lacework-global-586
Ensure that 'HTTP Version' is the Latest, if Used to Run the Web App (Automated)
Profile Applicability
• Level 1
Description
HTTP periodically releases newer versions for HTTP either due to security flaws or to include additional capabilities. Using the latest HTTP version for web apps to take advantage of security fixes, if any, and/or new functionalities of the newer version.
Rationale
Newer versions may contain security enhancements and additional functionality. Using the latest version is recommended in order to take advantage of enhancements and new capabilities. With each software installation, organizations need to determine if a given update meets their requirements. They must also verify the compatibility and support provided for any additional software against the update revision that is selected.
HTTP 2.0 has additional performance improvements on the head-of-line blocking problem of old HTTP version, header compression, and prioritization of requests. HTTP 2.0 no longer supports HTTP 1.1's chunked transfer encoding mechanism, as it provides its own, more efficient, mechanisms for data streaming.
Audit
From Azure Portal
- Login to Azure Portal using https://portal.azure.com
- Go to
App Services
- Click on each App
- Under
Setting
section, Click onConfiguration
- Ensure that
HTTP Version
set to2.0
version underGeneral settings
NOTE: Most modern browsers support HTTP 2.0 protocol over TLS only, while non-encrypted traffic continues to use HTTP 1.1. To ensure that client browsers connect to your app with HTTP/2, either buy an App Service Certificate for your app's custom domain or bind a third party certificate.
From Azure CLI
To check HTTP 2.0 version status for an existing app, run the following command,
az webapp config show --resource-group <RESOURCE_GROUP_NAME> --name <APP_NAME> --query http20Enabled
The output should return true
if HTTPS 2.0 traffic value is set to On
.
From Azure PowerShell
For each application, run the following command:
Get-AzWebApp -ResourceGroupName <app resource group> -Name <app name> |Select-Object -ExpandProperty SiteConfig
If the value of the Http20Enabled setting is true, the application is compliant. Otherwise if the value of the Http20Enabled setting is false, the application is non-compliant.
Remediation
From Azure Portal
- Login to Azure Portal using https://portal.azure.com.
- Go to App Services.
- Click each App.
- Under Setting section, click Configuration.
- Set HTTP version to 2.0 under General settings.
NOTE: Most modern browsers support HTTP 2.0 protocol over Transport Layer Security (TLS) only, while non-encrypted traffic continues to use HTTP 1.1. To ensure that client browsers connect to your app with HTTP/2, either buy an App Service Certificate for your app's custom domain or bind a third party certificate.
From Azure CLI
To set HTTP 2.0 version for an existing app, run the following command:
az webapp config set --resource-group <resource_group_name> --name <app_name> --http20-enabled true
From Azure PowerShell
To enable HTTP 2.0 version support, run the following command:
Set-AzWebApp -ResourceGroupName <app resource group> -Name <app name> -Http20Enabled $true
References
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/app-service/web-sites-configure#general-settings
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/security/benchmark/azure/security-controls-v3-posture-vulnerability-management#pv-7-rapidly-and-automatically-remediate-software-vulnerabilities
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/security/benchmark/azure/security-controls-v3-posture-vulnerability-management#pv-3-establish-secure-configurations-for-compute-resources