AC.L2-3.1.15 · NIST SP 800-171 3.1.15

Privileged Remote Access

Authorize remote execution of privileged commands and remote access to security-relevant information.

1 point if not metPOA&M eligible4 assessment objectives

What an assessor scores, the objectives

AC.L2-3.1.15 is met only when every one of these 4 objectives, from NIST SP 800-171A, is satisfied. A single missed objective makes the whole requirement not met.

  • a.privileged commands authorized for remote execution are identified
  • b.security-relevant information authorized to be accessed remotely is identified
  • c.the execution of the identified privileged commands via remote access is authorized
  • d.access to the identified security-relevant information via remote access is authorized

How a C3PAO checks it

NIST SP 800-171A defines three assessment methods. For AC.L2-3.1.15, an assessor uses these:

Examine

Access control policy; procedures addressing remote access to the system; system configuration settings and associated documentation; system security plan; system audit logs and records; other relevant documents or records

Interview

System or network administrators; personnel with information security responsibilities

Test

Mechanisms implementing remote access management

What it means, in context

A privileged command is a human- initiated (interactively or via a process operating on behalf of the human) command executed on a system involving the control, monitoring, or administration of the system including security functions and associated security -relevant information. Security-relevant information is any information within the system that can potentially impact the operation of security functions or the provision of security services in a manner that could result in failure to enforce the system security policy or maintain isolation of code and data. Privileged commands give individuals the ability to execute sensitive, security -critical, or security -relevant system functions . Controlling such access from remote locations helps to ensure that unauthorized individuals are not able to execute such commands freely with the potential to do serious or catastrophic damage to organizational systems. Note that the ability to affect the integrity of the system is considered security-relevant as that could enable the means to by -pass security functions although not directly impacting the function itself.

Privileged users are not necessarily allowed to perform their job functions from a remote location. Likewise, not all privileged commands may be executed remotely. Allowing remote execution of privileged commands or remote access to security-relevant information should be avoided if possible. If absolutely necessary, the p rivileged commands authorized for remote execution should be identified and documented. Document which user roles have permissions to remotely execute privileged commands to make changes and to access security relevant information. Documentation must be used to establish security mechanisms that enforce the policy. This requirement, AC.L2 -3.1.15, requires authorization for privileged commands executed during a remote session and complements five other requirements dealing with remote access (AC.L2-3.1.12, AC.L2-3.1.14, AC.L2-3.1.13, IA.L2-3.5.3, and MA.L2-3.7.5): • AC.L2-3.1.12 requires the control of remote access sessions. • AC.L2-3.1.14 limits remote access to specific access control points. • AC.L2-3.1.13 requires the use of cryptographic mechanisms when enabling remote sessions. • IA.L2-3.5.3 requires multifactor authentication for network access to non- privileged accounts. • Finally, MA.L2-3.7.5 requires the addition of multifactor authentication for remote maintenance sessions. This requirement, AC.L2-3.1.15, also extends AC. L2-3.1.2, which limits the types of transactions and functions that authorized users are permitted to execute. Example Your company’s Access Control Policy permits certain work roles to remotely perform a limited set of privileged commands from company -owned computers [a] . You implement controls to enforce who can remotely execute a privileged command , which privileged commands they can execute, and who is allowed access to security relevant information such as audit log configuration settings [a,c,d]. Potential Assessment Considerations • Does system documentation identify system administration or security functions that can be executed remotely [a]? • Is execution of the identified privileged commands via remote access only authorized for documented operational needs [c]?

What passing evidence looks like

A short authorization note: which privileged commands and security relevant information may be reached remotely, by whom, and the control (Conditional Access on admin portals, jump host) enforcing it.

Common ways contractors fail AC.L2-3.1.15

  • !In cloud shops admins always work remotely. The clean answer authorizes it explicitly and shows the extra guardrail (MFA, compliant device, or a privileged access workstation), not a pretense that remote admin never happens.

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AC.L2-3.1.15 questions, answered

How many points is CMMC requirement AC.L2-3.1.15 worth?+

AC.L2-3.1.15 is worth 1 point in the CMMC Level 2 score under 32 CFR 170.24. If it is not met, you lose 1 from your total of 110.

Can AC.L2-3.1.15 be placed on a POA&M?+

Yes. A gap on AC.L2-3.1.15 can be deferred to a Plan of Action and Milestones, provided your overall score is 88 or better and the item closes within 180 days.

What family does AC.L2-3.1.15 belong to?+

AC.L2-3.1.15 is in the Access Control (AC) family, one of the 14 families of NIST SP 800-171 that make up CMMC Level 2.

Key references
  • NIST SP 800-171 Rev. 2 3.1.15