SACM N. Cam-Winget Internet-Draft Cisco Systems Intended status: Informational L. Lorenzin Expires: November 10, 2015 Pulse Secure May 9, 2015 Secure Automation and Continuous Monitoring (SACM) Requirements draft-ietf-sacm-requirements-05 Abstract This document defines the scope and set of requirements for the Secure Automation and Continuous Monitoring (SACM) architecture, data model and protocols. The requirements and scope are based on the agreed upon use cases. Status of This Memo This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet- Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress." This Internet-Draft will expire on November 10, 2015. Copyright Notice Copyright (c) 2015 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved. This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Simplified BSD License. Cam-Winget & Lorenzin Expires November 10, 2015 [Page 1] Internet-Draft Abbreviated Title May 2015 Table of Contents 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 2. Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 2.1. Requirements for SACM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 2.2. Requirements for the Architecture . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 2.3. Requirements for the Information Model . . . . . . . . . 7 2.4. Requirements for the Data Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 2.5. Requirements for Data Model Operations . . . . . . . . . 11 2.6. Requirements for Transport Protocols . . . . . . . . . . 12 3. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 4. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 5. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 5.1. Trust between Provider and Requestor . . . . . . . . . . 14 6. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 6.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 6.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 1. Introduction Today's environment of rapidly-evolving security threats highlights the need to automate the sharing of such information while protecting user information as well as the systems that store, process, and transmit this information. Security threats can be detected in a number of ways. SACM's charter focuses on how to collect and share this information based on use cases that involve posture assessment of endpoints. Scalable and sustainable collection, expression, and evaluation of endpoint information is foundational to SACM's objectives. To secure and defend a network, one must reliably determine what devices are on the network, how those devices are configured from a hardware perspective, what software products are installed on those devices, and how those products are configured. We need to be able to determine, share, and use this information in a secure, timely, consistent, and automated manner to perform endpoint posture assessments. This document focuses on describing the requirements for facilitating the exchange of posture assessment information in the enterprise, in particular, for the use cases as exemplified in [I-D.ietf-sacm-use-cases]. Also, this document uses terminology defined in [I-D.ietf-sacm-terminology]. Cam-Winget & Lorenzin Expires November 10, 2015 [Page 2] Internet-Draft Abbreviated Title May 2015 2. Requirements This document defines requirements based on the SACM use cases defined in [I-D.ietf-sacm-use-cases]. This section describes the requirements used by SACM to assess and compare candidate data models, interfaces, and protocols, to suit the SACM architecture. These requirements express characteristics or features that a candidate protocol or data model must be capable of offering to ensure security and interoperability. In order to address the needs for determining, sharing, and using posture information, the following tasks should be considered: 1. Define the assets. This is what we want to know about an asset. For instance, organizations will want to know what software is installed and its many critical security attributes such as patch level. [EDITOR Note: Should this really be a task as I think it may need to be pre-defined as part of the SACM information model? This refers to comment on Mar 23 made by Jim Schaad] 2. Map the assets to an endpoint class. This requires populating the attributes needed to exchange information pertaining to the assets composing an endpoint. [EDITOR Note: Do we need to add another task or subtask for the creation of such a mapping as commented by Jim Schaad?] 3. Policy Definition: This is where an organization can express its policy for acceptable or problematic values of an asset attribute. The expected values of an asset attribute are determined for later comparison against the actual asset attribute values during the evaluation process. Expected values may include both those values which are good as well as those values which represent problems, such as vulnerabilities. The organization can also specify the asset attributes that are to be present for a given asset. 4. Evaluation task: Evaluate the actual values of the asset data against those expressed in the policy. 5. Report results: Report the results of the evaluation for use by other components. Examples of use of a report would be additional evaluation, network enforcement, vulnerability detection and license management. 6. Access Control Policy: Classes of entities and access control policies are assigned to generic attributes as well as attributes for specific endpoints. Cam-Winget & Lorenzin Expires November 10, 2015 [Page 3] Internet-Draft Abbreviated Title May 2015 2.1. Requirements for SACM Many deployment scenarios can be instantiated to address the above tasks and use cases defined in [I-D.ietf-sacm-use-cases]. To ensure interoperability, scalability, and flexibility in any of these deployments, the following requirements are defined for proposed SACM standards: G-001 Solution Extensibility: The data models, protocols, and transports defined by SACM MUST be designed to allow support for future extensions. 1. The information model and interfaces MUST support the ability to add new operations while maintaining backwards compatibility. 2. The query language MUST allow for general inquiries, as well as expression of specific paths to follow; the retrieval of specific information based on an event, or on a continuous basis and the ability to retrieve specific pieces of information, specific types or classes of information, or the entirety of available information. [EDITOR Note: this should be part of the operations on data model section, but we haven't defined routability for source paths so not sure this is even in scope for SACM] 3. The information model MUST accommodate the addition of new data types and/or schemas. G-002 Interoperability: The data models, protocols, and transports must be specified with enough details to ensure interoperability. [EDITOR Note: Can we remove this requirement?] G-003 Scalability: The data models, protocols, and transports MUST be scalable. SACM needs to support a broad set of deployment scenarios. Scalability must be addressed to support: * Large datagrams: It is possible that the size of posture assessment information can vary from a single assessment that is small in size to a very large datagram or a very large set of assessments. * Large number of providers and consumers: A deployment may consist of a very large number of endpoints requesting and/or producing posture assessment information. Cam-Winget & Lorenzin Expires November 10, 2015 [Page 4] Internet-Draft Abbreviated Title May 2015 * Large number of target endpoints: A deployment may be managing information of a very large number of target endpoints. G-004 Agility: The data model, protocols, and transports MUST be suitably specified to enable implementations to fit into different deployment models and scenarios, including considerations for implementations of data models and transports operating in constrained environments. G-005 Information Extensibility: A method for expressing both standard and non-standard (implementation-specific) data attributes while avoiding collisions SHOULD be defined. For interoperability and scope boundary, an explicit set of data attributes MUST be defined in the information model as mandatory to implement. G-006 Data Integrity: A method for ensuring data integrity MUST be provided. This method is required to be available (i.e. all data- handling components must support it), but is not required to be used in all cases. [EDITOR Note: is the intent to provide data transport integrity only?] G-007 Data Partitioning: A method for partitioning data MUST be supported to accommodate considerations such as geographic, regulatory, operational requirements, overlay boundaries and federation where the data may be collected in multiple locations and either centralized or kept in the local region. Where replication of data is supported, it is required that methods exist to prevent update loops. G-008 Versioning and Backward Compatibility: Announcement and negotiation of versions, inclusive of existing capabilities (such as transport protocols, data models, specific attributes within data models, standard attribute expression sets, etc.) MUST be supported. Negotiation for both versioning and capability is needed to accommodate future growth and ecosystems with mixed capabilities. G-009 Discovery: There MUST be a mechanism for components to discover what information is available across the ecosystem (i.e. a method for cataloging data available in the ecosystem and advertising it to consumers), and where to go to get a specific piece of that information. For example, providing a method by which a node can locate the advertised information so that consumers are not required to have a priori knowledge to find available information. G-010 Endpoint Discovery: SACM MUST define the means by which endpoints may be discovered. Use Case 2.1.2 describes the need to Cam-Winget & Lorenzin Expires November 10, 2015 [Page 5] Internet-Draft Abbreviated Title May 2015 discover endpoints and their composition. [EDITOR Note: should we make this a sub-requirement to G-009 as suggested by Jim Schaad?] G-011 Push and Pull Access: Three methods of data access MUST be supported: the standard Pull model as well as solicited and unsolicited Push models. All of the methods of data access MUST support the ability for the initiator to filter the set of posture assessment information to be delivered. Additionally, the provider of the information MUST be able to filter the set of posture assessment information based on the permissions of the recipient. This requirement is driven by use cases 2.1.3, 2.1.4 and 2.1.5. G-012 Device Interface: the interfaces by which SACM components communicate to share endpoint posture information MUST be well defined. [EDITOR Note: to address Chris' comment, we can clarify by changing the term interface to communication transport both at the network and data layer] G-013 Device location and network topology: the SACM architecture and interfaces MUST allow for the target endpoint (network) location and network topology to be modeled and understood. Where appropriate, the data model and the interfaces SHOULD allow for discovery of the target endpoint location or network topology or both. G-014 Target Endpoint Identity: the SACM architecture and interfaces MUST support the ability of components to provide attributes that can be used to compose an identity for a target endpoint. These identities MAY be composed of attributes from one or more SACM components. G-015 Data Access Control: Methods of access control MUST be supported to accommodate considerations such as geographic, regulatory, operational and federations. Entities accessing or publishing data MUST identify themselves and pass access policy. 2.2. Requirements for the Architecture At the simplest abstraction, the SACM architecture represents the core components and interfaces needed to perform the production and consumption of posture assessment information. Requirements relating to the SACM's architecture include: ARCH-001 Scalability: The architectural components MUST account for a range of deployments, from very small sets of endpoints to very large deployments. Cam-Winget & Lorenzin Expires November 10, 2015 [Page 6] Internet-Draft Abbreviated Title May 2015 ARCH-002 Flexibility: The architectural components MUST account for different deployment scenarios where the architectural components may be implemented, deployed, or used within a single application, service, or network, or may comprise a federated system. ARCH-003 Separation of Data and Management functions: SACM MUST define both the configuration and management of the SACM data models and protocols used to transport and share posture assessment information. ARCH-004 Topology Flexibility: Both centralized and decentralized (peer-to-peer) information exchange MUST be supported. Centralized data exchange enables use of a common data format to bridge together data exchange between diverse systems, and can leverage a virtual data store that centralizes and offloads all data access, storage, and maintenance to a dedicated resource. Decentralized data exchange enables simplicity of sharing data between relatively uniform systems, and between small numbers of systems, especially within a single enterprise domain. The fact that a centralized or decentralized deployment is used SHOULD be invisible to a Posture Information Consumer. ARCH-005 Modularity: Announcement and negotiation of functional capabilities (such as authentication protocols, authorization schemes, data models, transport protocols, etc.) must be supported, enabling a SACM component to make inquiries about the capabilities of other components in the SACM ecosystem. ARCH-006 Role-based Authorization: The SACM architecture MUST be capable of effecting role based authorization. Distinction of endpoints capable and authorized to provide or consume information is required to address appropriate access controls. ARCH-007 Context-based Authorization: The SACM architecture MUST be capable of effecting context based authorization. Different policies (e.g. business, regulatory, etc.) may specify what data may be exposed to, or shared by consumers based on one or more attributes of the consumer. The policy may specify that consumers are required to share specific information either back to the the system or to administrators. 2.3. Requirements for the Information Model The SACM information represents the abstracted representation for the Posture Assessment information to be communicated. SACM data models must adhere and comply to the SACM Information Model. The requirements for the SACM information model include: Cam-Winget & Lorenzin Expires November 10, 2015 [Page 7] Internet-Draft Abbreviated Title May 2015 IM-001 Extensible Attribute Dictionary: the Information Model MUST define a minimum set of attributes for communicating Posture Information, to ensure interoperability between data models. (Individual data models may define attributes beyond the mandatory- to-implement minimum set.) The attributes should be defined with a clear mechanism for extensibility to enable data models to adhere to SACM's required attributes as well as allow for their own extensions. The attribute dictionary should be defined with a clear mechanism for extensibility to enable future versions of the information model to be expanded with new attributes. IM-002 Posture Data Publication: The Information Model SHOULD allow for the data to be provided by an endpoint either solicited or unsolicited. That is, data models MUST support at least one or both means to publish data: solicited or unsolicited. For example, a compliance-server provider may publish endpoint posture information in response to a request from a consumer (solicited), or it may publish posture information driven by a change in the posture of the endpoint (unsolicited). IM-003 Data model negotiation: SACM's Information Model MUST allow support for different data models, data model versions and different versions of the operations (and network layer transport). The SACM Information Model MUST include the ability to discover and negotiate the use of a particular or any data model. IM-004 Data Model Identification: The Information model MUST provide a means to uniquely identify each Data Model uniquely. The identifier MUST contain both an identifier of the model and a version indicator for the model. The identifiers SHOULD be decomposable so that a customer can query for any version of a specific model and compare returned values for older or newer than a desired version. IM-005 Data lifetime management: The information model MUST provide a means to allow data models to include data lifetime management. The information model must identify attributes that can allow data models to at minimum, identify the data's origination time and expected time of next update or data longevity (how long should the data be assumed to still be valid). 2.4. Requirements for the Data Model The SACM information model represents an abstraction for "what" information can be communicated and "how" it is to be represented and shared. Cam-Winget & Lorenzin Expires November 10, 2015 [Page 8] Internet-Draft Abbreviated Title May 2015 It is expected that as applications may produce posture assessment information, they may share it using a specific data model. Similarly, applications consuming or requesting posture assessment information, may require it be based on a specific data model. Thus, while there may exist different data models and schemas, they should adhere to the SACM information model and meets the requirements defined in this section. The specific requirements for candidate data models include: DM-001 The data model MUST define the data attributes as objects that MUST be uniquely referenced (e.g. endpoint, IP address, asset). DM-002 The data model MAY be structured into modules and submodules to allow for data references within a module. For example, an endpoint may be defined as a module that references one or more submodules that further describe the one or more assets. Constraints and interfaces may further be defined to resolve or tolerate ambiguity in the references (e.g. same IP address used in two separate networks). DM-003 Search Flexibility: The search interfaces and actions MUST include the ability to start a search anywhere within a data model structure, and the ability to search based on patterns ("wildcard searches") as well as specific data elements. . DM-004 Full versus partial updates: The data model SHOULD include the ability to allow providers of data to provide the data as a whole or when updates occur. For example, a consumer can request a full update on initial engagement, then request to receive deltas (updates containing only the changes since the last update) on an ongoing basis as new data is generated. DM-005 The data model SHOULD allow for a loose coupling between the provider and the requestor. DM-006 Provider identification: The interfaces and actions in the data model MUST include the ability to identify data from a specific provider. For example, a SACM consumer should be able to request all data to come from a specific provider (e.g. Provider A) as there can be a larger set of providers. DM-007 Data cardinality: The data model MUST describe their constraints (e.g. cardinality). As posture information and the tasks for collection, aggregation or evaluation, could comprise one or more attributes, interfaces and actions MUST allow and account for such cardinality as well as whether the attributes are conditional, optional, or mandatory. Cam-Winget & Lorenzin Expires November 10, 2015 [Page 9] Internet-Draft Abbreviated Title May 2015 DM-008 Data model negotiation: The interfaces and actions in the data model MUST include capability negotiation to enable discovery of supported and available data types and schemas. DM-009 Data source: The data model MUST include the ability for providers to identify the data origin. For example, a provider endpoint could share self-reported data vs. data collected from a different SACM endpoint or by some externally-observed data. DM-010 Attribute Dictionary: Use Cases in the whole of Section 2 describe the need for an attribute dictionary. With SACM's scope focused on posture assessment, the data model attribute collection and aggregation MUST have a well-understood set of attributes inclusive of their meaning or usage intent. [EDITOR Note: Per Jim Schaad`s comment, this is really subsumed by IM-001. Should we remove it or incorporate into IM-001?] DM-011 The data model SHOULD allow the provider to include the information's origination time. DM-012 The data model SHOULD allow the provider to include attributes defining how the data was generated (e.g. self-reported, reported by aggregator, scan result, etc.). DM-013 The data model SHOULD allow the provider to include attributes defining the data source (e.g. hostname, domain (DNS) name or application name.)" DM-014 The data model SHOULD allow the provider to include attributes defining whether the information provided is a delta, partial, or full set of information. DM-015 The data model MUST support the collection of attributes by a variety of collectors, including internal collectors, external collectors with an authenticated relationship with the endpoint, and external collectors based on network and other observers. DM-016 Solicited vs. Unsolicited Updates: The data model SHOULD enable a provider to publish data either solicited (in response to a request from a from a consumer) or unsolicited (as new data is generated, without a request required). For example, an external collector can publish data in response to a request by a consumer for information about an endpoint, or can publish data as it observes new information about an endpoint, without any specific consumer request triggering the publication. Cam-Winget & Lorenzin Expires November 10, 2015 [Page 10] Internet-Draft Abbreviated Title May 2015 2.5. Requirements for Data Model Operations Posture information data adhering to a Data Model must also provide interfaces that include operations for access and production of the data. The specific requirements for such operations include: OP-001 Time Synchronization: Request and response operations SHOULD be timestamped, and published information SHOULD capture time of publication. Actions or decisions based on time-sensitive data (such as user logon/logoff, endpoint connection/disconnection, endpoint behavior events, etc.) are all predicated on a synchronized understanding of time. A method for detecting and reporting time discrepancies SHOULD be provided. OP-002 Collection separation: The request for a data item MUST include enough information to properly identify the item to collect, but the request shall not be a command to directly execute nor directly be applied as arguments to a command. The purpose of this requirement is primarily to reduce the potential attack vectors, but has the additional benefit of abstracting the request for collection from the collection method, thereby allowing more flexibility in how collection is implemented. OP-003 Collection composition: A collection request MAY be composed of multiple collection requests (which yield collected values). The desire for multiple values MUST be expressed as part of the collection request, so that the aggregation can be resolved at the point of collection without having to interact with the requester. OP-004 Attribute-based query: A query operation SHOULD be based on a set of attributes. Use Case 2.1.2 describes the need for the data model to support a query operation based on a set of attributes to facilitate collection of information such as posture assessment, inventory (of endpoints or endpoint components), and configuration checklist. OP-005 Information-based query with filtering: The query operation MUST support filtering. Use Case 2.1.3 describes the need for the data model to support the means for the information to be collected through a query mechanism. Furthermore, the query operation requires filtering capabilities to allow for only a subset of information to be retrieved. The query operation MAY be a synchronous request or asynchronous request. OP-006 Data model scalability: The data model MUST be scalable. Use Cases 2.1.4 and 2.1.5 describes the need for the data model to support scalability. For example, the query operation may result in a very large set of attributes, as well as a large set of targets. Cam-Winget & Lorenzin Expires November 10, 2015 [Page 11] Internet-Draft Abbreviated Title May 2015 OP-007 The data model MUST allow a SACM component to communicate what data was used to construct the target endpoint's identity, so other SACM components can determine whether they are constructing an equivalent target enpoint (and their identity) and whether they have confidence in that identity. SACM components SHOULD have interfaces defined to transmit this data directly or to refer to where the information can be retrieved. 2.6. Requirements for Transport Protocols EDITOR Note: this section is meant to relate to Network tranport layer protocols. For the data, I pesumed the transport would fall as an operation on the data model. But we need group consensus and terminology to clarify this. The requirements for transport protocols include: T-001 Transport variability: Different transports MUST be supported to address different deployment and time constraints. Supporting transports MAY be at the data link layer, network, transport, or application layers. T-002 Data Integrity: Transport protocols MUST be able to ensure data integrity. T-003 Data Confidentiality: Transport protocols MUST be able to support data confidentiality. Transport protocols SHOULD ensure data protection for data in transit by encryption to provide confidentiality, integrity, and robustness against protocol-based attacks. Note that while the transport MUST be able to support data confidentiality, implementations MAY choose to make confidentiality optional. Protection for data at rest is not in scope for SACM. Data protection MAY be used for both privacy and non-privacy scenarios. T-004 Transport protection: Transport protocols MUST be capable of supporting mutual authentication and replay protection. T-005 Transport reliability: Transport protocols MUST provide reliable delivery of data. This includes the ability to perform fragmentation and reassembly, and to detect replays. T-006 Transport Agnostic: the data model SHOULD be transport agnostic, to allow for the data operations to leverage the most appropriate transport Internet layer (e.g. Link Layer, TCP, UDP, etc.). Cam-Winget & Lorenzin Expires November 10, 2015 [Page 12] Internet-Draft Abbreviated Title May 2015 3. Acknowledgements The authors would like to thank Barbara Fraser, Jim Bieda, and Adam Montville for reviewing and contributing to this draft. In addition, we recognize valuable comments and suggestions made by Jim Schaad and Chris Inacio. 4. IANA Considerations This memo includes no request to IANA. 5. Security Considerations This document defines the requirements for SACM. As such, it is expected that several data models, protocols and transports may be defined or reused from already existing standards. This section will highlight security considerations that may apply to SACM based on the architecture and standards applied in SACM. In particular, highlights to security considerations that may apply to the SACM reference architecture and standard data models and transports will be discussed To address security and privacy considerations, the data model, protocols and transport must consider authorization based on consumer function and privileges, to only allow authorized consumers and providers to access specific information being requested or published. To enable federation across multiple entities (such as across organizational or geographic boundaries) authorization must also extend to infrastructure elements themselves, such as central controllers / brokers / data repositories. In addition, authorization needs to extend to specific information or resources available in the environment. In other words, authorization should be based on both subject (the information requestor) and object (the information requested). The method by which this authorization is applied is unspecified. SACM's charter focus on the sharing of posture information for improving efficacy of security applications such as compliance, configuration, assurance and other threat and vulnerability reporting and remediation systems. While the goal is to facilitate the flow of information securely, it is important to note that participating endpoints may not be cooperative or trustworthy. Cam-Winget & Lorenzin Expires November 10, 2015 [Page 13] Internet-Draft Abbreviated Title May 2015 5.1. Trust between Provider and Requestor The information given from the provider to a requestor may come with different levels of trustworthiness given the different potential deployment scenarios and compromise either at the provider, the requestor or devices that are involved in the transport between the provider and requestor. This section will describe the different considerations that may reduce the level of trustworthiness of the information provided. In the information transport flow, it is possible that some of the devices may serve as proxies or brokers and as such, may be able to observe the communications flowing between an information provider and requester. Without appropriate protections, it is possible for these proxies and brokers to inject and affect man-in-the-middle attacks. It is common to, in general, distrust the network service provider, unless the full hop by hop communications process flow is well understood. As such, the posture information provider should protect the posture information data it provides as well as the transport it uses. Similarly, while there may be providers whose goal is to openly share its information, there may also be providers whose policy is to grant access to certain posture information based on its business or regulatory policy. In those situations, a provider may require full authentication and authorization of the requestor (or set of requestors) and share only the authorized information to the authenticated and authorized requestors. A requestor beyond distrusting the network service provider, must also account that the information received from the provider may have been communicated through an undetermined network communications system. That is, the posture information may have traversed through many devices before reaching the requestor. Providing non- repudiation in SACM is out of scope. However, SACM specifications should provide the means for allowing non-repudiation possible and at minimum, provide endpoint authentication and transport integrity. A requestor may require data freshness indications, both knowledge of data origination as well as time of publication so that it can make more informed decisions about the relevance of the data based on its currency and/or age. It is also important to note that endpoint assessment reports, especially as they may be provided by the target endpoint may pose untrustworthy information. The considerations for this is described in Section 8 of [RFC5209]. Cam-Winget & Lorenzin Expires November 10, 2015 [Page 14] Internet-Draft Abbreviated Title May 2015 The trustworthiness of the posture information given by the provider to one or many requestors is dependent on several considerations. Some of these include the requestor requiring: o Full disclosure of the network topology path to the provider(s). o Direct (peer to peer) communication with the provider. o Authentication and authorization of the provider. o Either or both confidentiality and integrity at the transport layer. o Either or both confidentiality and integrity at the data layer. 6. References 6.1. Normative References [I-D.ietf-sacm-terminology] Waltermire, D., Montville, A., Harrington, D., Cam-Winget, N., Lu, J., Ford, B., and M. Kaeo, "Terminology for Security Assessment", draft-ietf-sacm-terminology-06 (work in progress), February 2015. [I-D.ietf-sacm-use-cases] Waltermire, D. and D. Harrington, "Endpoint Security Posture Assessment - Enterprise Use Cases", draft-ietf- sacm-use-cases-09 (work in progress), March 2015. [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. [RFC5209] Sangster, P., Khosravi, H., Mani, M., Narayan, K., and J. Tardo, "Network Endpoint Assessment (NEA): Overview and Requirements", RFC 5209, June 2008. 6.2. Informative References [RFC3444] Pras, A. and J. Schoenwaelder, "On the Difference between Information Models and Data Models", RFC 3444, January 2003. Authors' Addresses Cam-Winget & Lorenzin Expires November 10, 2015 [Page 15] Internet-Draft Abbreviated Title May 2015 Nancy Cam-Winget Cisco Systems 3550 Cisco Way San Jose, CA 95134 US Email: ncamwing@cisco.com Lisa Lorenzin Pulse Secure 2700 Zanker Rd., Suite 200 San Jose, CA 95134 US Email: llorenzin@pulsesecure.net Cam-Winget & Lorenzin Expires November 10, 2015 [Page 16]