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Add optional from attribute to catalog element for S2S requests. Make editorial changes. Correct catalog schema. Illustrate XEP Multi-User Chat room security label configuration. Make clarifications and minor editorial changes. Extend catalog handling. Minor editorial changes. Remove &LABEL;/&EQUIVALENTLABEL; type= attribute. Clarify label catalog discovery. Clarify syntax of selector= attribute. Update label catalogs to include user input selector. Add text regarding default bg/fg colors. Correct examples. Reworked discovery and various updates. Initial published version. Initial draft. A security label, sometimes referred to as a confidentiality label, is
a structured representation of the sensitivity of a piece of information. A security
label is used in conjunction with a clearance, a structured representation of what
information sensitivities a person (or other entity) is authorized to access, and a security
policy to control access to each piece of information. For instance, message could be
labeled as "SECRET", and hence requiring the sender and the receiver to each have a
clearance granting access to "SECRET" information. &X.841; provides a discussion of
security labels, clearances, and security policy. Sensitivity-based authorization is used in networks which operate under a set of
information classification rules, such as in government agency networks. The
standardized formats for security labels, clearances, and security policy are
generalized and do have application in non-government networks. This document describes the use of security labels in &xmpp;. The document specifies
how security label meta-data is carried in XMPP. It standardizes a mechanism for
carrying ESS Security Labels in XMPP, as well as provides for use of other label
formats. ESS Security Labels are specified in &rfc2634;. ESS Security Labels are
commonly used in conjunction with &X.500; clearances and either X.841 or &SDN.801c;
security policies. Note: The &IC-ISM; label example is for illustrative purposes only. The document details when security label meta-data should or should not be provided, and how
this meta-data is to be processed. This document does not provide:
Such mechanisms may be introduced in subsequent documents.
This document does discuss how one might securely bind a security label to a stanza. It is expected a subsequent document will tackle this topic.
An entity (client or server) which supports the XMPP Security Label protocol MUST report that fact by including a service discovery feature of "urn:xmpp:sec-label:0" in response to a &xep0030; information request.
Clients wishing to include a XMPP Security Label element in any stanza they generate SHOULD determine if their server supports the XMPP Security Label protocol. If their server does not support XMPP Security Label, the client SHOULD NOT generate XMPP Security Labels as the server not supporting this protocol will generally ignore XMPP Security Labels as they would any other unrecognized element.
As each service domain may have different support for security labels, servers should advertise and clients should perform appropriate discovery lookups on a per service basis.
An element, &SECURITYLABEL;, is defined to carry security label meta-data. This meta-data includes a security label, zero or more equivalent security labels, and optionally display marking data.
The security label metadata is carried in an &SECURITYLABEL; element. The &SECURITYLABEL; element which contains one and only one &LABEL; element, zero or more &EQUIVALENTLABEL; elements, and an optional &DISPLAYMARKING; element.
The &LABEL; provides the primary security label. It is commonly issued by the sender under the security policy of that they and their home server operating under. The &LABEL; contains either a single element representing the primary security label or is empty to indicate use of a default.
Each &EQUIVALENTLABEL; represents an equivalent security label under other policies. Each &EQUIVALENTLABEL; contains a single element representing the equivalent label. This element might be used when a recepient is known to hold a clearance under a different policy than the sender.
The &DISPLAYMARKING; element contains a display string for use by implementations which are unable to utilize the applicable security policy to generate display markings. The element may optionally contain two attributes, fgcolor= and bgcolor=, whose values are HTML color strings (e.g., 'red' or '#ff0000'), for use in colorizing the display marking. The fgcolor= default is black. The bgcolor= default is white.
A client can request a catalog for a particular JID by sending a catalog discovery request to the client's server. Where the JID is hosted by some other server, the client's server is expected to produce a suitable catalog (or fail the request). The client's server may, as needed, query catalogs from other servers in order to fulfill the client's request.
While this specification does not preclude a client from directing a catalog request elsewhere, it is noted that catalog returned by a party other than its server may not be directly usable by the client. For instance, the client's server might require a particular only-locally-known label be used in messages to a particular remote JID.
It is RECOMMENDED the server publish catalogs of security label for use by clients.
If catalog is restrictive, as indicated by the restrict attribute with value of true, the client SHOULD use one of the labels (or no label) offered by the catalog.
One and only one of the items may have a default attribute with value of true. The client should default the label selection to this item in cases where the user has not selected an item.
An item may have no security label. Such an item offers a choice of sending a stanza without a label.
Each catalog provided should only contain labels for which the client is allowed to use (based upon the user's authorization) in a particular context (such as in chat room). A catalog may not be include the complete set of labels available for the use by the client in the context.
Note: the single catalog per context approach used here is likely inadequate in environments where there are a large number of labels in use. It is expected that a more sophisticated approach will be introduced in a subsequent revision of this specification.
As each service domain may have different support for security labels, servers should advertise and clients should perform appropriate discovery lookups on a per service basis.
To indicate the support for label catalog discovery, a server advertises the urn:xmpp:sec-label:catalog:2 feature. The following pair of examples illustrates this feature discovery.
Items in the catalog may contain a selector attribute. The value of this attribute represents the item's placement in a hierarchical organization of the items. If one item has a selector attribute, all items should have a selector item. The value of the selector attribute conforms to the selector-value ABNF production:
"|")*- ]]>
where <item> is a sequence of characters not including "|".
A value of "X|Y|Z" indicates that this item is "Z" in the the "Y" subset of the "X" subset of items. This information may be used, for instance, in generating label selection menus in graphical user interfaces.
Note: use of unnecessarily deep hierarchies should be avoided.
The following example pair illustrates catalog discovery. The client directs the &IQ; to its server regardless of which catalog it requests via the to= attribute of in &CATALOG; element. The client SHOULD NOT provide a from= attribute in the &CATALOG; element.
Where the server needs to obtain a catalog from another server in order to respond to its client, it can send an &IQ; to that server requesting that catalog. The requesting server provides the bare JID of the requesting user in the from= attribute in the &CATALOG; element when it desires a catalog to be prepared specifically for the user. Otherwise the from= attribute in the &CATALOG; element is absent.
The sensitivity-based access control decisions discussed herein are to be made independently of other access control decisions or other facilities. That is, the sensitivity-based access control decisions are not conditional on other factors.
It is intended that &SECURITYLABEL; elements are only used as prescribed by this document, or other formal specifications. Any other use of &SECURITYLABEL; SHOULD be viewed as a protocol violation. The stanza SHOULD be discarded with, if approrpriate, an error response. Such error responses SHOULD NOT include content from the violating stanza, excepting that necessary to well-formed error responses.
When use of a &SECURITYLABEL; element is prescribed, that use is RECOMMENDED. Absence of a &SECURITYLABEL; element implies the stanza has the default label as specified in the governing security policy. Given that the governing policy may not specify a default label, hence denying access to the stanza, supporting clients SHOULD provide a &SECURITYLABEL; element where prescribed.
Typically, a client would allow the user to choose populate the &SECURITYLABEL; from one of from a small set of security labels selections known to it (through configuration and/or discovery and/or other means), such as from a pull-down menu. That selection would include appropriate values for the &LABEL;, &DISPLAYMARKING;, and &EQUIVALENTLABEL; elements.
A policy-aware client may provide the user with an interface allowing the user to produce custom labeling data for inclusion in this set. A policy-aware client SHOULD preclude the user from producing &LABEL; values which the user's own clearance does not grant access to, and SHOULD preclude sending any label which the user's own clearance does not grant access to. Each &EQUIVALENTLABEL; value, if any, MUST be equivalent under an equivalent policy to the &LABEL;. The &DISPLAYMARKING; element SHOULD be set the display marking prescribed for the &LABEL; under the governing policy, or, if the governing policy prescribes no display marking for the &LABEL;, absent.
A client which receives a stanza with &SECURITYLABEL; element is to promiently display the &DISPLAYMARKING; value. A policy-aware may alternatively prominently display the marking for the &LABEL; prescribed by the governing policy.
Each server is expected to make a number of sensitivity-based authorization decisions. Each decision is made by evaluating an Access Control Decision Function (ACDF) with a governing policy, a clearance, and a security label. The ACDF yields either Grant or Deny.
If the user holds a valid clearance (known to the server) under the governing policy, the clearance input is the user's clearance. Otherwise, if the governing policy provides a default clearance, the clearance input is the default clearance. Otherwise, the clearance input is the nil clearance. The nil clearance is a clearance for which the ACDF always returns Deny when given as the clearance input.
If the stanza contains a &SECURITYLABEL; element and the either the &LABEL; element or one of the &EQUIVALENTLABEL; elements contain an appropriate label, that label input is that label. Otherwise, the label input is the default label provided the governing policy or, if no default label is provided, the nil label. The nil label is a label for which the ACDF always returns Deny when given as the label input.
The term "effective clearance" and "effective label" refer, respectively, to the clearance and label provided as input to the ACDF.
Not all sensitivity-based authorization decisions an XMPP server might make involve a user clearance and/or stanza label. A server may only provide service to users which hold an appropriate clearance as determined by calling the ACDF with the user's clearance and a label associated with the service. A clearance might also be associated with the service to restrict the set of labels may be used in labeling stanzas. Labels and clearances can also be associated with network interfaces, remote servers, chat rooms, pubsub nodes.
A client may provide a &SECURITYLABEL; element in any &MESSAGE; it sends.
A client may provide a &SECURITYLABEL; element in &MESSAGE; stanzas.
A server SHOULD provide a label feature and information discovery for the room.
Clients SHOULD discover label feature and information on a per room basis.
Sending groupchat messages is similar to sending normal messages, however their are a few differences.
Groupchat messages are addressed to the room. The room clearance must be suitable for the message label, else it should be rejected.
The room's clearance may allow a variety of labels to be used. Not all participants may be cleared for all labels allowed in the room. The server MUST only deliver messages to participants for which they are cleared to receive.
Private messages are treated as discussed in the "Use in Instant Messaging" section. (Should private messages be restricted by room's configuration?)
Invitations may be labeled.
This section discusses semantics of &SECURITYLABEL; elements contained in &MESSAGE; stanzas containing a &SUBJECT; element.
The presence of a &SECURITYLABEL; element indicates a request to change the room's label, either to the provided label or, if the element is empty, to unset the room's label. The server is to refuse the request if the requestor is not authorized to change the subject, not cleared for the requested label, or if the server is otherwise unwilling or unable to make the change. If the label change is refused, so must the accompanied subject change. Likewise, if the subject change is refused, so must the accompanied label change.
Upon change of the room's label, the server MUST immediately kick all members whom are not cleared for that label out of the room.
In absence of a &SECURITYLABEL; element, the label associated with the room is unchanged.
The room's label can also be changed through room configuration (to be discussed in later revision of this document).
The server may allow for configuration of security label parameters via room configuration mechanisms. The approach is intended to be ad-hoc. Hence this section is intended to be illustrative of one possible approach. Implementations are free to utilize other approaches.
In the above example, the server allows the room label to be set to one of to a subset of labels from the label catalog (see below), using the display name for selection, as well as custom label support. For custom label choice support, the server offers an single text box for entry of an appropriate text string indicating the label to use. Likewise for the room clearance and default room clearance.
Though offering choices from the label catalog is often desirable, a server could only offer custom label and/or clearance support.
&SECURITYLABEL; elements are not to appear in &PRESENCE; stanzas. Server SHALL treat any &PRESENCE; stanza that contains a &SECURITYLABEL; as a protocol violation.
Presence information is subject to sensitivity-base authorization decisions, however these decisions are made are made using a label associated with the presence resource, such as a chat room's label.
A server SHOULD provide a label feature and information discovery for each node.
Clients SHOULD discover label feature and information on a per node basis.
Each item may be individually labeled.
The service then notifies appropriately cleared subscribers.
This extension is itself is extensible. In particular, the &LABEL; and &EQUIVALENTLABEL; elements are designed to hold a range of security labels formats. XML name spaces SHOULD be used to avoid name clashes.
This document is all about authorization, a key aspect of security. Hence, security considerations are discussed through this document.
Certain XMPP stanzas, such as &PRESENCE; stanzas, are not themselves subject to any sensitivity-based authorization decisions, and may be forwarded throughout the XMPP network. The content of these stanzas should not contain information requiring sensitivity-based dissemination controls.
It is desirable to securely bind the security label to the object it labels. This may be accomplished through use of digital signatures. Specification of such is left to a future document.
This document requires no interaction with &IANA;.
It is requested the ®ISTRAR; add the extension's namespaces and schemas to appropriate XMPP registries.
A copy of this schema is available at
http://www.xmpp.org/schemas/sec-label.xsd.
A copy of this schema is available at
http://www.xmpp.org/schemas/sec-label-catalog.xsd.
A copy of this schema is available at
http://www.xmpp.org/schemas/sec-label-ess.xsd.