Oracle Database 10g: Administration Workshop I

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Transcript Oracle Database 10g: Administration Workshop I

Implementing Oracle Database Security
Copyright © 2005, Oracle. All rights reserved.
Objectives
After completing this lesson, you should be able to
do the following:
• Describe your DBA responsibilities for security
• Implement security by applying the principle of
least privilege
• Manage default user accounts
• Implement standard password security features
• Describe database auditing
• Describe Virtual Private Database (VPD)
10-2
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Industry Security Requirements
•
Legal:
– Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX)
– Health Information Portability and Accountability
Act (HIPAA)
– California Breach Law
– UK Data Protection Act
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10-3
Auditing
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Separation of Responsibilities
•
Users with DBA privileges must be trusted.
Consider:
– Abuse of trust
– Audit trails protect the trusted position.
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10-5
DBA responsibilities must be shared.
Accounts must never be shared.
The DBA and the system administrator must be
different people.
Separate operator and DBA responsibilities.
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Database Security
A secure system ensures the confidentiality of the data
that it contains. There are several aspects of security:
• Restricting access to data and services
• Authenticating users
• Monitoring for suspicious activity
10-6
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Principle of Least Privilege
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10-8
Install only required software on the machine.
Activate only required services on the machine.
Give OS and database access to only those users
that require access.
Limit access to the root or administrator account.
Limit access to the SYSDBA and SYSOPER
accounts.
Limit users’ access to only the database objects
required to do their jobs.
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Applying the Principle of Least Privilege
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Protect the data dictionary:
O7_DICTIONARY_ACCESSIBILITY=FALSE
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Revoke unnecessary privileges from PUBLIC:
REVOKE EXECUTE ON UTL_SMTP, UTL_TCP, UTL_HTTP,
UTL_FILE FROM PUBLIC;
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Restrict the directories accessible by users.
Limit users with administrative privileges.
Restrict remote database authentication:
REMOTE_OS_AUTHENT=FALSE
10-9
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Managing Default User Accounts
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DBCA expires and
locks all accounts,
except:
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–
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–
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10-11
SYS
SYSTEM
SYSMAN
DBSNMP
For a manually
created database,
lock and expire any
unused accounts.
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Implementing Standard Password
Security Features
Password
history
Account
locking
User
Setting up
profiles
Password aging and
expiration
10-12
Password
complexity
verification
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Supplied Password Verification Function:
VERIFY_FUNCTION
The supplied password verification function enforces
these password restrictions:
• The minimum length is four characters.
• The password cannot be the same as the
username.
• The password must have at least one alphabetic,
one numeric, and one special character.
• The password must differ from the previous
password by at least three letters.
Tip: Use this function as a template to create
your own customized password verification.
10-14
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Creating a Password Profile
10-15
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Assigning Users to a Password Profile
Select Administration > Schema > Users & Privileges >
Users.
10-16
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Where We Are
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10-17
Comparing security aspects
Applying the principle of least privilege
Managing default user accounts
Implementing standard password security
features
Creating and using password profiles
Auditing
Virtual Private Database (VPD)
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Monitoring for Suspicious Activity
Monitoring or auditing must be an integral part of your
security procedures. Review the following:
• Mandatory auditing
• Standard database auditing
• Value-based auditing
• Fine-grained auditing (FGA)
• DBA auditing
10-18
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Enterprise Manager Audit Page
10-19
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Standard Database Auditing
DBA
(1) Enable
database
auditing.
Parameter
file
(2) Specify audit options.
User
executes
command.
Database
Server
process
Audit
options
(3) Review audit
information.
(4) Maintain audit trail.
10-20
Audit
trail
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Generate
audit trail.
OS or XML
audit
trail
Uniform Audit Trails
AUDIT_TRAIL=DB,EXTENDED
STATEMENTID,
ENTRYID
DBA_AUDIT_TRAIL
DBA_FGA_AUDIT_TRAIL
EXTENDED_TIMESTAMP,
PROXY_SESSIONID, GLOBAL_UID,
INSTANCE_NUMBER, OS_PROCESS,
TRANSACTIONID, SCN, SQL_BIND, SQL_TEXT
DBA_COMMON_AUDIT_TRAIL
10-21
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Enhanced Enterprise User Auditing
10-22
Exclusive schema
Shared schema
Standard audit
Standard audit
USERNAME
USERNAME
GLOBAL_UID
Fine-grained audit
Fine-grained audit
DB_USER
DB_USER
GLOBAL_UID
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Value-Based Auditing
A user makes a
change.
Trigger fires.
User’s change
is made.
10-23
Audit record is
created by the trigger.
And it is inserted into
an audit trail table.
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Fine-Grained Auditing
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Monitors data access on the basis of content
Audits SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, and
MERGE
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Can be linked to a table or view, to one or more
columns
May fire a procedure
Is administered with the DBMS_FGA package
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Policy: AUDIT_EMPS_SALARY
SELECT name, salary
FROM employees
WHERE
department_id = 10;
10-25
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employees
FGA Policy
• Defines:
– Audit criteria
– Audit action
• Is created with
DBMS_FGA
.ADD_POLICY
dbms_fga.add_policy (
object_schema => 'HR',
object_name
=> 'EMPLOYEES',
policy_name => 'audit_emps_salary',
audit_condition=> 'department_id=10',
audit_column
=> 'SALARY',
handler_schema => 'secure',
handler_module => 'log_emps_salary',
enable
=> TRUE,
statement_types => 'SELECT' );
SELECT name, job_id
FROM employees;
SELECT name, salary
FROM employees
WHERE
department_id = 10;
10-26
SECURE.LOG_
EMPS_SALARY
employees
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Audited DML Statement: Considerations
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Records are audited if FGA predicate is satisfied
and relevant columns are referenced.
DELETE statements are audited regardless of any
specified columns.
MERGE statements are audited with the underlying
INSERT or UPDATE generated statements.
UPDATE hr.employees
SET salary = 10
WHERE commission_pct = 90;
UPDATE hr.employees
SET salary = 10
WHERE employee_id = 111;
10-28
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FGA Guidelines
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To audit all statements, use a null condition.
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Policy names must be unique.
The audited table or view must already exist when
you create the policy.
If the audit condition syntax is invalid, an ORA28112 error is raised when the audited object is
accessed.
If the audited column does not exist in the table,
no rows are audited.
If the event handler does not exist, no error is
returned and the audit record is still created.
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10-29
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DBA Auditing
Users with the SYSDBA or SYSOPER privileges can
connect when the database is closed:
• Audit trail must be stored outside the database.
• Connecting as SYSDBA or SYSOPER is always
audited.
• Enable additional auditing of SYSDBA or SYSOPER
actions with audit_sys_operations.
• Control audit trail with audit_file_dest.
10-30
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Maintaining the Audit Trail
The audit trail should be maintained. Follow best
practice guidelines:
• Review and store old records
• Prevent storage problems
• Avoid loss of records
10-31
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Quiz: What Is Audited?
Type of Audit
What Is
Audited?
What Is in the
Audit Trail?
Standard database auditing
Value-based auditing
Fine-grained auditing (FGA)
Match the following text, “A” to “What is Audited?”, and “T” to
“What is in the Audit Trail?”.
A1: Data changed by DML statements
A2: SQL statements (insert, update, delete, select, and merge)
based on content)
A3: Privilege use including object access
T1: Fixed set of data including the SQL statement
T2: Fixed set of data
T3: N/A
10-32
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Where We Are
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Comparing security aspects
Applying the principle of least privilege
Managing default user accounts
Implementing standard password security
features
Describing auditing:
–
–
–
–
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10-33
Mandatory auditing
Standard database auditing
Value-based auditing
Fine-grained auditing
DBA auditing
Virtual Private Database (VPD)
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Virtual Private Database: Overview
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Virtual Private Database (VPD) consists of:
– Fine-grained access control
– Secure application context
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10-34
VPD uses policies to add conditions to SQL
statements that protect sensitive data.
VPD provides row-level access control.
Application attributes defined inside an
application context are used by fine-grained
access policies.
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VPD Example
Business rule: Employees outside the HR department
are only allowed to see their own EMPLOYEES record.
A salesman enters the following query:
SELECT * FROM EMPLOYEES;
The function implementing the security policy returns
the predicate employee_id='my_emp_id' and the
database rewrites the query and executes the
following:
SELECT * FROM EMPLOYEES
WHERE employee_id='my_emp_id‘;
10-35
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Creating a Column-Level Policy
BEGIN
dbms_rls.add_policy(object_schema => 'hr',
object_name => 'employees',
policy_name => 'hr_policy',
function_schema =>'hr',
policy_function => 'hrsec',
statement_types =>'select,insert',
sec_relevant_cols=>'salary,commission_pct');
END;
/
10-36
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Column-Level VPD: Example
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Statements are not always rewritten.
Consider a policy protecting the SALARY and
COMMISSION_PCT columns of the EMPLOYEES
table. The fine-grained access control is:
– Not enforced for this query:
SQL> SELECT last_name FROM employees;
– Enforced for these queries:
SQL> SELECT last_name, salary
2 FROM employees;
SQL> SELECT * FROM employees;
10-37
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Security Updates
•
Oracle posts security alerts on the Oracle
Technology Network Web site at:
http://www.oracle.com/technology/deploy/security/alerts.htm
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10-38
Oracle database administrators and developers
can also subscribe to be notified about critical
security alerts via e-mail by clicking the
“Subscribe to Security Alerts Here” link.
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Applying Security Patches
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10-39
Use the Critical Patch Update process.
Apply all security patches and workarounds.
Contact the Oracle security products team.
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Summary
In this lesson, you should have learned how to:
• Describe your DBA responsibilities for security
• Apply the principle of least privilege
• Manage default user accounts
• Implement standard password security features
• Describe database auditing
• Describe Virtual Private Database (VPD)
10-40
Copyright © 2005, Oracle. All rights reserved.
Practice Overview:
Implementing Oracle Database Security
This practice covers the following topics:
• Expiring passwords every 60 days
• Locking accounts after a grace period of 10 days
• Not allowing the reuse of passwords for 1,800 days
• Forcing accounts to lock for 10 minutes after four
failed login attempts
10-41
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