Configuration Compliance Exception Management overview
When your organization can't comply with a published vulnerability management or security policy, standard, or guideline, you can request an exception. Exception management entails requesting, reviewing, approving, or rejecting exceptions for a remediation task that cannot be remediated according to the policy.
| Terminology prior to v14.9 | Terminology v14.9 onwards |
|---|---|
| Test Result Group | Remediation Task |
| Group Rules | Remediation Task Rules |
| Policy | Test group |
Some vulnerabilities might not have an existing patch, fix, or solution. When an exception is approved, it also means that you're accepting a risk because you're acknowledging and agreeing to the consequences of not remediating the configuration-related vulnerability.
Life cycle of an exception
An exception is a request to defer the remediation of a remediation task for a specified period.
- Requesting an exception
- Approving an exception request
- Tracking an exception request
- Expiry of an exception request
As the remediation owner, you can ask for an exemption for a remediation task using the exception management process. During the approval process, the remediation task remains in In review state. After the exception approver approves this request, the remediation task moves to a Deferred state.
Starting from Configuration Compliance v13.0, if you are deploying the CC application for the first time, the flow designer for exception management is enabled by default. If you are already using the workflow, you can update to the flow designer. In both cases, you cannot change it back to workflow.
- Reopen
- Delete
After raising the exception, you can track its status by using the State Change Approvals tab of the remediation task. If an action is taken on a remediation task, you can't track the status of the individual test results in that remediation task.
When an exception request for a remediation task expires, the remediation task reverts to its Open state.