Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 • Release: 7 Benchmark Date: 05 Jan 2026

CAT II V-258150 RHEL-09-652060

RHEL 9 must use cron logging.

Documentable No
Rule ID SV-258150r1045296_rule
CCI References
CCI-000366

Cron logging can be used to trace the successful or unsuccessful execution of cron jobs. It can also be used to spot intrusions into the use of the cron facility by unauthorized and malicious users.

Check Procedure

Verify that "rsyslog" is configured to log cron events with the following command:

Note: If another logging package is used, substitute the utility configuration file for "/etc/rsyslog.conf" or "/etc/rsyslog.d/*.conf" files.

$ grep -s cron /etc/rsyslog.conf /etc/rsyslog.d/*.conf

/etc/rsyslog.conf:*.info;mail.none;authpriv.none;cron.none /var/log/messages
/etc/rsyslog.conf:cron.* /var/log/cron

If the command does not return a response, check for cron logging all facilities with the following command:

$ logger -p local0.info "Test message for all facilities."

Check the logs for the test message with:

$ sudo tail /var/log/messages

If "rsyslog" is not logging messages for the cron facility or all facilities, this is a finding.

Fix Action

Configure "rsyslog" to log all cron messages by adding or updating the following line to "/etc/rsyslog.conf" or a configuration file in the /etc/rsyslog.d/ directory:

cron.* /var/log/cron

The rsyslog daemon must be restarted for the changes to take effect:

$ sudo systemctl restart rsyslog.service