About predefined and custom patch baselines - Amazon Systems Manager
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About predefined and custom patch baselines

Patch Manager, a capability of Amazon Systems Manager, provides predefined patch baselines for each of the operating systems supported by Patch Manager. You can use these baselines as they are currently configured (you can't customize them) or you can create your own custom patch baselines. Custom patch baselines allows you greater control over which patches are approved or rejected for your environment. Also, the predefined baselines assign a compliance level of Unspecified to all patches installed using those baselines. For compliance values to be assigned, you can create a copy of a predefined baseline and specify the compliance values you want to assign to patches. For more information, see About custom baselines and Working with custom patch baselines.

Note

The information in this topic applies no matter which method or type of configuration you are using for your patching operations:

  • A patch policy configured in Quick Setup

  • A Host Management option configured in Quick Setup

  • A maintenance window to run a patch Scan or Install task

  • An on-demand Patch now operation

About predefined baselines

The following table describes the predefined patch baselines provided with Patch Manager.

For information about which versions of each operating system Patch Manager supports, see Patch Manager prerequisites.

Name Supported operating system Details

AWS-AlmaLinuxDefaultPatchBaseline

AlmaLinux

Approves all operating system patches that are classified as "Security" and that have a severity level of "Critical" or "Important". Also approves all patches that are classified as "Bugfix". Patches are auto-approved 7 days after they are released or updated.¹

AWS-AmazonLinuxDefaultPatchBaseline

Amazon Linux 1

Approves all operating system patches that are classified as "Security" and that have a severity level of "Critical" or "Important". Also auto-approves all patches with a classification of "Bugfix". Patches are auto-approved 7 days after they are released or updated.¹

AWS-AmazonLinux2DefaultPatchBaseline Amazon Linux 2 Approves all operating system patches that are classified as "Security" and that have a severity level of "Critical" or "Important". Also approves all patches with a classification of "Bugfix". Patches are auto-approved 7 days after release.¹
AWS-AmazonLinux2022DefaultPatchBaseline

Approves all operating system patches that are classified as "Security" and that have a severity level of "Critical" or "Important". Patches are auto-approved seven days after release. Also approves all patches with a classification of "Bugfix" seven days after release.

AWS-AmazonLinux2023DefaultPatchBaseline Amazon Linux 2023

Approves all operating system patches that are classified as "Security" and that have a severity level of "Critical" or "Important". Patches are auto-approved seven days after release. Also approves all patches with a classification of "Bugfix" seven days after release.

AWS-CentOSDefaultPatchBaseline CentOS and CentOS Stream Approves all updates 7 days after they become available, including nonsecurity updates.
AWS-DebianDefaultPatchBaseline Debian Server Immediately approves all operating system security-related patches that have a priority of "Required", "Important", "Standard," "Optional," or "Extra." There is no wait before approval because reliable release dates aren't available in the repositories.
AWS-MacOSDefaultPatchBaseline macOS Approves all operating system patches that are classified as "Security". Also approves all packages with a current update.
AWS-OracleLinuxDefaultPatchBaseline Oracle Linux Approves all operating system patches that are classified as "Security" and that have a severity level of "Important" or "Moderate". Also approves all patches that are classified as "Bugfix" 7 days after release. Patches are auto-approved 7 days after they are released or updated.¹
AWS-DefaultRaspbianPatchBaseline Raspberry Pi OS Immediately approves all operating system security-related patches that have a priority of "Required", "Important", "Standard," "Optional," or "Extra." There is no wait before approval because reliable release dates aren't available in the repositories.

AWS-RedHatDefaultPatchBaseline

Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL)

Approves all operating system patches that are classified as "Security" and that have a severity level of "Critical" or "Important". Also approves all patches that are classified as "Bugfix". Patches are auto-approved 7 days after they are released or updated.¹

AWS-RockyLinuxDefaultPatchBaseline

Rocky Linux

Approves all operating system patches that are classified as "Security" and that have a severity level of "Critical" or "Important". Also approves all patches that are classified as "Bugfix". Patches are auto-approved 7 days after they are released or updated.¹

AWS-SuseDefaultPatchBaseline SUSE Linux Enterprise Server (SLES) Approves all operating system patches that are classified as "Security" and with a severity of "Critical" or "Important". Patches are auto-approved 7 days after they are released or updated.¹

AWS-UbuntuDefaultPatchBaseline

Ubuntu Server

Immediately approves all operating system security-related patches that have a priority of "Required", "Important", "Standard," "Optional," or "Extra." There is no wait before approval because reliable release dates aren't available in the repositories.

AWS-DefaultPatchBaseline

Windows Server

Approves all Windows Server operating system patches that are classified as "CriticalUpdates" or "SecurityUpdates" and that have an MSRC severity of "Critical" or "Important". Patches are auto-approved 7 days after they are released or updated.²

AWS-WindowsPredefinedPatchBaseline-OS

Windows Server

Approves all Windows Server operating system patches that are classified as "CriticalUpdates" or "SecurityUpdates" and that have an MSRC severity of "Critical" or "Important". Patches are auto-approved 7 days after they are released or updated.²

AWS-WindowsPredefinedPatchBaseline-OS-Applications Windows Server For the Windows Server operating system, approves all patches that are classified as "CriticalUpdates" or "SecurityUpdates" and that have an MSRC severity of "Critical" or "Important". For applications released by Microsoft, approves all patches. Patches for both OS and applications are auto-approved 7 days after they are released or updated.²

¹ For Amazon Linux 1 and Amazon Linux 2, the 7-day wait before patches are auto-approved is calculated from an Updated Date value in updateinfo.xml, not a Release Date value. Various factors can affect the Updated Date value. Other operating systems handle release and update dates differently. For information to help you avoid unexpected results with auto-approval delays, see How package release dates and update dates are calculated.

² For Windows Server, default baselines include a 7-day auto-approval delay. To install a patch within 7 days after release, you must create a custom baseline.

About custom baselines

If you create your own patch baseline, you can choose which patches to auto-approve by using the following categories.

  • Operating system: Windows Server, Amazon Linux, Ubuntu Server, and so on.

  • Product name (for operating systems): For example, RHEL 6.5, Amazon Linux 2014.09, Windows Server 2012, Windows Server 2012 R2, and so on.

  • Product name (for applications released by Microsoft on Windows Server only): For example, Word 2016, BizTalk Server, and so on.

  • Classification: For example, critical updates, security updates, and so on.

  • Severity: For example, critical, important, and so on.

For each approval rule that you create, you can choose to specify an auto-approval delay or specify a patch approval cutoff date.

Note

Because it's not possible to reliably determine the release dates of update packages for Ubuntu Server, the auto-approval options aren't supported for this operating system.

An auto-approval delay is the number of days to wait after the patch was released or last updated, before the patch is automatically approved for patching. For example, if you create a rule using the CriticalUpdates classification and configure it for 7 days auto-approval delay, then a new critical patch released on July 7 is automatically approved on July 14.

Note

If a Linux repository doesn’t provide release date information for packages, Systems Manager uses the build time of the package as the auto-approval delay for Amazon Linux 1, Amazon Linux 2, RHEL, and CentOS. If the system isn't able to find the build time of the package, Systems Manager treats the auto-approval delay as having a value of zero.

When you specify an auto-approval cutoff date, Patch Manager automatically applies all patches released or last updated on or before that date. For example, if you specify July 7, 2023 as the cutoff date, no patches released or last updated on or after July 8, 2023 are installed automatically.

Note

When you create a custom patch baseline, you can specify a compliance severity level for patches approved by that patch baseline, such as Critical or High. If the patch state of any approved patch is reported as Missing, then the patch baseline's overall reported compliance severity is the severity level you specified.

Keep the following in mind when you create a patch baseline:

  • Patch Manager provides one predefined patch baseline for each supported operating system. These predefined patch baselines are used as the default patch baselines for each operating system type unless you create your own patch baseline and designate it as the default for the corresponding operating system type.

    Note

    For Windows Server, three predefined patch baselines are provided. The patch baselines AWS-DefaultPatchBaseline and AWS-WindowsPredefinedPatchBaseline-OS support only operating system updates on the Windows operating system itself. AWS-DefaultPatchBaseline is used as the default patch baseline for Windows Server managed nodes unless you specify a different patch baseline. The configuration settings in these two patch baselines are the same. The newer of the two, AWS-WindowsPredefinedPatchBaseline-OS, was created to distinguish it from the third predefined patch baseline for Windows Server. That patch baseline, AWS-WindowsPredefinedPatchBaseline-OS-Applications, can be used to apply patches to both the Windows Server operating system and supported applications released by Microsoft.

  • For on-premises servers and virtual machines (VMs), Patch Manager attempts to use your custom default patch baseline. If no custom default patch baseline exists, the system uses the predefined patch baseline for the corresponding operating system.

  • If a patch is listed as both approved and rejected in the same patch baseline, the patch is rejected.

  • A managed node can have only one patch baseline defined for it.

  • The formats of package names you can add to lists of approved patches and rejected patches for a patch baseline depend on the type of operating system you're patching.

    For information about accepted formats for lists of approved patches and rejected patches, see About package name formats for approved and rejected patch lists.

  • If you are using a patch policy configuration in Quick Setup, updates you make to custom patch baselines are synchronized with Quick Setup once an hour.

    If a custom patch baseline that was referenced in a patch policy is deleted, a banner displays on the Quick Setup Configuration details page for your patch policy. The banner informs you that the patch policy references a patch baseline that no longer exists, and that subsequent patching operations will fail. In this case, return to the Quick Setup Configurations page, select the Patch Manager configuration , and choose Actions, Edit configuration. The deleted patch baseline name is highlighted, and you must select a new patch baseline for the affected operating system.

For information about creating a patch baseline, see Working with custom patch baselines and Tutorial: Patch a server environment (Amazon CLI).