy ARP disabled on all external interfaces. When Proxy ARP is enabled on a router, it allows that router to extend the network (at layer 2) across multiple interfaces (LAN segments). Because proxy ARP allows hosts from different LAN segments to look like they are on the same segment, proxy ARP is o
    SV-254049r844180_rule JUEX-RT-000770 CCI-001097 MEDIUM The Juniper perimeter router must be configured to block all outbound management traffic. For in-band management, the management network must have its own subnet to enforce control and access boundaries provided by layer 3 network nodes, such as routers and firewalls. Management traffic between the managed network elements and the management n
    SV-254050r844262_rule JUEX-RT-000780 CCI-002403 LOW The Juniper multicast Designated Router (DR) must be configured to filter the IGMP and MLD Report messages to allow hosts to join only multicast groups that have been approved by the organization. Real-time multicast traffic can entail multiple large flows of data. Large unicast flows tend to be fairly isolated (i.e., someone downloading a file here or there), whereas multicast can have broader impact on bandwidth consumption, resulting in extreme
    SV-254051r844263_rule JUEX-RT-000790 CCI-002403 MEDIUM The Juniper multicast Designated Router (DR) must be configured to filter the IGMP and MLD Report messages to allow hosts to join a multicast group only from sources that have been approved by the organization. Real-time multicast traffic can entail multiple large flows of data. Large unicast flows tend to be fairly isolated (i.e., someone downloading a file here or there), whereas multicast can have broader impact on bandwidth consumption, resulting in extreme
    SV-254052r844189_rule JUEX-RT-000800 CCI-002403 MEDIUM The Juniper Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP) router must be configured to only accept MSDP packets from known MSDP peers. MSDP peering with customer network routers presents additional risks to the DISN Core, whether from a rogue or misconfigured MSDP-enabled router. To guard against an attack from malicious MSDP traffic, the receive path or interface filter for all MSDP-ena
    SV-254053r844192_rule JUEX-RT-000810 CCI-002403 MEDIUM The Juniper perimeter router must be configured to drop fragmented IPv6 packets where the first fragment does not include the entire IPv6 header chain. One of the fragmentation weaknesses known in IPv6 is the "undetermined transport" packet, which is the first fragment where the entire IPv6 header chain is not included. Fragmenting IPv6 datagrams and not including the upper-layer header makes it difficul
    SV-254054r844195_rule JUEX-RT-000820 CCI-002403 MEDIUM The Juniper perimeter router must be configured drop IPv6 packets with a Routing Header type 0, 1, or 3255. The routing header can be used maliciously to send a packet through a path where less robust security is in place, rather than through the presumably preferred path of routing protocols. Use of the routing extension header has few legitimate uses other th
    SV-254055r844198_rule JUEX-RT-000830 CCI-002403 MEDIUM The Juniper perimeter router must be configured to drop IPv6 packets containing a Hop-by-Hop header with invalid option type values. These options are intended to be for the Destination Options header only. The optional and extensible natures of the IPv6 extension headers require higher scrutiny since many implementations do not always drop packets with headers that it cannot recognize
    SV-254056r844201_rule JUEX-RT-000840 CCI-002403 MEDIUM The Juniper perimeter router must be configured to drop IPv6 packets containing a Destination Option header with invalid option type values. These options are intended to be for the Hop-by-Hop header only. The optional and extensible natures of the IPv6 extension headers require higher scrutiny since many implementations do not always drop packets with headers that it cannot recognize. Hence,
    SV-254057r844204_rule JUEX-RT-000850 CCI-002403 MEDIUM The Juniper perimeter router must be configured to drop IPv6 packets containing an extension header with the Endpoint Identification option. The optional and extensible natures of the IPv6 extension headers require higher scrutiny since many implementations do not always drop packets with headers that it cannot recognize, and hence could cause a denial-of-service on the target device. In addit
    SV-254058r844207_rule JUEX-RT-000860 CCI-002403 MEDIUM The Juniper perimeter router must be configured to drop IPv6 packets containing the NSAP address option within Destination Option header. The optional and extensible natures of the IPv6 extension headers require higher scrutiny since many implementations do not always drop packets with headers that it cannot recognize, and hence could cause a denial-of-service on the target device. In addit
    SV-254059r844210_rule JUEX-RT-000870 CCI-002403 MEDIUM The Juniper perimeter router must be configured to drop IPv6 packets containing a Hop-by-Hop or Destination Option extension header with an undefined option type. The optional and extensible natures of the IPv6 extension headers require higher scrutiny since many implementations do not always drop packets with headers that it cannot recognize, and hence could cause a denial-of-service on the target device. In addit
    SV-254060r844213_rule JUEX-RT-000880 CCI-000366 LOW The Juniper BGP router must be configured to use its loopback address as the source address for iBGP peering sessions. Using a loopback address as the source address offers a multitude of uses for security, access, management, and scalability of the BGP routers. It is easier to construct appropriate ingress filters for router management plane traffic destined to the netwo
    SV-254061r844216_rule JUEX-RT-000890 CCI-000366 LOW The Juniper MPLS router must be configured to use its loopback address as the source address for LDP peering sessions. Using a loopback address as the source address offers a multitude of uses for security, access, management, and scalability of backbone routers. It is easier to construct appropriate ingress filters for router management plane traffic destined to the netw
    SV-254062r844219_rule JUEX-RT-000900 CCI-000366 LOW The Juniper MPLS router must be configured to synchronize IGP and LDP to minimize packet loss when an IGP adjacency is established prior to LDP peers completing label exchange. Packet loss can occur when an IGP adjacency is established and the router begins forwarding packets using the new adjacency before the LDP label exchange completes between the peers on that link. Packet loss can also occur if an LDP session closes and the
    SV-254063r844222_rule JUEX-RT-000910 CCI-000366 MEDIUM The Juniper MPLS router must be configured to have TTL Propagation disabled. The head end of the label-switched path (LSP), the label edge router (LER) will decrement the IP packet's time-to-live (TTL) value by one and then copy the value to the MPLS TTL field. At each label-switched router (LSR) hop, the MPLS TTL value is decreme
    SV-254064r844225_rule JUEX-RT-000920 CCI-000366 HIGH The Juniper PE router must be configured to have each Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF) instance bound to the appropriate physical or logical interfaces to maintain traffic separation between all MPLS L3VPNs. The primary security model for an MPLS L3VPN infrastructure is traffic separation. The service provider must guarantee the customer that traffic from one VPN does not leak into another VPN or into the core, and that core traffic must not leak into any VPN
    SV-254065r844228_rule JUEX-RT-000930 CCI-000366 HIGH The Juniper PE router must be configured to have each Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF) instance with the appropriate Route Target (RT). The primary security model for an MPLS L3VPN as well as a VRF-lite infrastructure is traffic separation. Each interface can only be associated to one VRF, which is the fundamental framework for traffic separation. Forwarding decisions are made based on th
    SV-254066r844231_rule JUEX-RT-000940 CCI-000366 MEDIUM The Juniper PE router must be configured to have each VRF with the appropriate Route Distinguisher (RD). An RD provides uniqueness to the customer address spaces within the MPLS L3VPN infrastructure. The concept of the VPN-IPv4 and VPN-IPv6 address families consists of the RD prepended before the IP address. Hence, if the same IP prefix is used in several di
    SV-254067r844234_rule JUEX-RT-000950 CCI-000366 HIGH The Juniper PE router providing MPLS Virtual Private Wire Service (VPWS) must be configured to have the appropriate virtual circuit identification (VC ID) for each attachment circuit. VPWS is an L2VPN technology that provides a virtual circuit between two PE routers to forward layer 2 frames between two customer-edge routers or switches through an MPLS-enabled IP core. The ingress PE router (virtual circuit head-end) encapsulates Ether
    SV-254068r844237_rule JUEX-RT-000960 CCI-000366 HIGH The Juniper PE router providing Virtual Private LAN Services (VPLS) must be configured to have all attachment circuits defined to the virtual forwarding instance (VFI) with the globally unique VPN ID assigned for each customer VLAN. VPLS defines an architecture that delivers Ethernet multipoint services over an MPLS network. Customer layer 2 frames are forwarded across the MPLS core via pseudowires using IEEE 802.1q Ethernet bridging principles. A pseudowire is a virtual bidirectiona
    SV-254069r844240_rule JUEX-RT-000970 CCI-000366 LOW The Juniper PE router must be configured to enforce the split-horizon rule for all pseudowires within a Virtual Private LAN Services (VPLS) bridge domain. A virtual forwarding instance (VFI) must be created on each participating PE router for each customer VLAN using VPLS for carrier Ethernet services. The VFI specifies the VPN ID of a VPLS domain, the addresses of other PE routers in the domain, and the ty
    SV-254070r844243_rule JUEX-RT-000980 CCI-000366 LOW The Juniper Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP) router must be configured to use its loopback address as the source address when originating MSDP traffic. Using a loopback address as the source address offers a multitude of uses for security, access, management, and scalability of MSDP routers. It is easier to construct appropriate ingress filters for router management plane traffic destined to the network
    SV-254071r844246_rule JUEX-RT-000990 CCI-000366 LOW The Juniper router must be configured to advertise a hop limit of at least 32 in Router Advertisement messages for IPv6 stateless auto-configuration deployments. The Neighbor Discovery protocol allows a hop limit value to be advertised by routers in a Router Advertisement message being used by hosts instead of the standardized default value. If a very small value was configured and advertised to hosts on the LAN s
    SV-254072r844249_rule JUEX-RT-001000 CCI-000366 MEDIUM The Juniper router must not be configured to use IPv6 Site Local Unicast addresses. As currently defined, site local addresses are ambiguous and can be present in multiple sites. The address itself does not contain any indication of the site to which it belongs. The use of site-local addresses has the potential to adversely affect networ
    SV-254073r844252_rule JUEX-RT-001010 CCI-000366 MEDIUM The Juniper perimeter router must be configured to suppress Router Advertisements on all external IPv6-enabled interfaces. Many of the known attacks in stateless autoconfiguration are defined in RFC 3756 were present in IPv4 ARP attacks. To mitigate these vulnerabilities, links that have no hosts connected such as the interface connecting to external gateways must be configur
    SV-254074r844255_rule JUEX-RT-001020 CCI-000366 MEDIUM The Juniper router must be configured in accordance with the security configuration settings based on DoD security configuration or implementation guidance, including STIGs, NSA configuration guides, CTOs, and DTMs. Configuring the network device to implement organization-wide security implementation guides and security checklists ensures compliance with federal standards and establishes a common security baseline across DoD that reflects the most restrictive securit