DoD 5200.28-STD
                                                                   Supersedes
                                                CSC-STD-00l-83, dtd l5 Aug 83
                                                         Library No. S225,7ll









                       DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE STANDARD




                                DEPARTMENT OF

                                   DEFENSE

                              TRUSTED COMPUTER

                              SYSTEM EVALUATION

                                  CRITERIA




















                                DECEMBER l985


                                                            December 26, l985

                                  FOREWORD


This publication, DoD 5200.28-STD, "Department of Defense Trusted Computer
System Evaluation Criteria," is issued under the authority of an in accordance
with DoD Directive 5200.28, "Security Requirements for Automatic Data
Processing (ADP) Systems," and in furtherance of responsibilities assigned by
DoD Directive 52l5.l, "Computer Security Evaluation Center."  Its purpose is to
provide technical hardware/firmware/software security criteria and associated
technical evaluation methodologies in support of the overall ADP system
security policy, evaluation and approval/accreditation responsibilities
promulgated by DoD Directive 5200.28.

The provisions of this document apply to the Office of the Secretary of Defense
(ASD), the Military Departments, the Organization of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
the Unified and Specified Commands, the Defense Agencies and activities
administratively supported by OSD (hereafter called "DoD Components").

This publication is effective immediately and is mandatory for use by all DoD
Components in carrying out ADP system technical security evaluation activities
applicable to the processing and storage of classified and other sensitive DoD
information and applications as set forth herein.

Recommendations for revisions to this publication are encouraged and will be
reviewed biannually by the National Computer Security Center through a formal
review process.  Address all proposals for revision through appropriate
channels to:  National Computer Security Center, Attention:  Chief, Computer
Security Standards.

DoD Components may obtain copies of this publication through their own
publications channels.  Other federal agencies and the public may obtain copies
from:  Office of Standards and Products, National Computer Security Center,
Fort Meade, MD  20755-6000, Attention:  Chief, Computer Security Standards.




_________________________________

Donald C. Latham
Assistant Secretary of Defense
(Command, Control, Communications, and Intelligence)


                              ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS


Special recognition is extended to Sheila L. Brand, National Computer Security
Center (NCSC), who integrated theory, policy, and practice into and directed
the production of this document.

Acknowledgment is also given for the contributions of: Grace Hammonds and
Peter S. Tasker, the MITRE Corp., Daniel J. Edwards, NCSC, Roger R. Schell,
former Deputy Director of NCSC, Marvin Schaefer, NCSC, and Theodore M. P. Lee,
Sperry Corp., who as original architects formulated and articulated the
technical issues and solutions presented in this document; Jeff Makey, formerly
NCSC, Warren F. Shadle, NCSC, and Carole S. Jordan, NCSC, who assisted in the
preparation of this document; James P. Anderson, James P. Anderson & Co.,
Steven B. Lipner, Digital Equipment Corp., Clark Weissman, System Development
Corp., LTC Lawrence A. Noble, formerly U.S. Air Force, Stephen T. Walker,
formerly DoD, Eugene V. Epperly, DoD, and James E. Studer, formerly Dept. of
the Army, who gave generously of their time and expertise in the review and
critique of this document; and finally, thanks are given to the computer
industry and others interested in trusted computing for their enthusiastic
advice and assistance throughout this effort.



                                  CONTENTS


         FOREWORD. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .i

         ACKNOWLEDGMENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ii

         PREFACE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .v

         INTRODUCTION. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1


                            PART I:  THE CRITERIA

         1.0  DIVISION D:  MINIMAL PROTECTION. . . . . . . . . . . . . .9

         2.0  DIVISION C:  DISCRETIONARY PROTECTION. . . . . . . . . . 11
              2.1   Class (C1):  Discretionary Security Protection . . 12
              2.2   Class (C2):  Controlled Access Protection. . . . . 15

         3.0  DIVISION B:  MANDATORY PROTECTION. . . . . . . . . . . . 19
              3.1   Class (B1):  Labeled Security Protection . . . . . 20
              3.2   Class (B2):  Structured Protection . . . . . . . . 26
              3.3   Class (B3):  Security Domains. . . . . . . . . . . 33

         4.0  DIVISION A:  VERIFIED PROTECTION . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
              4.1   Class (A1):  Verified Design . . . . . . . . . . . 42
              4.2   Beyond Class (A1). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51


                     PART II:  RATIONALE AND GUIDELINES

         5.0  CONTROL OBJECTIVES FOR TRUSTED COMPUTER SYSTEMS. . . . . 55
              5.1   A Need for Consensus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
              5.2   Definition and Usefulness. . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
              5.3   Criteria Control Objective . . . . . . . . . . . . 56

         6.0  RATIONALE BEHIND THE EVALUATION CLASSES. . . . . . . . . 63
              6.1   The Reference Monitor Concept. . . . . . . . . . . 64
              6.2   A Formal Security Policy Model . . . . . . . . . . 64
              6.3   The Trusted Computing Base . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
              6.4   Assurance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
              6.5   The Classes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66

         7.0  THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN POLICY AND THE CRITERIA . . . . 69
              7.1   Established Federal Policies . . . . . . . . . . . 70
              7.2   DoD Policies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
              7.3   Criteria Control Objective For Security Policy . . 71
              7.4   Criteria Control Objective for Accountability. . . 74
              7.5   Criteria Control Objective for Assurance . . . . . 76

         8.0  A GUIDELINE ON COVERT CHANNELS . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79


         9.0  A GUIDELINE ON CONFIGURING MANDATORY ACCESS CONTROL
              FEATURES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81

         10.0  A GUIDELINE ON SECURITY TESTING . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
               10.1 Testing for Division C . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
               10.2 Testing for Division B . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
               10.3 Testing for Division A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85


         APPENDIX A:  Commercial Product Evaluation Process. . . . . . 87

         APPENDIX B:  Summary of Evaluation Criteria Divisions . . . . 89

         APPENDIX C:  Sumary of Evaluation Criteria Classes. . . . . . 91

         APPENDIX D:  Requirement Directory. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93

         GLOSSARY. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .109

         REFERENCES. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .115



                                   PREFACE


The trusted computer system evaluation criteria defined in this document
classify systems into four broad hierarchical divisions of enhanced security
protection.  They provide a basis for the evaluation of effectiveness of
security controls built into automatic data processing system products.  The
criteria were developed with three objectives in mind: (a) to provide users
with a yardstick with which to assess the degree of trust that can be placed
in computer systems for the secure processing of classified or other sensitive
information; (b) to provide guidance to manufacturers as to what to build into
their new, widely-available trusted commercial products in order to satisfy
trust requirements for sensitive applications; and (c) to provide a basis for
specifying security requirements in acquisition specifications.  Two types of
requirements are delineated for secure processing: (a) specific security
feature requirements and (b) assurance requirements.  Some of the latter
requirements enable evaluation personnel to determine if the required features
are present and functioning as intended.  The scope of these criteria is to be
applied to the set of components comprising a trusted system, and is not
necessarily to be applied to each system component individually.  Hence, some
components of a system may be completely untrusted, while others may be
individually evaluated to a lower or higher evaluation class than the trusted
product considered as a whole system.  In trusted products at the high end of
the range, the strength of the reference monitor is such that most of the
components can be completely untrusted.  Though the criteria are intended to be
application-independent, the specific security feature requirements may have to
be interpreted when applying the criteria to specific systems with their own
functional requirements, applications or special environments (e.g.,
communications processors, process control computers, and embedded systems in
general).  The underlying assurance requirements can be applied across the
entire spectrum of ADP system or application processing environments without
special interpretation.


                                INTRODUCTION

Historical Perspective

In October 1967, a task force was assembled under the auspices of the Defense
Science Board to address computer security safeguards that would protect
classified information in remote-access, resource-sharing computer systems.
The Task Force report, "Security Controls for Computer Systems," published in
February 1970, made a number of policy and technical recommendations on
actions to be taken to reduce the threat of compromise of classified
information processed on remote-access computer systems.[34]  Department of
Defense Directive 5200.28 and its accompanying manual DoD 5200.28-M, published
in 1972 and 1973 respectively, responded to one of these recommendations by
establishing uniform DoD policy, security requirements, administrative
controls, and technical measures to protect classified information processed
by DoD computer systems.[8;9]  Research and development work undertaken by the
Air Force, Advanced Research Projects Agency, and other defense agencies in
the early and mid 70's developed and demonstrated solution approaches for the
technical problems associated with controlling the flow of information in
resource and information sharing computer systems.[1]  The DoD Computer
Security Initiative was started in 1977 under the auspices of the Under
Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering to focus DoD efforts
addressing computer security issues.[33]

Concurrent with DoD efforts to address computer security issues, work was
begun under the leadership of the National Bureau of Standards (NBS) to define
problems and solutions for building, evaluating, and auditing secure computer
systems.[17]  As part of this work NBS held two invitational workshops on the
subject of audit and evaluation of computer security.[20;28]  The first was
held in March 1977, and the second in November of 1978.  One of the products
of the second workshop was a definitive paper on the problems related to
providing criteria for the evaluation of technical computer security
effectiveness.[20]  As an outgrowth of recommendations from this report, and in
support of the DoD Computer Security Initiative, the MITRE Corporation began
work on a set of computer security evaluation criteria that could be used to
assess the degree of trust one could place in a computer system to protect
classified data.[24;25;31]  The preliminary concepts for computer security
evaluation were defined and expanded upon at invitational workshops and
symposia whose participants represented computer security expertise drawn from
industry and academia in addition to the government.  Their work has since
been subjected to much peer review and constructive technical criticism from
the DoD, industrial research and development organizations, universities, and
computer manufacturers.

The DoD Computer Security Center (the Center) was formed in January 1981 to
staff and expand on the work started by the DoD Computer Security
Initiative.[15]  A major goal of the Center as given in its DoD Charter is to
encourage the widespread availability of trusted computer systems for use by
those who process classified or other sensitive information.[10]  The criteria
presented in this document have evolved from the earlier NBS and MITRE
evaluation material.

Scope

The trusted computer system evaluation criteria defined in this document apply
primarily to trusted commercially available automatic data processing (ADP)
systems.  They are also applicable, as amplified below, the the evaluation of
existing systems and to the specification of security requirements for ADP
systems acquisition.  Included are two distinct sets of requirements: 1)
specific security feature requirements; and 2) assurance requirements.  The
specific feature requirements encompass the capabilities typically found in
information processing systems employing general-purpose operating systems that
are distinct from the applications programs being supported.  However, specific
security feature requirements may also apply to specific systems with their own
functional requirements, applications or special environments (e.g.,
communications processors, process control computers, and embedded systems in
general).  The assurance requirements, on the other hand, apply to systems that
cover the full range of computing environments from dedicated controllers to
full range multilevel secure resource sharing systems.


Purpose

As outlined in the Preface, the criteria have been developedto serve a number
of intended purposes:

          * To provide a standard to manufacturers as to what security
          features to build into their new and planned, commercial
          products in order to provide widely available systems that
          satisfy trust requirements (with particular emphasis on preventing
          the disclosure of data) for sensitive applications.

          * To provide DoD components with a metric with which to evaluate
          the degree of trust that can be placed in computer systems for
          the secure processing of classified and other sensitive
          information.

          * To provide a basis for specifying security requirements in
          acquisition specifications.

With respect to the second purpose for development of the criteria, i.e.,
providing DoD components with a security evaluation metric, evaluations can be
delineated into two types: (a) an evaluation can be performed on a computer
product from a perspective that excludes the application environment; or, (b)
it can be done to assess whether appropriate security measures have been taken
to permit the system to be used operationally in a specific environment.  The
former type of evaluation is done by the Computer Security Center through the
Commercial Product Evaluation Process.  That process is described in Appendix
A.

The latter type of evaluation, i.e., those done for the purpose of assessing a
system's security attributes with respect to a specific operational mission,
is known as a certification evaluation.  It must be understood that the
completion of a formal product evaluation does not constitute certification or
accreditation for the system to be used in any specific application
environment.  On the contrary, the evaluation report only provides a trusted
computer system's evaluation rating along with supporting data describing the
product system's strengths and weaknesses from a computer security point of
view.  The system security certification and the formal approval/accreditation
procedure, done in accordance with the applicable policies of the issuing
agencies, must still be followed-before a system can be approved for use in
processing or handling classified information.[8;9]  Designated Approving
Authorities (DAAs) remain ultimately responsible for specifying security of
systems they accredit.

The trusted computer system evaluation criteria will be used directly and
indirectly in the certification process.  Along with applicable policy, it
will be used directly as technical guidance for evaluation of the total system
and for specifying system security and certification requirements for new
acquisitions.  Where a system being evaluated for certification employs a
product that has undergone a Commercial Product Evaluation, reports from that
process will be used as input to the certification evaluation.  Technical data
will be furnished to designers, evaluators and the Designated Approving
Authorities to support their needs for making decisions.


Fundamental Computer Security Requirements

Any discussion of computer security necessarily starts from a statement of
requirements, i.e., what it really means to call a computer system "secure."
In general, secure systems will control, through use of specific security
features, access to information such that only properly authorized
individuals, or processes operating on their behalf, will have access to read,
write, create, or delete information.  Six fundamental requirements are
derived from this basic statement of objective: four deal with what needs to
be provided to control access to information; and two deal with how one can
obtain credible assurances that this is accomplished in a trusted computer
system.

                                   Policy

         Requirement 1 - SECURITY POLICY - There must be an explicit and
well-defined security policy enforced by the system.  Given identified subjects
and objects, there must be a set of rules that are used by the system to
determine whether a given subject can be permitted to gain access to a specific
object.  Computer systems of interest must enforce a mandatory security policy
that can effectively implement access rules for handling sensitive (e.g.,
classified) information.[7]  These rules include requirements such as: No
person lacking proper personnel security clearance shall obtain access to
classified
information.  In addition, discretionary security controls are required to
ensure that only selected users or groups of users may obtain access to data
(e.g., based on a need-to-know).

         Requirement 2 - MARKING - Access control labels must be associated
with objects.  In order to control access to information stored in a computer,
according to the rules of a mandatory security policy, it must be possible to
mark every object with a label that reliably identifies the object's
sensitivity level (e.g., classification), and/or the modes of access accorded
those subjects who may potentially access the object.

                               Accountability

         Requirement 3 - IDENTIFICATION - Individual subjects must be
identified.  Each access to information must be mediated based on who is
accessing the information and what classes of information they are authorized
to deal with.  This identification and authorization information must be
securely maintained by the computer system and be associated with every active
element that performs some security-relevant action in the system.

         Requirement 4 - ACCOUNTABILITY - Audit information must be
selectively kept and protected so that actions affecting security can be traced
to the responsible party.  A trusted system must be able to record the
occurrences of security-relevant events in an audit log.  The capability to
select the audit events to be recorded is necessary to minimize the expense of
auditing and to allow efficient analysis.  Audit data must be protected from
modification and unauthorized destruction to permit detection and
after-the-fact investigations of security violations.

                                  Assurance

         Requirement 5 - ASSURANCE - The computer system must contain
hardware/software mechanisms that can be independently evaluated to provide
sufficient assurance that the system enforces requirements 1 through 4 above.
In order to assure that the four requirements of Security Policy, Marking,
Identification, and Accountability are enforced by a computer system, there
must be some identified and unified collection of hardware and software
controls that perform those functions.  These mechanisms are typically embedded
in the operating system and are designed to carry out the assigned tasks in a
secure manner.  The basis for trusting such system mechanisms in their
operational setting must be clearly documented such that it is possible to
independently examine the evidence to evaluate their sufficiency.

         Requirement 6 - CONTINUOUS PROTECTION - The trusted mechanisms that
enforce these basic requirements must be continuously protected against
tampering and/or unauthorized changes.  No computer system can be considered
truly secure if the basic hardware and software mechanisms that enforce the
security policy are themselves subject to unauthorized modification or
subversion.  The continuous protection requirement has direct implications
throughout the computer system's life-cycle.

These fundamental requirements form the basis for the individual evaluation
criteria applicable for each evaluation division and class.  The interested
reader is referred to Section 5 of this document, "Control Objectives for
Trusted Computer Systems," for a more complete discussion and further
amplification of these fundamental requirements as they apply to
general-purpose information processing systems and to Section 7 for
amplification of the relationship between Policy and these requirements.


Structure of the Document

The remainder of this document is divided into two parts, four appendices, and
a glossary.  Part I (Sections 1 through 4) presents the detailed criteria
derived from the fundamental requirements described above and relevant to the
rationale and policy excerpts contained in Part II.

Part II (Sections 5 through 10) provides a discussion of basic objectives,
rationale, and national policy behind the development of the criteria, and
guidelines for developers pertaining to: mandatory access control rules
implementation, the covert channel problem, and security testing.  It is
divided into six sections.  Section 5 discusses the use of control objectives
in general and presents the three basic control objectives of the criteria.
Section 6 provides the theoretical basis behind the criteria.  Section 7 gives
excerpts from pertinent regulations, directives, OMB Circulars, and Executive
Orders which provide the basis for many trust requirements for processing
nationally sensitive and classified information with computer systems.
Section 8 provides guidance to system developers on expectations in dealing
with the covert channel problem.  Section 9 provides guidelines dealing with
mandatory security.  Section 10 provides guidelines for security testing.
There are four appendices, including a description of the Trusted Computer
System Commercial Products Evaluation Process (Appendix A), summaries of the
evaluation divisions (Appendix B) and classes (Appendix C), and finally a
directory of requirements ordered alphabetically.  In addition, there is a
glossary.


Structure of the Criteria

The criteria are divided into four divisions: D, C, B, and A ordered in a
hierarchical manner with the highest division (A) being reserved for systems
providing the most comprehensive security.  Each division represents a major
improvement in the overall confidence one can place in the system for the
protection of sensitive information.  Within divisions C and B there are a
number of subdivisions known as classes.  The classes are also ordered in a
hierarchical manner with systems representative of division C and lower
classes of division B being characterized by the set of computer security
mechanisms that they possess.  Assurance of correct and complete design and
implementation for these systems is gained mostly through testing of the
security- relevant portions of the system.  The security-relevant portions of
a system are referred to throughout this document as the Trusted Computing
Base (TCB).  Systems representative of higher classes in division B and
division A derive their security attributes more from their design and
implementation structure.  Increased assurance that the required features are
operative, correct, and tamperproof under all circumstances is gained through
progressively more rigorous analysis during the design process.

Within each class, four major sets of criteria are addressed.  The first three
represent features necessary to satisfy the broad control objectives of
Security Policy, Accountability, and Assurance that are discussed in Part II,
Section 5.  The fourth set, Documentation, describes the type of written
evidence in the form of user guides, manuals, and the test and design
documentation required for each class.

A reader using this publication for the first time may find it helpful to
first read Part II, before continuing on with Part I.



                            PART I:  THE CRITERIA


Highlighting (UPPERCASE) is used in Part I to indicate criteria not contained
in a lower class or changes and additions to already defined criteria.  Where
there is no highlighting, requirements have been carried over from lower
classes without addition or modification.



                    1.0  DIVISION D:  MINIMAL PROTECTION


This division contains only one class.  It is reserved for those systems that
have been evaluated but that fail to meet the requirements for a higher
evaluation class.



                  2.0 DIVISION C:  DISCRETIONARY PROTECTION


Classes in this division provide for discretionary (need-to-know) protection
and, through the inclusion of audit capabilities, for accountability of
subjects and the actions they initiate.



2.1  CLASS (C1):  DISCRETIONARY SECURITY PROTECTION

The Trusted Computing Base (TCB) of a class (C1) system nominally satisfies
the discretionary security requirements by providing separation of users and
data.  It incorporates some form of credible controls capable of enforcing
access limitations on an individual basis, i.e., ostensibly suitable for
allowing users to be able to protect project or private information and to
keep other users from accidentally reading or destroying their data.  The
class (C1) environment is expected to be one of cooperating users processing
data at the same level(s) of sensitivity.  The following are minimal
requirements for systems assigned a class (C1) rating:

2.1.1  Security Policy

    2.1.1.1   Discretionary Access Control

              The TCB shall define and control access between named users and
              named objects (e.g., files and programs) in the ADP system.  The
              enforcement mechanism (e.g., self/group/public controls, access
              control lists) shall allow users to specify and control sharing
              of those objects by named individuals or defined groups or both.

2.1.2  Accountability

    2.1.2.1   Identification and Authentication

              The TCB shall require users to identify themselves to it before
              beginning to perform any other actions that the TCB is expected
              to mediate.  Furthermore, the TCB shall use a protected
              mechanism (e.g., passwords) to authenticate the user's identity.
              The TCB shall protect authentication data so that it cannot be
              accessed by any unauthorized user.

2.1.3  Assurance

    2.1.3.1   Operational Assurance

         2.1.3.1.1  System Architecture

                    The TCB shall maintain a domain for its own execution
                    protects it from external interference or tampering
                    (e.g., by modification of its code or data strucutres).
                    Resources controlled by the TCB may be a defined subset
                    of the subjects and objects in the ADP system.

         2.1.3.1.2  System Integrity

                    Hardware and/or software features shall be provided that
                    can be used to periodically validate the correct operation
                    of the on-site hardware and firmware elements of the TCB.

    2.1.3.2   Life-Cycle Assurance

         2.1.3.2.1  Security Testing

                    The security mechanisms of the ADP system shall be tested
                    and found to work as claimed in the system documentation.
                    Testing shall be done to assure that there are no obvious
                    ways for an unauthorized user to bypass or otherwise
                    defeat the security protection mechanisms of the TCB.
                    (See the Security Testing Guidelines.)

2.1.4  Documentation

    2.1.4.1   Security Features User's Guide

              A single summary, chapter, or manual in user documentation
              shall describe the protection mechanisms provided by the TCB,
              guidelines on their use, and how they interact with one another.

    2.1.4.2   Trusted Facility Manual

              A manual addressed to the ADP System Administrator shall
              present cautions about functions and privileges that should be
              controlled when running a secure facility.

    2.1.4.3   Test Documentation

              The system developer shall provide to the evaluators a document
              that describes the test plan, test procedures that show how the
              the security mechanisms were tested, and results of the
              security mechanisms' functional testing.

    2.1.4.4   Design Documentation

              Documentation shall be available that provides a description of
              the manufacturer's philosophy of protection and an explanation
              of how this philosophy is translated into the TCB.  If the TCB
              is composed of distinct modules, the interfaces between these
              modules shall be described.




2.2  CLASS (C2):  CONTROLLED ACCESS PROTECTION

Systems in this class enforce a more finely grained discretionary access
control than (C1) systems, making users individually accountable for their
actions through login procedures, auditing of security-relevant events, and
resource isolation.  The following are minimal requirements for systems
assigned a class (C2) rating:

2.2.1  Security Policy

    2.2.1.1   Discretionary Access Control

              The TCB shall define and control access between named users and
              named objects (e.g., files and programs) in the ADP system.  The
              enforcement mechanism (e.g., self/group/public controls, access
              control lists) shall allow users to specify and control sharing
              of those objects by named individuals, or defined groups of
              individuals, or by both, and shall provide controls to limit
              propagation of access rights.  The discretionary access control
              mechanism shall, either by explicit user action or by default,
              provide that objects are protected from unauthorized access.
              These access controls shall be capable of including or excluding
              access to the granularity of a single user.  Access permission
              to an object by users not already possessing access permission
              shall only be assigned by authorized users.

    2.2.1.2   Object Reuse

              All authorizations to the information contained within a
              storage object shall be revoked prior to initial assignment,
              allocation or reallocation to a subject from the TCB's pool
              of unused storage objects.  No information, including encrypted
              representations of information, produced by a prior subject's
              actions is to be available to any subject that obtains access
              to an object that has been released back to the system.

2.2.2  Accountability

    2.2.2.1   Identification and Authentication

              The TCB shall require users to identify themselves to it before
              beginning to perform any other actions that the TCB is expected
              to mediate.  Furthermore, the TCB shall use a protected
              mechanism (e.g., passwords) to authenticate the user's identity.
              The TCB shall protect authentication data so that it cannot be
              accessed by any unauthorized user.  The TCB shall be able to
              enforce individual accountability by providing the capability to
              uniquely identify each individual ADP system user.  The TCB
              shall also provide the capability of associating this identity
              with all auditable actions taken by that individual.

    2.2.2.2   Audit

              The TCB shall be able to create, maintain, and protect from
              modification or unauthorized access or destruction an audit
              trail of accesses to the objects it protects.  The audit data
              shall be protected by the TCB so that read access to it is
              limited to those who are authorized for audit data.  The TCB
              shall be able to record the following types of events:  use of
              identification and authentication mechanisms, introduction or
              objects into a user's address space (e.g., file open, program
              initiation), deletion of objects, and actions taken by
              computer operators and system administrators and/or system
              security officers, and other security relevant events.  For
              each recorded event, the audit record shall identify:  date and
              time of the event, user, type of event, and success or failure
              of the event.  For identification/authentication events the
              origin of request (e.g., terminal ID) shall be included in the
              audit record.  For events that introduce an object into a user's
              address space and  for object deletion events the audit record
              shall include the name of the object.  The ADP system
              administrator shall be able to selectively audit the actions of
              any one or more users based on individual identity.

2.2.3  Assurance

    2.2.3.1   Operational Assurance

         2.2.3.1.1  System Architecture

                    The TCB shall maintain a domain for its own execution
                    that protects it from external interference or tampering
                    (e.g., by modification of its code or data structures).
                    Resources controlled by the TCB may be a defined subset
                    of the subjects and objects in the ADP system.  The TCB
                    shall isolate the resources to be protected so that they
                    are subject to the access control and auditing
                    requirements.

         2.2.3.1.2  System Integrity

                    Hardware and/or software features shall be provided that
                    can be used to periodically validate the correct operation
                    of the on-site hardware and firmware elements of the TCB.

    2.2.3.2   Life-Cycle Assurance

         2.2.3.2.1  Security Testing

                    The security mechanisms of the ADP system shall be tested
                    and found to work as claimed in the system documentation.
                    Testing shall be done to assure that there are no obvious
                    ways for an unauthorized user to bypass or otherwise
                    defeat the security protection mechanisms of the TCB.
                    Testing shall also include a search for obvious flaws that
                    would allow violation of resource isolation, or that would
                    permit unauthorized access to the audit or authentication
                    data.  (See the Security Testing guidelines.)

2.2.4  Documentation

    2.2.4.1   Security Features User's Guide

              A single summary, chapter, or manual in user documentation
              shall describe the protection mechanisms provided by the TCB,
              guidelines on their use, and how they interact with one another.

    2.2.4.2   Trusted Facility Manual

              A manual addressed to the ADP system administrator shall
              present cautions about functions and privileges that should be
              controlled when running a secure facility.  The procedures for
              examining and maintaining the audit files as well as the
              detailed audit record structure for each type of audit event
              shall be given.


    2.2.4.3   Test Documentation

              The system developer shall provide to the evaluators a document
              that describes the test plan, test procedures that show how the
              security mechanisms were tested, and results of the security
              mechanisms' functional testing.

    2.2.4.4   Design Documentation

              Documentation shall be available that provides a description of
              the manufacturer's philosophy of protection and an explanation
              of how this philosophy is translated into the TCB.  If the TCB
              is composed of distinct modules, the interfaces between these
              modules shall be described.



                   3.0  DIVISION B:  MANDATORY PROTECTION


The notion of a TCB that preserves the integrity of sensitivity labels and
uses them to enforce a set of mandatory access control rules is a major
requirement in this division.  Systems in this division must carry the
sensitivity labels with major data structures in the system.  The system
developer also provides the security policy model on which the TCB is based
and furnishes a specification of the TCB.  Evidence must be provided to
demonstrate that the reference monitor concept has been implemented.



3.1  CLASS (B1):  LABELED SECURITY PROTECTION

Class (B1) systems require all the features required for class (C2).  In
addition, an informal statement of the security policy model, data labeling,
and mandatory access control over named subjects and objects must be present.
The capability must exist for accurately labeling exported information.  Any
flaws identified by testing must be removed.  The following are minimal
requirements for systems assigned a class (B1) rating:

3.1.1  Security Policy

    3.1.1.1   Discretionary Access Control

              The TCB shall define and control access between named users and
              named objects (e.g., files and programs) in the ADP system.
              The enforcement mechanism (e.g., self/group/public controls,
              access control lists) shall allow users to specify and control
              sharing of those objects by named individuals, or defined groups
              of individuals, or by both, and shall provide controls to limit
              propagation of access rights.  The discretionary access control
              mechanism shall, either by explicit user action or by default,
              provide that objects are protected from unauthorized access.
              These access controls shall be capable of including or excluding
              access to the granularity of a single user.  Access permission
              to an object by users not already possessing access permission
              shall only be assigned by authorized users.

    3.1.1.2   Object Reuse

              All authorizations to the information contained within a
              storage object shall be revoked prior to initial assignment,
              allocation or reallocation to a subject from the TCB's pool
              of unused storage objects.  No information, including encrypted
              representations of information, produced by a prior subject's
              actions is to be available to any subject that obtains access
              to an object that has been released back to the system.

    3.1.1.3   Labels

              Sensitivity labels associated with each subject and storage
              object under its control (e.g., process, file, segment, device)
              shall be maintained by the TCB.  These labels shall be used as
              the basis for mandatory access control decisions.  In order to
              import non-labeled data, the TCB shall request and receive from
              an authorized user the security level of the data, and all such
              actions shall be auditable by the TCB.

         3.1.1.3.1  Label Integrity

                    Sensitivity labels shall accurately represent security
                    levels of the specific subjects or objects with which they
                    are associated.  When exported by the TCB, sensitivity
                    labels shall accurately and unambiguously represent the
                    internal labels and shall be associated with the
                    information being exported.

         3.1.1.3.2  Exportation of Labeled Information

                    The TCB shall designate each communication channel and
                    I/O device as either single-level or miltilevel.  Any
                    change in this designation shall be done manually and
                    shall be auditable by the TCB.  The TCB shall maintain
                    and be able to audit any change in the security level
                    or levels associated with a communication channel or
                    I/O device.

              3.1.1.3.2.1  Exportation to Multilevel Devices

                         When the TCB exports an object to a multilevel I/O
                         device, the sensitivity label associated with that
                         object shall also be exported and shall reside on
                         the same physical medium as the exported
                         information and shall be in the same form
                         (i.e., machine-readable or human-readable form).
                         When the TCB exports or imports an object over a
                         multilevel communication channel, the protocol
                         used on that channel shall provide for the
                         unambiguous pairing between the sensitivity labels
                         and the associated information that is sent or
                         received.

              3.1.1.3.2.2  Exportation to Single-Level Devices

                         Single-level I/O devices and single-level
                         communication channels are not required to
                         maintain the sensitivity labels of the information
                         they process.  However, the TCB shall include a
                         mechanism by which the TCb and an authorized user
                         reliably communicate to designate the single
                         security level of information imported or exported
                         via single-level communication channels or I/O
                         devices.

              3.1.1.3.2.3  Labeling Human-Readable Output

                         The ADP system administrator shall be able to
                         specify the printable label names associated with
                         exported sensitivity labels.  The TCB shall mark
                         the beginning and end of all human-readable, paged,
                         hardcopy output (e.g., line printer output) with
                         human-readable sensitivity labels that properly*
                         represent the sensitivity of the output.  The TCB
                         shall, be default, mark the top and bottom of each
                         page of human-readable, paged, hardcopy output
                         (e.g., line printer output) with human-readable
                         sensitivity labels that properly* represent the
                         overall sensitivity of the output or that properly*
                         represent the sensitivity of the information on the
                         page.  The TCB shall, by default and in an
                         appropriate manner, mark other forms of human-
                         readable output (e.g., maps, graphics) with human-
                         readable sensitivity labels that properly*
                         represent the sensitivity of the touput.  Any
                         override of these marking defaults shall be
                         auditable by the TCB.

    3.1.1.4  Mandatory Access Control

              The TCB shall enforce a mandatory access control policy over
              all subjects and storage objects under its control (e.g.,
              processes, files, segments, devices).  These subjects and
              objects shall be assigned sensitivity labels that are a
              combination of hierarchical classification levels and
              non-hierarchical categories, and the labels shall be used as
              the basis for mandatory access control decisions.  The TCB
              shall be able to support two or more such security levels.
              (See the Mandatory Access Control Guidelines.)  The following
              requirements shall hold for all accesses between subjects and
              objects controlled by the TCB:  a subject can read an object
              only if the hierarchical classification in the subject's
              security level is greater than or equal to the hierarchical
              classification in the object's security level and the non-
              hierarchical categories in the subject's security level include
              all the non-hierarchical categories in the object's security
              level.  A subject can write an object only if the hierarchical
              classification in the subject's security level is less than or
              equal to the hierarchical classification in the object's
              security level and all the non-hierarchical categories in the
              subject's security level are included in the non-hierarchical
              categories in the object's security level.  Identification
              and authentication data shall be used by the TCB to authenti-
              cate the user's identity and to ensure that the security level
              and authorization of subjects external to the TCB that may be
              created to act on behalf of the individual user are dominated
              by the clearance and authorization of that user.

3.1.2  Accountability

    3.1.2.1  Identification and Authentication

              The TCB shall require users to identify themselves to it before
              beginning to perform any other actions that the TCB is expected
              to mediate.  Furthermore, the TCB shall maintain authentication
              data that includes information for verifying the identity of
              individual users (e.g., passwords) as well as information for
              determining the clearance and authorizations or individual
_____________________________
* The hierarchical classification component in human-readable sensitivity
labels shall be equal to the greatest hierarchical classification or any of the
information in the output that the labels refer to; the non-hierarchical
category component shall include all of the non-hierarchical categories of the
information in the output the labels refer to, but no other non-hierarchical
categories.

              users.  This data shall be used by the TCB to authenticate the
              user's identity and to ensure that the security level and
              authorizations of subjects external to the TCB that may be
              created to act on behalf of the individual user are dominated
              by the clearance and authorization of that user.  The TCB shall
              protect authentication data so that it cannot be accessed by any
              unauthorized user.  The TCB shall be able to enforce individual
              accountability by providing the capability to uniquely identify
              each individual ADP system user.  The TCB shall also provide the
              capability of associating this identity with all auditable
              actions taken by that individual.

    3.1.2.2   Audit

              The TCB shall be able to create, maintain, and protect from
              modification or unauthorized access or destruction an audit
              trail of accesses to the objects it protects.  The audit data
              shall be protected by the TCB so that read access to it is
              limited to those who are authorized for audit data.  The TCB
              shall be able to record the following types of events: use of
              identification and authentication mechanisms, introduction of
              objects into a user's address space (e.g., file open, program
              initiation), deletion of objects, and actions taken by computer
              operators and system administrators and/or system security
              officers and other security relevant events.  The TCB shall also
              be able to audit any override of human-readable output markings.
              For each recorded event, the audit record shall identify: date
              and time of the event, user, type of event, and success or
              failure of the event.  For identification/authentication events
              the origin of request (e.g., terminal ID) shall be included in
              the audit record.  For events that introduce an object into a
              user's address space and for object deletion events the audit
              record shall include the name of the object and the object's
              security level.  The ADP system administrator shall be able to
              selectively audit the actions of any one or more users based on
              individual identity and/or object security level.

3.1.3  Assurance

    3.1.3.1   Operational Assurance

         3.1.3.1.1  System Architecture

                    The TCB shall maintain a domain for its own execution
                    that protects it from external interference or tampering
                    (e.g., by modification of its code or data structures).
                    Resources controlled by the TCB may be a defined subset
                    of the subjects and objects in the ADP system.  The TCB
                    shall maintain process isolation through the provision of
                    distinct address spaces under its control.  The TCB shall
                    isolate the resources to be protected so that they are
                    subject to the access control and auditing requirements.

         3.1.3.1.2  System Integrity

                    Hardware and/or software features shall be provided that
                    can be used to periodically validate the correct operation
                    of the on-site hardware and firmware elements of the TCB.

    3.1.3.2   Life-Cycle Assurance

         3.1.3.2.1  Security Testing

                    The security mechanisms of the ADP system shall be tested
                    and found to work as claimed in the system documentation.
                    A team of individuals who thoroughly understand the
                    specific implementation of the TCB shall subject its
                    design documentation, source code, and object code to
                    thorough analysis and testing.  Their objectives shall be:
                    to uncover all design and implementation flaws that would
                    permit a subject external to the TCB to read, change, or
                    delete data normally denied under the mandatory or
                    discretionary security policy enforced by the TCB; as well
                    as to assure that no subject (without authorization to do
                    so) is able to cause the TCB to enter a state such that
                    it is unable to respond to communications initiated by
                    other users.  All discovered flaws shall be removed or
                    neutralized and the TCB retested to demonstrate that they
                    have been eliminated and that new flaws have not been
                    introduced.  (See the Security Testing Guidelines.)

         3.1.3.2.2  Design Specification and Verification

                    An informal or formal model of the security policy
                    supported by the TCB shall be maintained over the life
                    cycle of the ADP system and demonstrated to be consistent
                    with its axioms.

3.1.4  Documentation

    3.1.4.1   Security Features User's Guide

              A single summary, chapter, or manual in user documentation
              shall describe the protection mechanisms provided by the TCB,
              guidelines on their use, and how they interact with one another.

    3.1.4.2   Trusted Facility Manual

              A manual addressed to the ADP system administrator shall
              present cautions about functions and privileges that should be
              controlled when running a secure facility.  The procedures for
              examining and maintaining the audit files as well as the
              detailed audit record structure for each type of audit event
              shall be given.  The manual shall describe the operator and
              administrator functions related to security, to include changing
              the security characteristics of a user.  It shall provide
              guidelines on the consistent and effective use of the protection
              features of the system, how they interact, how to securely
              generate a new TCB, and facility procedures, warnings, and
              privileges that need to be controlled in order to operate the
              facility in a secure manner.

    3.1.4.3   Test Documentation

              The system developer shall provide to the evaluators a document
              that describes the test plan, test procedures that show how the
              security mechanisms were tested, and results of the security
              mechanisms' functional testing.

    3.1.4.4   Design Documentation

              Documentation shall be available that provides a description of
              the manufacturer's philosophy of protection and an explanation
              of how this philosophy is translated into the TCB.  If the TCB
              is composed of distinct modules, the interfaces between these
              modules shall be described.  An informal or formal description
              of the security policy model enforced by the TCB shall be
              available and an explanation provided to show that it is
              sufficient to enforce the security policy.  The specific TCB
              protection mechanisms shall be identified and an explanation
              given to show that they satisfy the model.


3.2  CLASS (B2):  STRUCTURED PROTECTION

In class (B2) systems, the TCB is based on a clearly defined and documented
formal security policy model that requires the discretionary and mandatory
access control enforcement found in class (B1) systems be extended to all
subjects and objects in the ADP system.  In addition, covert channels are
addressed.  The TCB must be carefully structured into protection-critical and
non- protection-critical elements.  The TCB interface is well-defined and the
TCB design and implementation enable it to be subjected to more thorough
testing and more complete review.  Authentication mechanisms are strengthened,
trusted facility management is provided in the form of support for system
administrator and operator functions, and stringent configuration management
controls are imposed.  The system is relatively resistant to penetration.  The
following are minimal requirements for systems assigned a class (B2) rating:

3.2.1  Security Policy

    3.2.1.1   Discretionary Access Control

              The TCB shall define and control access between named users and
              named objects (e.g., files and programs) in the ADP system.
              The enforcement mechanism (e.g., self/group/public controls,
              access control lists) shall allow users to specify and control
              sharing of those objects by named individuals, or defined
              groups of individuals, or by both, and shall provide controls
              to limit propagation of access rights.  The discretionary access
              control mechanism shall, either by explicit user action or by
              default, provide that objects are protected from unauthorized
              access.  These access controls shall be capable of including
              or excluding access to the granularity of a single user.
              Access permission to an object by users not already possessing
              access permission shall only be assigned by authorized users.

    3.2.1.2   Object Reuse

              All authorizations to the information contained within a
              storage object shall be revoked prior to initial assignment,
              allocation or reallocation to a subject from the TCB's pool of
              unused storage objects.  No information, including encrypted
              representations of information, produced by a prior subject's
              actions is to be available to any subject that obtains access
              to an object that has been released back to the system.

    3.2.1.3   Labels

              Sensitivity labels associated with each ADP system resource
              (e.g., subject, storage object, ROM) that is directly or
              indirectly accessible by subjects external to the TCB shall be
              maintained by the TCB.  These labels shall be used as the basis
              for mandatory access control decisions.  In order to import
              non-labeled data, the TCB shall request and receive from an
              authorized user the security level of the data, and all such
              actions shall be auditable by the TCB.

         3.2.1.3.1  Label Integrity

                    Sensitivity labels shall accurately represent security
                    levels of the specific subjects or objects with which
                    they are associated.  When exported by the TCB,
                    sensitivity labels shall accurately and unambiguously
                    represent the internal labels and shall be associated
                    with the information being exported.

         3.2.1.3.2  Exportation of Labeled Information

                    The TCB shall designate each communication channel and
                    I/O device as either single-level or multilevel.  Any
                    change in this designation shall be done manually and
                    shall be auditable by the TCB.  The TCB shall maintain
                    and be able to audit any change in the security level
                    or levels associated with a communication channel or
                    I/O device.

              3.2.1.3.2.1  Exportation to Multilevel Devices

                         When the TCB exports an object to a multilevel I/O
                         device, the sensitivity label associated with that
                         object shall also be exported and shall reside on
                         the same physical medium as the exported
                         information and shall be in the same form (i.e.,
                         machine-readable or human-readable form).  When
                         the TCB exports or imports an object over a
                         multilevel communication channel, the protocol
                         used on that channel shall provide for the
                         unambiguous pairing between the sensitivity labels
                         and the associated information that is sent or
                         received.

              3.2.1.3.2.2  Exportation to Single-Level Devices

                         Single-level I/O devices and single-level
                         communication channels are not required to
                         maintain the sensitivity labels of the
                         information they process.  However, the TCB shall
                         include a mechanism by which the TCB and an
                         authorized user reliably communicate to designate
                         the single security level of information imported
                         or exported via single-level communication
                         channels or I/O devices.

              3.2.1.3.2.3  Labeling Human-Readable Output

                         The ADP system administrator shall be able to
                         specify the printable label names associated with
                         exported sensitivity labels.  The TCB shall mark
                         the beginning and end of all human-readable, paged,
                         hardcopy output (e.g., line printer output) with
                         human-readable sensitivity labels that properly*
                         represent the sensitivity of the output.  The TCB
                         shall, by default, mark the top and bottom of each
                         page of human-readable, paged, hardcopy output
                         (e.g., line printer output) with human-readable
                         sensitivity labels that properly* represent the
                         overall sensitivity of the output or that
                         properly* represent the sensitivity of the
                         information on the page.  The TCB shall, by
                         default and in an appropriate manner, mark other
                         forms of human-readable output (e.g., maps,
                         graphics) with human-readable sensitivity labels
                         that properly* represent the sensitivity of the
                         output.  Any override of these marking defaults
                         shall be auditable by the TCB.

         3.2.1.3.3  Subject Sensitivity Labels

                    The TCB shall immediately notify a terminal user of each
                    change in the security level associated with that user
                    during an interactive session.  A terminal user shall be
                    able to query the TCB as desired for a display of the
                    subject's complete sensitivity label.

         3.2.1.3.4  Device Labels

                    The TCB shall support the assignment of minimum and
                    maximum security levels to all attached physical devices.
                    These security levels shall be used by the TCB to enforce
                    constraints imposed by the physical environments in which
                    the devices are located.

    3.2.1.4   Mandatory Access Control

              The TCB shall enforce a mandatory access control policy over
              all resources (i.e., subjects, storage objects, and I/O devices
              that are directly or indirectly accessible by subjects external
              to the TCB.  These subjects and objects shall be assigned
              sensitivity labels that are a combination of hierarchical
              classification levels and non-hierarchical categories, and the
              labels shall be used as the basis for mandatory access control
              decisions.  The TCB shall be able to support two or more such
              security levels.  (See the Mandatory Access Control guidelines.)
              The following requirements shall hold for all accesses between
              All subjects external to the TCB and all objects directly or
              indirectly accessible by these subjects:  A subject can read an
              object only if the hierarchical classification in the subject's
              security level is greater than or equal to the hierarchical
              classification in the object's security level and the non-
              hierarchical categories in the subject's security level include
              all the non-hierarchical categories in the object's security
              level.  A subject can write an object only if the hierarchical
              classification in the subject's security level is less than or
              equal to the hierarchical classification in the object's
              security level and all the non-hierarchical categories in the
              subject's security level are included in the non-hierarchical
              categories in the object's security level.  Identification and
              authentication data shall be used by the TCB to authenticate
              the user's identity and to ensure that the security level and
              authorization of subjects external to the TCB that may be
              created to act on behalf of the individual user are dominated
              by the clearance and authorization of that user.

3.2.2  Accountability

    3.2.2.1   Identification and Authentication

              The TCB shall require users to identify themselves to it before
              beginning to perform any other actions that the TCB is expected
              to mediate.  Furthermore, the TCB shall maintain authentication
              data that includes information for verifying the identity of
              individual users (e.g., passwords) as well as information for
              determining the clearance and authorizations of individual
              users.  This data shall be used by the TCB to authenticate the
              user's identity and to ensure that the security level and
              authorizations of subjects external to the TCB that may be
              created to act on behalf of the individual user are dominated by
              the clearance and authorization of that user.  The TCB shall
              protect authentication data so that it cannot be accessed by any
              unauthorized user.  The TCB shall be able to enforce individual
              accountability by providing the capability to uniquely identify
              each individual ADP system user.  The TCB shall also provide the
              capability of associating this identity with all auditable
              actions taken by that individual.

         3.2.2.1.1  Trusted Path

                    The TCB shall support a trusted communication path
                    between itself and user for initial login and
                    authentication.  Communications via this path shall be
                    initiated exclusively by a user.

    3.2.2.2   Audit

              The TCB shall be able to create, maintain, and protect from
              modification or unauthorized access or destruction an audit
              trail of accesses to the objects it protects.  The audit data
              shall be protected by the TCB so that read access to it is
              limited to those who are authorized for audit data.  The TCB
              shall be able to record the following types of events: use of
              identification and authentication mechanisms, introduction of
              objects into a user's address space (e.g., file open, program
              initiation), deletion of objects, and actions taken by computer
              operators and system administrators and/or system security
              officers, and other security relevant events.  The TCB shall
              also be able to audit any override of human-readable output
              markings.  For each recorded event, the audit record shall
              identify:  date and time of the event, user, type of event, and
              success or failure of the event.  For identification/
              authentication events the origin of request (e.g., terminal ID)
              shall be included in the audit record.  For events that
              introduce an object into a user's address space and for object
              deletion events the audit record shall include the name of the
              object and the object's security level.  The ADP system
              administrator shall be able to selectively audit the actions of
              any one or more users based on individual identity and/or object
              security level.  The TCB shall be able to audit the identified
              events that may be used in the exploitation of covert storage
              channels.

3.2.3  Assurance

    3.2.3.1   Operational Assurance

         3.2.3.1.1  System Architecture

                    The TCB shall maintain a domain for its own execution
                    that protects it from external interference or tampering
                    (e.g., by modification of its code or data structures).
                    The TCB shall maintain process isolation through the
                    provision of distinct address spaces under its control.
                    The TCB shall be internally structured into well-defined
                    largely independent modules.  It shall make effective use
                    of available hardware to separate those elements that are
                    protection-critical from those that are not.  The TCB
                    modules shall be designed such that the principle of least
                    privilege is enforced.  Features in hardware, such as
                    segmentation, shall be used to support logically distinct
                    storage objects with separate attributes (namely:
                    readable, writeable).  The user interface to the TCB
                    shall be completely defined and all elements of the TCB
                    identified.

         3.2.3.1.2  System Integrity

                    Hardware and/or software features shall be provided that
                    can be used to periodically validate the correct
                    operation of the on-site hardware and firmware elements
                    of the TCB.

         3.2.3.1.3  Covert Channel Analysis

                    The system developer shall conduct a thorough search for
                    covert storage channels and make a determination (either
                    by actual measurement or by engineering estimation) of
                    the maximum bandwidth of each identified channel.  (See
                    the covert channels guideline section.)

         3.2.3.1.4  Trusted Facility Management

                    The TCB shall support separate operator and administrator
                    functions.

    3.2.3.2   Life-Cycle Assurance

         3.2.3.2.1  Security Testing

                    The security mechanisms of the ADP system shall be tested
                    and found to work as claimed in the system documentation.
                    A team of individuals who thoroughly understand the
                    specific implementation of the TCB shall subject its
                    design documentation, source code, and object code to
                    thorough analysis and testing.  Their objectives shall be:
                    to uncover all design and implementation flaws that would
                    permit a subject external to the TCB to read, change, or
                    delete data normally denied under the mandatory or
                    discretionary security policy enforced by the TCB; as well
                    as to assure that no subject (without authorization to do
                    so) is able to cause the TCB to enter a state such that it
                    is unable to respond to communications initiated by other
                    users.  The TCB shall be found relatively resistant to
                    penetration.  All discovered flaws shall be corrected and
                    the TCB retested to demonstrate that they have been
                    eliminated and that new flaws have not been introduced.
                    Testing shall demonstrate that the TCB implementation is
                    consistent with the descriptive top-level specification.
                    (See the Security Testing Guidelines.)

         3.2.3.2.2  Design Specification and Verification

                    A formal model of the security policy supported by the
                    TCB shall be maintained over the life cycle of the ADP
                    system that is proven consistent with its axioms.  A
                    descriptive top-level specification (DTLS) of the TCB
                    shall be maintained that completely and accurately
                    describes the TCB in terms of exceptions, error messages,
                    and effects.  It shall be shown to be an accurate
                    description of the TCB interface.

         3.2.3.2.3  Configuration Management

                    During development and maintenance of the TCB, a
                    configuration management system shall be in place that
                    maintains control of changes to the descriptive top-level
                    specification, other design data, implementation
                    documentation, source code, the running versionof the
                    object code, and test fixtures and documentation.  The
                    configuration management system shall assure a consistent
                    mapping among all documentation and code associated with
                    the current version of the TCB.  Tools shall be provided
                    for generation of a new version of the TCB from source
                    code.  Also available shall be tools for comparing a
                    newly generated version with the previous TCB version in
                    order to ascertain that only the intended changes have
                    been made in the code that will actually be used as the
                    new version of the TCB.

3.2.4  Documentation

    3.2.4.1   Security Features User's Guide

              A single summary, chapter, or manual in user documentation
              shall describe the protection mechanisms provided by the TCB,
              guidelines on their use, and how they interact with one another.

    3.2.4.2   Trusted Facility Manual

              A manual addressed to the ADP system administrator shall
              present cautions about functions and privileges that should be
              controlled when running a secure facility.  The procedures for
              examining and maintaining the audit files as well as the
              detailed audit record structure for each type of audit event
              shall be given.  The manual shall describe the operator and
              administrator functions related to security, to include
              changing the security characteristics of a user.  It shall
              provide guidelines on the consistent and effective use of the
              protection features of the system, how they interact, how to
              securely generate a new TCB, and facility procedures, warnings,
              and privileges that need to be controlled in order to operate
              the facility in a secure manner.  The TCB modules that contain
              the reference validation mechanism shall be identified.  The
              procedures for secure generation of a new TCB from source after
              modification of any modules in the TCB shall be described.

    3.2.4.3   Test Documentation

              The system developer shall provide to the evaluators a document
              that describes the test plan, test procedures that show how the
              security mechanisms were tested, and results of the security
              mechanisms' functional testing.  It shall include results of
              testing the effectiveness of the methods used to reduce covert
              channel bandwidths.

    3.2.4.4   Design Documentation

              Documentation shall be available that provides a description of
              the manufacturer's philosophy of protection and an explanation
              of how this philosophy is translated into the TCB.  The
              interfaces between the TCB modules shall be described.  A
              formal description of the security policy model enforced by the
              TCB shall be available and proven that it is sufficient to
              enforce the security policy.  The specific TCB protection
              mechanisms shall be identified and an explanation given to show
              that they satisfy the model.  The descriptive top-level
              specification (DTLS) shall be shown to be an accurate
              description of the TCB interface.  Documentation shall describe
              how the TCB implements the reference monitor concept and give
              an explanation why it is tamper resistant, cannot be bypassed,
              and is correctly implemented.  Documentation shall describe how
              the TCB is structured to facilitate testing and to enforce least
              privilege.  This documentation shall also present the results
              of the covert channel analysis and the tradeoffs involved in
              restricting the channels.  All auditable events that may be
              used in the exploitation of known covert storage channels shall
              be identified.  The bandwidths of known covert storage channels
              the use of which is not detectable by the auditing mechanisms,
              shall be provided.  (See the Covert Channel Guideline section.)


3.3  CLASS (B3):  SECURITY DOMAINS

The class (B3) TCB must satisfy the reference monitor requirements that it
mediate all accesses of subjects to objects, be tamperproof, and be small
enough to be subjected to analysis and tests.  To this end, the TCB is
structured to exclude code not essential to security policy enforcement, with
significant system engineering during TCB design and implementation directed
toward minimizing its complexity.  A security administrator is supported,
audit mechanisms are expanded to signal security- relevant events, and system
recovery procedures are required.  The system is highly resistant to
penetration.  The following are minimal requirements for systems assigned a
class (B3) rating:

3.1.1  Security Policy

    3.3.1.1   Discretionary Access Control

              The TCB shall define and control access between named users and
              named objects (e.g., files and programs) in the ADP system.
              The enforcement mechanism (e.g., access control lists) shall
              allow users to specify and control sharing of those objects,
              and shall provide controls to limit propagation of access
              rights.  The discretionary access control mechanism shall,
              either by explicit user action or by default, provide that
              objects are protected from unauthorized access.  These access
              controls shall be capable of specifying, for each named object,
              a list of named individuals and a list of groups of named
              individuals with their respective modes of access to that
              object.  Furthermore, for each such named object, it shall be
              possible to specify a list of named individuals and a list of
              groups of named individuals for which no access to the object is
              to be given.  Access permission to an object by users not
              already possessing access permission shall only be assigned by
              authorized users.

    3.3.1.2   Object Reuse

              All authorizations to the information contained within a
              storage object shall be revoked prior to initial assignment,
              allocation or reallocation to a subject from the TCB's pool
              of unused storage objects.  No information, including
              encrypted representations of information, produced by a prior
              subjects actions is to be available to any subject that obtains
              access to an object that has been released back to the system.

    3.3.1.3   Labels

              Sensitivity labels associated with each ADP system resource
              (e.g., subject, storage object, ROM) that is directly or
              indirectly accessible by subjects external to the TCB shall be
              maintained by the TCB.  These labels shall be used as the basis
              for mandatory access control decisions.  In order to import
              non-labeled data, the TCB shall request and receive from an
              authorized user the security level of the data, and all such
              actions shall be auditable by the TCB.

         3.3.1.3.1  Label Integrity

                    Sensitivity labels shall accurately represent security
                    levels of the specific subjects or objects with which
                    they are associated.  When exported by the TCB,
                    sensitivity labels shall accurately and unambiguously
                    represent the internal labels and shall be associated
                    with the information being exported.

         3.3.1.3.2  Exportation of Labeled Information

                    The TCB shall designate each communication channel and
                    I/O device as either single-level or multilevel.  Any
                    change in this designation shall be done manually and
                    shall be auditable by the TCB.  The TCB shall maintain
                    and be able to audit any change in the security level
                    or levels associated with a communication channel or
                    I/O device.

              3.3.1.3.2.1  Exportation to Multilevel Devices

                           When the TCB exports an object to a multilevel I/O
                           device, the sensitivity label associated with that
                           object shall also be exported and shall reside on
                           the same physical medium as the exported
                           information and shall be in the same form (i.e.,
                           machine-readable or human-readable form).  When
                           the TCB exports or imports an object over a
                           multilevel communication channel, the protocol
                           used on that channel shall provide for the
                           unambiguous pairing between the sensitivity labels
                           and the associated information that is sent or
                           received.

              3.3.1.3.2.2  Exportation to Single-Level Devices

                           Single-level I/O devices and single-level
                           communication channels are not required to
                           maintain the sensitivity labels of the information
                           they process.  However, the TCB shall include a
                           mechanism by which the TCB and an authorized user
                           reliably communicate to designate the single
                           security level of information imported or exported
                           via single-level communication channels or I/O
                           devices.

              3.3.1.3.2.3  Labeling Human-Readable Output

                           The ADP system administrator shall be able to
                           specify the printable label names associated with
                           exported sensitivity labels.  The TCB shall mark
                           the beginning and end of all human-readable, paged,
                           hardcopy output (e.g., line printer output) with
                           human-readable sensitivity labels that properly*
                           represent the sensitivity of the output.  The TCB
                           shall, by default, mark the top and bottom of each
                           page of human-readable, paged, hardcopy output
                           (e.g., line printer output) with human-readable
                           sensitivity labels that properly* represent the
                           overall sensitivity of the output or that
                           properly* represent the sensitivity of the
                           information on the page.  The TCB shall, by
                           default and in an appropriate manner, mark other
                           forms of human-readable output (e.g., maps,
                           graphics) with human-readable sensitivity labels
                           that properly* represent the sensitivity of the
                           output.  Any override of these marking defaults
                           shall be auditable by the TCB.

         3.3.1.3.3  Subject Sensitivity Labels

                    The TCB shall immediately notify a terminal user of each
                    change in the security level associated with that user
                    during an interactive session.  A terminal user shall be
                    able to query the TCB as desired for a display of the
                    subject's complete sensitivity label.

         3.3.1.3.4  Device Labels

                    The TCB shall support the assignment of minimum and
                    maximum security levels to all attached physical devices.
                    These security levels shall be used by the TCB to enforce
                    constraints imposed by the physical environments in which
                    the devices are located.

    3.3.1.4   Mandatory Access Control

              The TCB shall enforce a mandatory access control policy over
              all resources (i.e., subjects, storage objects, and I/O
              devices) that are directly or indirectly accessible by subjects
              external to the TCB.  These subjects and objects shall be
              assigned sensitivity labels that are a combination of
              hierarchical classification levels and non-hierarchical
              categories, and the labels shall be used as the basis for
              mandatory access control decisions.  The TCB shall be able to
              support two or more such security levels.  (See the Mandatory
______________________________
* The hierarchical classification component in human-readable sensitivity
labels shall be equal to the greatest hierarchical classification of any of the
information in the output that the labels refer to; the non-hierarchical
category component shall include all of the non-hierarchical categories of the
information in the output the labels refer to, but no other non-hierarchical
categories.

              Access Control guidelines.)  The following requirements shall
              hold for all accesses between all subjects external to the TCB
              and all objects directly or indirectly accessible by these
              subjects: A subject can read an object only if the hierarchical
              classification in the subject's security level is greater than
              or equal to the hierarchical classification in the object's
              security level and the non-hierarchical categories in the
              subject's security level include all the non-hierarchical
              categories in the object's security level.  A subject can write
              an object only if the hierarchical classification in the
              subject's security level is less than or equal to the
              hierarchical classification in the object's security level and
              all the non-hierarchical categories in the subject's security
              level are included in the non- hierarchical categories in the
              object's security level.  Identification and authentication
              data shall be used by the TCB to authenticate the user's
              identity and to ensure that the security level and authori-
              zation of subjects external to the TCB that may be created
              to act on behalf of the individual user are dominated by the
              clearance and authorization of that user.

3.3.2  Accountability

    3.3.2.1   Identification and Authentication

              The TCB shall require users to identify themselves to it before
              beginning to perform any other actions that the TCB is expected
              to mediate.  Furthermore, the TCB shall maintain authentication
              data that includes information for verifying the identity of
              individual users (e.g., passwords) as well as information for
              determining the clearance and authorizations of individual
              users.  This data shall be used by the TCB to authenticate the
              user's identity and to ensure that the security level and
              authorizations of subjectsexternal to the TCB that may be
              created to act on behalf of the individual user are dominated
              by the clearance and authorization of that user.  The TCB shall
              protect authentication data so that it cannot be accessed by any
              unauthorized user.  The TCB shall be able to enforce individual
              accountability by providing the capability to uniquely identify
              each individual ADP system user.  The TCB shall also provide the
              capability of associating this identity with all auditable
              actions taken by that individual.

         3.3.2.1.1  Trusted Path

                    The TCB shall support a trusted communication path
                    between itself and users for use when a positive TCB-to-
                    user connection is required (e.g., login, change subject
                    security level).  Communications via this trusted path
                    shall be activated exclusively by a user of the TCB and
                    shall be logically isolated and unmistakably
                    distinguishable from other paths.

    3.3.2.2   Audit

              The TCB shall be able to create, maintain, and protect from
              modification or unauthorized access or destruction an audit
              trail of accesses to the objects it protects.  The audit data
              shall be protected by the TCB so that read access to it is
              limited to those who are authorized for audit data.  The TCB
              shall be able to record the following types of events: use of
              identification and authentication mechanisms, introduction of
              objects into a user's address space (e.g., file open, program
              initiation), deletion of objects, and actions taken by computer
              operators and system administrators and/or system security
              officers and other security relevant events.  The TCB shall also
              be able to audit any override of human-readable output markings.
              For each recorded event, the audit record shall identify:  date
              and time of the event, user, type of event, and success or
              failure of the event.  For identification/authentication events
              the origin of request (e.g., terminal ID) shall be included in
              the audit record.  For events that introduce an object into a
              user's address space and for object deletion events the audit
              record shall include the name of the object and the object's
              security level.  The ADP system administrator shall be able to
              selectively audit the actions of any one or more users based on
              individual identity and/or object security level.  The TCB shall
              be able to audit the identified events that may be used in the
              exploitation of covert storage channels.  The TCB shall contain
              a mechanism that is able to monitor the occurrence or
              accumulation of security auditable events that may indicate an
              imminent violation of security policy.  This mechanism shall be
              able to immediately notify the security administrator when
              thresholds are exceeded, and if the occurrence or accumulation
              of these security relevant events continues, the system shall
              take the least disruptive action to terminate the event.

3.3.3  Assurance

    3.3.3.1   Operational Assurance

         3.3.3.1.1  System Architecture

                    The TCB shall maintain a domain for its own execution
                    that protects it from external interference or tampering
                    (e.g., by modification of its code or data structures).
                    The TCB shall maintain process isolation through the
                    provision of distinct address spaces under its control.
                    The TCB shall be internally structured into well-defined
                    largely independent modules.  It shall make effective use
                    of available hardware to separate those elements that are
                    protection-critical from those that are not.  The TCB
                    modules shall be designed such that the principle of
                    least privilege is enforced.  Features in hardware, such
                    as segmentation, shall be used to support logically
                    distinct storage objects with separate attributes (namely:
                    readable, writeable).  The user interface to the TCB shall
                    be completely defined and all elements of the TCB
                    identified.  The TCB shall be designed and structured to
                    use a complete, conceptually simple protection mechanism
                    with precisely defined semantics.  This mechanism shall
                    play a central role in enforcing the internal structuring
                    of the TCB and the system.  The TCB shall incorporate
                    significant use of layering, abstraction and data hiding.
                    Significant system engineering shall be directed toward
                    minimizing the complexity of the TCB and excluding from
                    the TCB modules that are not protection-critical.

         3.3.3.1.2  System Integrity

                    Hardware and/or software features shall be provided that
                    can be used to periodically validate the correct
                    operation of the on-site hardware and firmware elements
                    of the TCB.

         3.3.3.1.3  Covert Channel Analysis

                    The system developer shall conduct a thorough search for
                    covert channels and make a determination (either by
                    actual measurement or by engineering estimation) of the
                    maximum bandwidth of each identified channel.  (See the
                    Covert Channels Guideline section.)

         3.3.3.1.4  Trusted Facility Management

                    The TCB shall support separate operator and administrator
                    functions.  The functions performed in the role of a
                    security administrator shall be identified.  The ADP
                    system administrative personnel shall only be able to
                    perform security administrator functions after taking a
                    distinct auditable action to assume the security
                    administrator role on the ADP system.  Non-security
                    functions that can be performed in the security
                    administration role shall be limited strictly to those
                    essential to performing the security role effectively.

         3.3.3.1.5  Trusted Recovery

                    Procedures and/or mechanisms shall be provided to assure
                    that, after an ADP system failure or other discontinuity,
                    recovery without a protection compromise is obtained.

    3.3.3.2   Life-Cycle Assurance

         3.3.3.2.1  Security Testing

                    The security mechanisms of the ADP system shall be tested
                    and found to work as claimed in the system documentation.
                    A team of individuals who thoroughly understand the
                    specific implementation of the TCB shall subject its
                    design documentation, source code, and object code to
                    thorough analysis and testing.  Their objectives shall
                    be: to uncover all design and implementation flaws that
                    would permit a subject external to the TCB to read,
                    change, or delete data normally denied under the
                    mandatory or discretionary security policy enforced by
                    the TCB; as well as to assure that no subject (without
                    authorization to do so) is able to cause the TCB to enter
                    a state such that it is unable to respond to
                    communications initiated by other users.  The TCB shall
                    be found resistant to penetration.  All discovered flaws
                    shall be corrected and the TCB retested to demonstrate
                    that they have been eliminated and that new flaws have
                    not been introduced.  Testing shall demonstrate that the
                    TCB implementation is consistent with the descriptive
                    top-level specification.  (See the Security Testing
                    Guidelines.)  No design flaws and no more than a few
                    correctable implementation flaws may be found during
                    testing and there shall be reasonable confidence that
                    few remain.

         3.3.3.2.2  Design Specification and Verification

                    A formal model of the security policy supported by the
                    TCB shall be maintained over the life cycle of the ADP
                    system that is proven consistent with its axioms.  A
                    descriptive top-level specification (DTLS) of the TCB
                    shall be maintained that completely and accurately
                    describes the TCB in terms of exceptions, error messages,
                    and effects.  It shall be shown to be an accurate
                    description of the TCB interface.  A convincing argument
                    shall be given that the DTLS is consistent with the model.

         3.3.3.2.3  Configuration Management

                    During development and maintenance of the TCB, a
                    configuration management system shall be in place that
                    maintains control of changes to the descriptive top-level
                    specification, other design data, implementation
                    documentation, source code, the running version of the
                    object code, and test fixtures and documentation.  The
                    configuration management system shall assure a consistent
                    mapping among all documentation and code associated with
                    the current version of the TCB.  Tools shall be provided
                    for generation of a new version of the TCB from source
                    code.  Also available shall be tools for comparing a
                    newly generated version with the previous TCB version in
                    order to ascertain that only the intended changes have
                    been made in the code that will actually be used as the
                    new version of the TCB.

3.3.4  Documentation

    3.3.4.1   Security Features User's Guide

              A single summary, chapter, or manual in user documentation
              shall describe the protection mechanisms provided by the TCB,
              guidelines on their use, and how they interact with one another.

    3.3.4.2   Trusted Facility Manual

              A manual addressed to the ADP system administrator shall
              present cautions about functions and privileges that should be
              controlled when running a secure facility.  The procedures for
              examining and maintaining the audit files as well as the
              detailed audit record structure for each type of audit event
              shall be given.  The manual shall describe the operator and
              administrator functions related to security, to include
              changing the security characteristics of a user.  It shall
              provide guidelines on the consistent and effective use of the
              protection features of the system, how they interact, how to
              securely generate a new TCB, and facility procedures, warnings,
              and privileges that need to be controlled in order to operate
              the facility in a secure manner.  The TCB modules that contain
              the reference validation mechanism shall be identified.  The
              procedures for secure generation of a new TCB from source after
              modification of any modules in the TCB shall be described.  It
              shall include the procedures to ensure that the system is
              initially started in a secure manner.  Procedures shall also be
              included to resume secure system operation after any lapse in
              system operation.

    3.3.4.3   Test Documentation

              The system developer shall provide to the evaluators a document
              that describes the test plan, test procedures that show how the
              security mechanisms were tested, and results of the security
              mechanisms' functional testing.  It shall include results of
              testing the effectiveness of the methods used to reduce covert
              channel bandwidths.

    3.3.4.4   Design Documentation

              Documentation shall be available that provides a description of
              the manufacturer's philosophy of protection and an explanation
              of how this philosophy is translated into the TCB.  The
              interfaces between the TCB modules shall be described.  A
              formal description of the security policy model enforced by the
              TCB shall be available and proven that it is sufficient to
              enforce the security policy.  The specific TCB protection
              mechanisms shall be identified and an explanation given to show
              that they satisfy the model.  The descriptive top-level
              specification (DTLS) shall be shown to be an accurate
              description of the TCB interface.  Documentation shall describe
              how the TCB implements the reference monitor concept and give
              an explanation why it is tamper resistant, cannot be bypassed,
              and is correctly implemented.  The TCB implementation (i.e., in
              hardware, firmware, and software) shall be informally shown to
              be consistent with the DTLS.  The elements of the DTLS shall be
              shown, using informal techniques, to correspond to the elements
              of the TCB.  Documentation shall describe how the TCB is
              structured to facilitate testing and to enforce least privilege.
              This documentation shall also present the results of the covert
              channel analysis and the tradeoffs involved in restricting the
              channels.  All auditable events that may be used in the
              exploitation of known covert storage channels shall be
              identified.  The bandwidths of known covert storage channels,
              the use of which is not detectable by the auditing mechanisms,
              shall be provided.  (See the Covert Channel Guideline section.)


                    4.0  DIVISION A:  VERIFIED PROTECTION

This division is characterized by the use of formal security verification
methods to assure that the mandatory and discretionary security controls
employed in the system can effectively protect classified or other sensitive
information stored or processed by the system.  Extensive documentation is
required to demonstrate that the TCB meets the security requirements in all
aspects of design, development and implementation.



4.1  CLASS (A1):  VERIFIED DESIGN

Systems in class (A1) are functionally equivalent to those in class (B3) in
that no additional architectural features or policy requirements are added.
The distinguishing feature of systems in this class is the analysis derived
from formal design specification and verification techniques and the resulting
high degree of assurance that the TCB is correctly implemented.  This
assurance is developmental in nature, starting with a formal model of the
security policy and a formal top-level specification (FTLS) of the design.
Independent of the particular specification language or verification system
used, there are five important criteria for class (A1) design verification:

         * A formal model of the security policy must be clearly
         identified and documented, including a mathematical proof
         that the model is consistent with its axioms and is
         sufficient to support the security policy.

         * An FTLS must be produced that includes abstract definitions
         of the functions the TCB performs and of the hardware and/or
         firmware mechanisms that are used to support separate
         execution domains.

         * The FTLS of the TCB must be shown to be consistent with the
         model by formal techniques where possible (i.e., where
         verification tools exist) and informal ones otherwise.

         * The TCB implementation (i.e., in hardware, firmware, and
         software) must be informally shown to be consistent with the
         FTLS.  The elements of the FTLS must be shown, using
         informal techniques, to correspond to the elements of the
         TCB.  The FTLS must express the unified protection mechanism
         required to satisfy the security policy, and it is the
         elements of this protection mechanism that are mapped to the
         elements of the TCB.

         * Formal analysis techniques must be used to identify and
         analyze covert channels.  Informal techniques may be used to
         identify covert timing channels.  The continued existence of
         identified covert channels in the system must be justified.

In keeping with the extensive design and development analysis of the TCB
required of systems in class (A1), more stringent configuration management is
required and procedures are established for securely distributing the system
to sites.  A system security administrator is supported.

The following are minimal requirements for systems assigned a class (A1)
rating:

4.1.1  Security Policy

    4.1.1.1   Discretionary Access Control

              The TCB shall define and control access between named users and
              named objects (e.g., files and programs) in the ADP system.
              The enforcement mechanism (e.g., access control lists) shall
              allow users to specify and control sharing of those objects,
              and shall provide controls to limit propagation of access
              rights.  The discretionary access control mechanism shall,
              either by explicit user action or by default, provide that
              objects are protected from unauthorized access.  These access
              controls shall be capable of specifying, for each named object,
              a list of named individuals and a list of groups of named
              individuals with their respective modes of access to that
              object.  Furthermore, for each such named object, it shall be
              possible to specify a list of named individuals and a list of
              groups of named individuals for which no access to the object is
              to be given.  Access permission to an object by users not
              already possessing access permission shall only be assigned by
              authorized users.

    4.1.1.2   Object Reuse

              All authorizations to the information contained within a
              storage object shall be revoked prior to initial assignment,
              allocation or reallocation to a subject from the TCB's pool
              of unused storage objects.  No information, including encrypted
              representations of information, produced by a prior subject's
              actions is to be available to any subject that obtains access
              to an object that has been released back to the system.

    4.1.1.3   Labels

              Sensitivity labels associated with each ADP system resource
              (e.g., subject, storage object, ROM) that is directly or
              indirectly accessible by subjects external to the TCB shall be
              maintained by the TCB.  These labels shall be used as the basis
              for mandatory access control decisions.  In order to import
              non-labeled data, the TCB shall request and receive from an
              authorized user the security level of the data, and all such
              actions shall be auditable by the TCB.

         4.1.1.3.1  Label Integrity

                    Sensitivity labels shall accurately represent security
                    levels of the specific subjects or objects with which
                    they are associated.  When exported by the TCB,
                    sensitivity labels shall accurately and unambiguously
                    represent the internal labels and shall be associated
                    with the information being exported.

         4.1.1.3.2  Exportation of Labeled Information

                    The TCB shall designate each communication channel and
                    I/O device as either single-level or multilevel.  Any
                    change in this designation shall be done manually and
                    shall be auditable by the TCB.  The TCB shall maintain
                    and be able to audit any change in the security level
                    or levels associated with a communication channel or
                    I/O device.

              4.1.1.3.2.1  Exportation to Multilevel Devices

                           When the TCB exports an object to a multilevel I/O
                           device, the sensitivity label associated with that
                           object shall also be exported and shall reside on
                           the same physical medium as the exported
                           information and shall be in the same form (i.e.,
                           machine-readable or human-readable form).  When
                           the TCB exports or imports an object over a
                           multilevel communication channel, the protocol
                           used on that channel shall provide for the
                           unambiguous pairing between the sensitivity labels
                           and the associated information that is sent or
                           received.

              4.1.1.3.2.2  Exportation to Single-Level Devices

                           Single-level I/O devices and single-level
                           communication channels are not required to
                           maintain the sensitivity labels of the information
                           they process.  However, the TCB shall include a
                           mechanism by which the TCB and an authorized user
                           reliably communicate to designate the single
                           security level of information imported or exported
                           via single-level communication channels or I/O
                           devices.

              4.1.1.3.2.3  Labeling Human-Readable Output

                           The ADP system administrator shall be able to
                           specify the printable label names associated with
                           exported sensitivity labels.  The TCB shall mark
                           the beginning and end of all human-readable, paged,
                           hardcopy output (e.g., line printer output) with
                           human-readable sensitivity labels that properly*
                           represent the sensitivity of the output.  The TCB
                           shall, by default, mark the top and bottom of each
                           page of human-readable, paged, hardcopy output
                           (e.g., line printer output) with human-readable
                           sensitivity labels that properly* represent the
                           overall sensitivity of the output or that
                           properly* represent the sensitivity of the
                           information on the page.  The TCB shall, by
                           default and in an appropriate manner, mark other
                           forms of human-readable output (e.g., maps,
                           graphics) with human-readable sensitivity labels
                           that properly* represent the sensitivity of the
                           output.  Any override of these marking defaults
                           shall be auditable by the TCB.

         4.1.1.3.3  Subject Sensitivity Labels

                    The TCB shall immediately notify a terminal user of each
                    change in the security level associated with that user
                    during an interactive session.  A terminal user shall be
                    able to query the TCB as desired for a display of the
                    subject's complete sensitivity label.

         4.1.1.3.4  Device Labels

                    The TCB shall support the assignment of minimum and
                    maximum security levels to all attached physical devices.
                    These security levels shall be used by the TCB to enforce
                    constraints imposed by the physical environments in which
                    the devices are located.

    4.1.1.4   Mandatory Access Control

              The TCB shall enforce a mandatory access control policy over
              all resources (i.e., subjects, storage objects, and I/O
              devices) that are directly or indirectly accessible by subjects
              external to the TCB.  These subjects and objects shall be
              assigned sensitivity labels that are a combination of
              hierarchical classification levels and non-hierarchical
              categories, and the labels shall be used as the basis for
              mandatory access control decisions.  The TCB shall be able to
              support two or more such security levels.  (See the Mandatory
              Access Control guidelines.) The following requirements shall
              hold for all accesses between all subjects external to the TCB
              and all objects directly or indirectly accessible by these
              subjects: A subject can read an object only if the hierarchical
              classification in the subject's security level is greater than
              or equal to the hierarchical classification in the object's
              security level and the non-hierarchical categories in the
              subject's security level include all the non-hierarchical
              categories in the object's security level.  A subject can write
______________________________
* The hierarchical classification component in human-readable sensitivity
labels shall be equal to the greatest hierarchical classification of any of the
information in the output that the labels refer to; the non-hierarchical
category component shall include all of the non-hierarchical categories of the
information in the output the labels refer to, but no other non-hierarchical
categories.

              an object only if the hierarchical classification in the
              subject's security level is less than or equal to the
              hierarchical classification in the object's security level and
              all the non-hierarchical categories in the subject's security
              level are included in the non- hierarchical categories in the
              object's security level.  Identification and authentication
              data shall be used by the TCB to authenticate the user's
              identity and to ensure that the security level and authoriza-
              tion of subjects external to the TCB that may be created to
              act on behalf of the individual user are dominated by the
              clearance and authorization of that user.

4.1.2  Accountability

    4.1.2.1   Identification and Authentication

              The TCB shall require users to identify themselves to it before
              beginning to perform any other actions that the TCB is expected
              to mediate.  Furthermore, the TCB shall maintain authentication
              data that includes information for verifying the identity of
              individual users (e.g., passwords) as well as information for
              determining the clearance and authorizations of individual
              users.  This data shall be used by the TCB to authenticate the
              user's identity and to ensure that the security level and
              authorizations of subjects external to the TCB that may be
              created to act on behalf of the individual user are dominated by
              the clearance and authorization of that user.  The TCB shall
              protect authentication data so that it cannot be accessed by any
              unauthorized user.  The TCB shall be able to enforce individual
              accountability by providing the capability to uniquely identify
              each individual ADP system user.  The TCB shall also provide the
              capability of associating this identity with all auditable
              actions taken by that individual.

         4.1.2.1.1  Trusted Path

                    The TCB shall support a trusted communication path
                    between itself and users for use when a positive TCB-to-
                    user connection is required (e.g., login, change subject
                    security level).  Communications via this trusted path
                    shall be activated exclusively by a user or the TCB and
                    shall be logically isolated and unmistakably
                    distinguishable from other paths.

    4.1.2.2   Audit

              The TCB shall be able to create, maintain, and protect from
              modification or unauthorized access or destruction an audit
              trail of accesses to the objects it protects.  The audit data
              shall be protected by the TCB so that read access to it is
              limited to those who are authorized for audit data.  The TCB
              shall be able to record the following types of events: use of
              identification and authentication mechanisms, introduction of
              objects into a user's address space (e.g., file open, program
              initiation), deletion of objects, and actions taken by computer
              operators and system administrators and/or system security
              officers, and other security relevant events.  The TCB shall
              also be able to audit any override of human-readable output
              markings.  For each recorded event, the audit record shall
              identify: date and time of the event, user, type of event, and
              success or failure of the event.  For identification/
              authentication events the origin of request (e.g., terminal ID)
              shall be included in the audit record.  For events that
              introduce an object into a user's address space and for object
              deletion events the audit record shall include the name of the
              object and the object's security level.  The ADP system
              administrator shall be able to selectively audit the actions of
              any one or more users based on individual identity and/or object
              security level.  The TCB shall be able to audit the identified
              events that may be used in the exploitation of covert storage
              channels.  The TCB shall contain a mechanism that is able to
              monitor the occurrence or accumulation of security auditable
              events that may indicate an imminent violation of security
              policy.  This mechanism shall be able to immediately notify the
              security administrator when thresholds are exceeded, and, if
              the occurrence or accumulation of these security relevant
              events continues, the system shall take the least disruptive
              action to terminate the event.

4.1.3  Assurance

    4.1.3.1   Operational Assurance

         4.1.3.1.1  System Architecture

                    The TCB shall maintain a domain for its own execution
                    that protects it from external interference or tampering
                    (e.g., by modification of its code or data structures).
                    The TCB shall maintain process isolation through the
                    provision of distinct address spaces under its control.
                    The TCB shall be internally structured into well-defined
                    largely independent modules.  It shall make effective use
                    of available hardware to separate those elements that are
                    protection-critical from those that are not.  The TCB
                    modules shall be designed such that the principle of
                    least privilege is enforced.  Features in hardware, such
                    as segmentation, shall be used to support logically
                    distinct storage objects with separate attributes (namely:
                    readable, writeable).  The user interface to the TCB
                    shall be completely defined and all elements of the TCB
                    identified.  The TCB shall be designed and structured to
                    use a complete, conceptually simple protection mechanism
                    with precisely defined semantics.  This mechanism shall
                    play a central role in enforcing the internal structuring
                    of the TCB and the system.  The TCB shall incorporate
                    significant use of layering, abstraction and data hiding.
                    Significant system engineering shall be directed toward
                    minimizing the complexity of the TCB and excluding from
                    the TCB modules that are not protection-critical.

         4.1.3.1.2  System Integrity

                    Hardware and/or software features shall be provided that
                    can be used to periodically validate the correct
                    operation of the on-site hardware and firmware elements
                    of the TCB.

         4.1.3.1.3  Covert Channel Analysis

                    The system developer shall conduct a thorough search for
                    covert channels and make a determination (either by
                    actual measurement or by engineering estimation) of the
                    maximum bandwidth of each identified channel.  (See the
                    Covert Channels Guideline section.)  Formal methods shall
                    be used in the analysis.

         4.1.3.1.4  Trusted Facility Management

                    The TCB shall support separate operator and administrator
                    functions.  The functions performed in the role of a
                    security administrator shall be identified.  The ADP
                    system administrative personnel shall only be able to
                    perform security administrator functions after taking a
                    distinct auditable action to assume the security
                    administrator role on the ADP system.  Non-security
                    functions that can be performed in the security
                    administration role shall be limited strictly to those
                    essential to performing the security role effectively.

         4.1.3.1.5  Trusted Recovery

                    Procedures and/or mechanisms shall be provided to assure
                    that, after an ADP system failure or other discontinuity,
                    recovery without a protection compromise is obtained.

    4.1.3.2   Life-Cycle Assurance

         4.1.3.2.1  Security Testing

                    The security mechanisms of the ADP system shall be tested
                    and found to work as claimed in the system documentation.
                    A team of individuals who thoroughly understand the
                    specific implementation of the TCB shall subject its
                    design documentation, source code, and object code to
                    thorough analysis and testing.  Their objectives shall
                    be: to uncover all design and implementation flaws that
                    would permit a subject external to the TCB to read,
                    change, or delete data normally denied under the
                    mandatory or discretionary security policy enforced by
                    the TCB; as well as to assure that no subject (without
                    authorization to do so) is able to cause the TCB to enter
                    a state such that it is unable to respond to
                    communications initiated by other users.  The TCB shall
                    be found resistant to penetration.  All discovered flaws
                    shall be corrected and the TCB retested to demonstrate
                    that they have been eliminated and that new flaws have
                    not been introduced.  Testing shall demonstrate that the
                    TCB implementation is consistent with the formal top-
                    level specification.  (See the Security Testing
                    Guidelines.)  No design flaws and no more than a few
                    correctable implementation flaws may be found during
                    testing and there shall be reasonable confidence that few
                    remain.  Manual or other mapping of the FTLS to the
                    source code may form a basis for penetration testing.

         4.1.3.2.2  Design Specification and Verification

                    A formal model of the security policy supported by the
                    TCB shall be maintained over the life-cycle of the ADP
                    system that is proven consistent with its axioms.  A
                    descriptive top-level specification (DTLS) of the TCB
                    shall be maintained that completely and accurately
                    describes the TCB in terms of exceptions, error messages,
                    and effects. A formal top-level specification (FTLS) of
                    the TCB shall be maintained that accurately describes the
                    TCB in terms of exceptions, error messages, and effects.
                    The DTLS and FTLS shall include those components of the
                    TCB that are implemented as hardware and/or firmware if
                    their properties are visible at the TCB interface.  The
                    FTLS shall be shown to be an accurate description of the
                    TCB interface.  A convincing argument shall be given that
                    the DTLS is consistent with the model and a combination of
                    formal and informal techniques shall be used to show that
                    the FTLS is consistent with the model.  This verification
                    evidence shall be consistent with that provided within the
                    state-of-the-art of the particular computer security
                    center-endorsed formal specification and verification
                    system used.  Manual or other mapping of the FTLS to the
                    TCB source code shall be performed to provide evidence of
                    correct implementation.

         4.1.3.2.3  Configuration Management

                    During the entire life-cycle, i.e., during the design,
                    development, and maintenance of the TCB, a configuration
                    management system shall be in place for all security-
                    relevant hardware, firmware, and software that maintains
                    control of changes to the formal model, the descriptive
                    and formal top-level specifications, other design data,
                    implementation documentation, source code, the running
                    version of the object code, and test fixtures and
                    documentation.  The configuration management system shall
                    assure a consistent mapping among all documentation and
                    code associated with the current version of the TCB.
                    Tools shall be provided for generation of a new version
                    of the TCB from source code.  Also available shall be
                    tools, maintained under strict configuration control, for
                    comparing a newly generated version with the previous TCB
                    version in order to ascertain that only the intended
                    changes have been made in the code that will actually be
                    used as the new version of the TCB.  A combination of
                    technical, physical, and procedural safeguards shall be
                    used to protect from unauthorized modification or
                    destruction the master copy or copies of all material
                    used to generate the TCB.

         4.1.3.2.4  Trusted Distribution

                    A trusted ADP system control and distribution facility
                    shall be provided for maintaining the integrity of the
                    mapping between the master data describing the current
                    version of the TCB and the on-site master copy of the
                    code for the current version.  Procedures (e.g., site
                    security acceptance testing) shall exist for assuring
                    that the TCb software, firmware, and hardware updates
                    distributed to a customer are exactly as specified by
                    the master copies.

4.1.4  Documentation

    4.1.4.1   Security Features User's Guide

              A single summary, chapter, or manual in user documentation
              shall describe the protection mechanisms provided by the TCB,
              guidelines on their use, and how they interact with one another.

    4.1.4.2   Trusted Facility Manual

              A manual addressed to the ADP system administrator shall
              present cautions about functions and privileges that should be
              controlled when running a secure facility.  The procedures for
              examining and maintaining the audit files as well as the
              detailed audit record structure for each type of audit event
              shall be given.  The manual shall describe the operator and
              administrator functions related to security, to include
              changing the security characteristics of a user.  It shall
              provide guidelines on the consistent and effective use of the
              protection features of the system, how they interact, how to
              securely generate a new TCB, and facility procedures, warnings,
              and privileges that need to be controlled in order to operate
              the facility in a secure manner.  The TCB modules that contain
              the reference validation mechanism shall be identified.  The
              procedures for secure generation of a new TCB from source after
              modification of any modules in the TCB shall be described.  It
              shall include the procedures to ensure that the system is
              initially started in a secure manner.  Procedures shall also be
              included to resume secure system operation after any lapse in
              system operation.

    4.1.4.3   Test Documentation

              The system developer shall provide to the evaluators a document
              that describes the test plan, test procedures that show how the
              security mechanisms were tested, and results of the security
              mechanisms' functional testing.  It shall include results of
              testing the effectiveness of the methods used to reduce covert
              channel bandwidths.  The results of the mapping between the
              formal top-level specification and the TCB source code shall be
              given.

    4.1.4.4   Design Documentation

              Documentation shall be available that provides a description of
              the manufacturer's philosophy of protection and an explanation
              of how this philosophy is translated into the TCB.  The
              interfaces between the TCB modules shall be described.  A
              formal description of the security policy model enforced by the
              TCB shall be available and proven that it is sufficient to
              enforce the security policy.  The specific TCB protection
              mechanisms shall be identified and an explanation given to show
              that they satisfy the model.  The descriptive top-level speci-
              fication (DTLS) shall be shown to be an accurate description of
              the TCB interface.  Documentation shall describe how the TCB
              implements the reference monitor concept and give an explana-
              tion why it is tamper resistant, cannot be bypassed, and
              is correctly implemented.  The TCB implementation (i.e., in
              hardware, firmware, and software) shall be informally shown to
              be consistent with the formal top-level specification (FTLS).
              The elements of the FTLS shall be shown, using informal
              techniques, to correspond to the elements of the TCB.
              Documentation shall describe how the TCB is structured to
              facilitate testing and to enforce least privilege.  This
              documentation shall also present the results of the covert
              channel analysis and the tradeoffs involved in restricting the
              channels.  All auditable events that may be used in the
              exploitation of known covert storage channels shall be
              identified.  The bandwidths of known covert storage channels,
              the use of which is not detectable by the auditing mechanisms,
              shall be provided.  (See the Covert Channel Guideline section.)
              Hardware, firmware, and software mechanisms not dealt with in
              the FTLS but strictly internal to the TCB (e.g., mapping
              registers, direct memory access I/O) shall be clearly described.


4.2  BEYOND CLASS (A1)

Most of the security enhancements envisioned for systems that will provide
features and assurance in addition to that already provided by class (Al)
systems are beyond current technology.  The discussion below is intended to
guide future work and is derived from research and development activities
already underway in both the public and private sectors.  As more and better
analysis techniques are developed, the requirements for these systems will
become more explicit.  In the future, use of formal verification will be
extended to the source level and covert timing channels will be more fully
addressed.  At this level the design environment will become important and
testing will be aided by analysis of the formal top-level specification.
Consideration will be given to the correctness of the tools used in TCB
development (e.g., compilers, assemblers, loaders) and to the correct
functioning of the hardware/firmware on which the TCB will run.  Areas to be
addressed by systems beyond class (A1) include:

          * System Architecture

          A demonstration (formal or otherwise) must be given showing
          that requirements of self-protection and completeness for
          reference monitors have been implemented in the TCB.

          * Security Testing

          Although beyond the current state-of-the-art, it is
          envisioned that some test-case generation will be done
          automatically from the formal top-level specification or
          formal lower-level specifications.

          * Formal Specification and Verification

          The TCB must be verified down to the source code level,
          using formal verification methods where feasible.  Formal
          verification of the source code of the security-relevant
          portions of an operating system has proven to be a difficult
          task.  Two important considerations are the choice of a
          high-level language whose semantics can be fully and
          formally expressed, and a careful mapping, through
          successive stages, of the abstract formal design to a
          formalization of the implementation in low-level
          specifications.    Experience has shown that only when the
          lowest level specifications closely correspond to the actual
          code can code proofs be successfully accomplished.

          * Trusted Design Environment

          The TCB must be designed in a trusted facility with only
          trusted (cleared) personnel.





                                  PART II:

                          RATIONALE AND GUIDELINES



            5.0  CONTROL OBJECTIVES FOR TRUSTED COMPUTER SYSTEMS

The criteria are divided within each class into groups of requirements.  These
groupings were developed to assure that three basic control objectives for
computer security are satisfied and not overlooked.  These control objectives
deal with:

                     * Security Policy
                     * Accountability
                     * Assurance

This section provides a discussion of these general control objectives and
their implication in terms of designing trusted systems.


5.1  A NEED FOR CONSENSUS

A major goal of the DoD Computer Security Center is to encourage the Computer
Industry to develop trusted computer systems and products, making them widely
available in the commercial market place.  Achievement of this goal will
require recognition and articulation by both the public and private sectors of
a need and demand for such products.

As described in the introduction to this document, efforts to define the
problems and develop solutions associated with processing nationally sensitive
information, as well as other sensitive data such as financial, medical, and
personnel information used by the National Security Establishment, have been
underway for a number of years.  The criteria, as described in Part I,
represent the culmination of these efforts and describe basic requirements for
building trusted computer systems.  To date, however, these systems have been
viewed by many as only satisfying National Security needs.  As long as this
perception continues the consensus needed to motivate manufacture of trusted
systems will be lacking.

The purpose of this section is to describe in detail the fundamental control
objectives.  These objectives lay the foundation for the requirements outlined
in the criteria.  The goal is to explain the foundations so that those outside
the National Security Establishment can assess their universality and, by
extension, the universal applicability of the criteria requirements to
processing all types of sensitive applications whether they be for National
Security or the private sector.


5.2  DEFINITION AND USEFULNESS

The term "control objective" refers to a statement of intent with respect to
control over some aspect of an organization's resources, or processes, or
both.  In terms of a computer system, control objectives provide a framework
for developing a strategy for fulfilling a set of security requirements for
any given system.  Developed in response to generic vulnerabilities, such as
the need to manage and handle sensitive data in order to prevent compromise,
or the need to provide accountability in order to detect fraud, control
objectives have been identified as a useful method of expressing security
goals.[3]

Examples of control objectives include the three basic design requirements for
implementing the reference monitor concept discussed in Section 6.  They are:

    * The reference validation mechanism must be tamperproof.

    * The reference validation mechanism must always be invoked.

    * The reference validation mechanism must be small enough to be
      subjected to analysis and tests, the completeness of which can
      be assured.[1]


5.3  CRITERIA CONTROL OBJECTIVES

The three basic control objectives of the criteria are concerned with security
policy, accountability, and assurance.  The remainder of this section provides
a discussion of these basic requirements.

5.3.1  Security Policy

      In the most general sense, computer security is concerned with
      controlling the way in which a computer can be used, i.e.,
      controlling how information processed by it can be accessed and
      manipulated.  However, at closer examination, computer security
      can refer to a number of areas.  Symptomatic of this, FIPS PUB 39,
      Glossary For Computer Systems Security, does not have a unique
      definition for computer security.[16]  Instead there are eleven
      separate definitions for security which include: ADP systems
      security, administrative security, data security, etc.  A common
      thread running through these definitions is the word "protection."
      Further declarations of protection requirements can be found in
      DoD Directive 5200.28 which describes an acceptable level of
      protection for classified data to be one that will "assure that
      systems which process, store, or use classified data and produce
      classified information will, with reasonable dependability,
      prevent: a. Deliberate or inadvertent access to classified
      material by unauthorized persons, and b.  Unauthorized
      manipulation of the computer and its associated peripheral
      devices."[8]

      In summary, protection requirements must be defined in terms of
      the perceived threats, risks, and goals of an organization.  This
      is often stated in terms of a security policy.  It has been
      pointed out in the literature that it is external laws, rules,
      regulations, etc.  that establish what access to information is to
      be permitted, independent of the use of a computer.  In particular,
      a given system can only be said to be secure with respect to its
      enforcement of some specific policy.[30]  Thus, the control
      objective for security policy is:

      SECURITY POLICY CONTROL OBJECTIVE

      A statement of intent with regard to control over access to and
      dissemination of information, to be known as the security policy
      must be precisely defined and implemented for each system that is
      used to process sensitive information.  The security policy must
      accurately reflect the laws, regulations, and general policies
      from which it is derived.

    5.3.1.1   Mandatory Security Policy

              Where a security policy is developed that is to be applied
              to control of classified or other specifically designated
              sensitive information, the policy must include detailed
              rules on how to handle that information throughout its
              life-cycle.  These rules are a function of the various
              sensitivity designations that the information can assume
              and the various forms of access supported by the system.
              Mandatory security refers to the enforcement of a set of
              access control rules that constrains a subject's access to
              information on the basis of a comparison of that
              individual's clearance/authorization to the information,
              the classification/sensitivity designation of the
              information, and the form of access being mediated.
              Mandatory policies either require or can be satisfied by
              systems that can enforce a partial ordering of
              designations, namely, the designations must form what is
              mathematically known as a "lattice."[5]

              A clear implication of the above is that the system must
              assure that the designations associated with sensitive data
              cannot be arbitrarily changed, since this could permit
              individuals who lack the appropriate authorization to
              access sensitive information.  Also implied is the
              requirement that the system control the flow of information
              so that data cannot be stored with lower sensitivity
              designations unless its "downgrading" has been authorized.
              The control objective is:

              MANDATORY SECURITY CONTROL OBJECTIVE

              Security policies defined for systems that are used to
              process classified or other specifically categorized
              sensitive information must include provisions for the
              enforcement of mandatory access control rules.  That is,
              they must include a set of rules for controlling access
              based directly on a comparison of the individual's
              clearance or authorization for the information and the
              classification or sensitivity designation of the
              information being sought, and indirectly on considerations
              of physical and other environmental factors of control.
              The mandatory access control rules must accurately reflect
              the laws, regulations, and general policies from which
              they are derived.

    5.3.1.2   Discretionary Security Policy

              Discretionary security is the principal type of access
              control available in computer systems today.  The basis of
              this kind of security is that an individual user, or
              program operating on his behalf, is allowed to specify
              explicitly the types of access other users may have to
              information under his control.  Discretionary security
              differs from mandatory security in that it implements an
              access control policy on the basis of an individual's
              need-to-know as opposed to mandatory controls which are
              driven by the classification or sensitivity designation of
              the information.

              Discretionary controls are not a replacement for mandatory
              controls.  In an environment in which information is
              classified (as in the DoD) discretionary security provides
              for a finer granularity of control within the overall
              constraints of the mandatory policy.  Access to classified
              information requires effective implementation of both types
              of controls as precondition to granting that access.  In
              general, no person may have access to classified
              information unless: (a) that person has been determined to
              be trustworthy, i.e., granted a personnel security
              clearance -- MANDATORY, and (b) access is necessary for the
              performance of official duties, i.e., determined to have a
              need-to-know -- DISCRETIONARY.  In other words,
              discretionary controls give individuals discretion to
              decide on which of the permissible accesses will actually
              be allowed to which users, consistent with overriding
              mandatory policy restrictions.  The control objective is:

              DISCRETIONARY SECURITY CONTROL OBJECTIVE

              Security policies defined for systems that are used to
              process classified or other sensitive information must
              include provisions for the enforcement of discretionary
              access control rules.  That is, they must include a
              consistent set of rules for controlling and limiting access
              based on identified individuals who have been determined to
              have a need-to-know for the information.

    5.3.1.3   Marking

              To implement a set of mechanisms that will put into effect
              a mandatory security policy, it is necessary that the
              system mark information with appropriate classification or
              sensitivity labels and maintain these markings as the
              information moves through the system.  Once information is
              unalterably and accurately marked, comparisons required by
              the mandatory access control rules can be accurately and
              consistently made.  An additional benefit of having the
              system maintain the classification or sensitivity label
              internally is the ability to automatically generate
              properly "labeled" output.  The labels, if accurately and
              integrally maintained by the system, remain accurate when
              output from the system.  The control objective is:

              MARKING CONTROL OBJECTIVE

              Systems that are designed to enforce a mandatory security
              policy must store and preserve the integrity of
              classification or other sensitivity labels for all
              information.  Labels exported from the system must be
              accurate representations of the corresponding internal
              sensitivity labels being exported.

5.3.2  Accountability

      The second basic control objective addresses one of the
      fundamental principles of security, i.e., individual
      accountability.  Individual accountability is the key to securing
      and controlling any system that processes information on behalf
      of individuals or groups of individuals.  A number of requirements
      must be met in order to satisfy this objective.

      The first requirement is for individual user identification.
      Second, there is a need for authentication of the identification.
      Identification is functionally dependent on authentication.
      Without authentication, user identification has no credibility.
      Without a credible identity, neither mandatory nor discretionary
      security policies can be properly invoked because there is no
      assurance that proper authorizations can be made.

      The third requirement is for dependable audit capabilities.  That
      is, a trusted computer system must provide authorized personnel
      with the ability to audit any action that can potentially cause
      access to, generation of, or effect the release of classified or
      sensitive information.  The audit data will be selectively
      acquired based on the auditing needs of a particular installation
      and/or application.  However, there must be sufficient granularity
      in the audit data to support tracing the auditable events to a
      specific individual who has taken the actions or on whose behalf
      the actions were taken.  The control objective is:

      ACCOUNTABILITY CONTROL OBJECTIVE

      Systems that are used to process or handle classified or other
      sensitive information must assure individual accountability
      whenever either a mandatory or discretionary security policy is
      invoked.  Furthermore, to assure accountability, the capability
      must exist for an authorized and competent agent to access and
      evaluate accountability information by a secure means, within a
      reasonable amount of time, and without undue difficulty.

5.3.3  Assurance

      The third basic control objective is concerned with guaranteeing
      or providing confidence that the security policy has been
      implemented correctly and that the protection-relevant elements of
      the system do, indeed, accurately mediate and enforce the intent
      of that policy.  By extension, assurance must include a guarantee
      that the trusted portion of the system works only as intended.  To
      accomplish these objectives, two types of assurance are needed.
      They are life-cycle assurance and operational assurance.

      Life-cycle assurance refers to steps taken by an organization to
      ensure that the system is designed, developed, and maintained
      using formalized and rigorous controls and standards.[17]
      Computer systems that process and store sensitive or classified
      information depend on the hardware and software to protect that
      information.  It follows that the hardware and software themselves
      must be protected against unauthorized changes that could cause
      protection mechanisms to malfunction or be bypassed completely.
      For this reason trusted computer systems must be carefully
      evaluated and tested during the design and development phases and
      reevaluated whenever changes are made that could affect the
      integrity of the protection mechanisms.  Only in this way can
      confidence be provided that the hardware and software
      interpretation of the security policy is maintained accurately
      and without distortion.

      While life-cycle assurance is concerned with procedures for
      managing system design, development, and maintenance; operational
      assurance focuses on features and system architecture used to
      ensure that the security policy is uncircumventably enforced
      during system operation.  That is, the security policy must be
      integrated into the hardware and software protection features of
      the system.  Examples of steps taken to provide this kind of
      confidence include: methods for testing the operational hardware
      and software for correct operation, isolation of protection-
      critical code, and the use of hardware and software to provide
      distinct domains.  The control objective is:

      ASSURANCE CONTROL OBJECTIVE

      Systems that are used to process or handle classified or other
      sensitive information must be designed to guarantee correct and
      accurate interpretation of the security policy and must not
      distort the intent of that policy.  Assurance must be provided
      that correct implementation and operation of the policy exists
      throughout the system's life-cycle.



                6.0  RATIONALE BEHIND THE EVALUATION CLASSES



6.1  THE REFERENCE MONITOR CONCEPT

In October of 1972, the Computer Security Technology Planning Study, conducted
by James P.  Anderson & Co., produced a report for the Electronic Systems
Division (ESD) of the United States Air Force.[1]  In that report, the concept
of "a reference monitor which enforces the authorized access relationships
between subjects and objects of a system" was introduced.  The reference
monitor concept was found to be an essential element of any system that would
provide multilevel secure computing facilities and controls.

The Anderson report went on to define the reference validation mechanism as
"an implementation of the reference monitor concept .  .  .  that validates
each reference to data or programs by any user (program) against a list of
authorized types of reference for that user." It then listed the three design
requirements that must be met by a reference validation mechanism:

    a. The reference validation mechanism must be tamper proof.

    b. The reference validation mechanism must always be invoked.

    c. The reference validation mechanism must be small enough to be
       subject to analysis and tests, the completeness of which can
       be assured."[1]

Extensive peer review and continuing research and development activities have
sustained the validity of the Anderson Committee's findings.  Early examples
of the reference validation mechanism were known as security kernels.  The
Anderson Report described the security kernel as "that combination of hardware
and software which implements the reference monitor concept."[1]  In this vein,
it will be noted that the security kernel must support the three reference
monitor requirements listed above.


6.2  A FORMAL SECURITY POLICY MODEL

Following the publication of the Anderson report, considerable research was
initiated into formal models of security policy requirements and of the
mechanisms that would implement and enforce those policy models as a security
kernel.  Prominent among these efforts was the ESD-sponsored development of
the Bell and LaPadula model, an abstract formal treatment of DoD security
policy.[2]  Using mathematics and set theory, the model precisely defines the
notion of secure state, fundamental modes of access, and the rules for
granting subjects specific modes of access to objects.  Finally, a theorem is
proven to demonstrate that the rules are security-preserving operations, so
that the application of any sequence of the rules to a system that is in a
secure state will result in the system entering a new state that is also
secure.  This theorem is known as the Basic Security Theorem.

A subject can act on behalf of a user or another subject.  The subject is
created as a surrogate for the cleared user and is assigned a formal security
level based on their classification.  The state transitions and invariants of
the formal policy model define the invariant relationships that must hold
between the clearance of the user, the formal security level of any process
that can act on the user's behalf, and the formal security level of the devices
and other objects to which any process can obtain specific modes of access.
The Bell and LaPadula model, for example, defines a relationship between formal
security levels of subjects and objects, now referenced as the "dominance
relation." From this definition, accesses permitted between subjects and
objects are explicitly defined for the fundamental modes of access, including
read-only access, read/write access, and write-only access.  The model defines
the Simple Security Condition to control granting a subject read access to a
specific object, and the *-Property (read "Star Property") to control granting
a subject write access to a specific object.  Both the Simple Security
Condition and the *-Property include mandatory security provisions based on the
dominance relation between formal security levels of subjects and objects the
clearance of the subject and the classification of the object.  The
Discretionary Security Property is also defined, and requires that a specific
subject be authorized for the particular mode of access required for the state
transition.  In its treatment of subjects (processes acting on behalf of a
user), the model distinguishes between trusted subjects (i.e., not constrained
within the model by the *-Property) and untrusted subjects (those that are
constrained by the *-Property).

From the Bell and LaPadula model there evolved a model of the method of proof
required to formally demonstrate that all arbitrary sequences of state
transitions are security-preserving.  It was also shown that the *- Property
is sufficient to prevent the compromise of information by Trojan Horse
attacks.


6.3  THE TRUSTED COMPUTING BASE

In order to encourage the widespread commercial availability of trusted
computer systems, these evaluation criteria have been designed to address
those systems in which a security kernel is specifically implemented as well
as those in which a security kernel has not been implemented.  The latter case
includes those systems in which objective (c) is not fully supported because
of the size or complexity of the reference validation mechanism.  For
convenience, these evaluation criteria use the term Trusted Computing Base to
refer to the reference validation mechanism, be it a security kernel,
front-end security filter, or the entire trusted computer system.

The heart of a trusted computer system is the Trusted Computing Base (TCB)
which contains all of the elements of the system responsible for supporting
the security policy and supporting the isolation of objects (code and data) on
which the protection is based.  The bounds of the TCB equate to the "security
perimeter" referenced in some computer security literature.  In the interest
of understandable and maintainable protection, a TCB should be as simple as
possible consistent with the functions it has to perform.  Thus, the TCB
includes hardware, firmware, and software critical to protection and must be
designed and implemented such that system elements excluded from it need not
be trusted to maintain protection.  Identification of the interface and
elements of the TCB along with their correct functionality therefore forms the
basis for evaluation.

For general-purpose systems, the TCB will include key elements of the
operating system and may include all of the operating system.  For embedded
systems, the security policy may deal with objects in a way that is meaningful
at the application level rather than at the operating system level.  Thus, the
protection policy may be enforced in the application software rather than in
the underlying operating system.  The TCB will necessarily include all those
portions of the operating system and application software essential to the
support of the policy.  Note that, as the amount of code in the TCB increases,
it becomes harder to be confident that the TCB enforces the reference monitor
requirements under all circumstances.


6.4  ASSURANCE

The third reference monitor design objective is currently interpreted as
meaning that the TCB "must be of sufficiently simple organization and
complexity to be subjected to analysis and tests, the completeness of which
can be assured."

Clearly, as the perceived degree of risk increases (e.g., the range of
sensitivity of the system's protected data, along with the range of clearances
held by the system's user population) for a particular system's operational
application and environment, so also must the assurances be increased to
substantiate the degree of trust that will be placed in the system.  The
hierarchy of requirements that are presented for the evaluation classes in the
trusted computer system evaluation criteria reflect the need for these
assurances.

As discussed in Section 5.3, the evaluation criteria uniformly require a
statement of the security policy that is enforced by each trusted computer
system.  In addition, it is required that a convincing argument be presented
that explains why the TCB satisfies the first two design requirements for a
reference monitor.  It is not expected that this argument will be entirely
formal.  This argument is required for each candidate system in order to
satisfy the assurance control objective.

The systems to which security enforcement mechanisms have been added, rather
than built-in as fundamental design objectives, are not readily amenable to
extensive analysis since they lack the requisite conceptual simplicity of a
security kernel.  This is because their TCB extends to cover much of the
entire system.  Hence, their degree of trustworthiness can best be ascertained
only by obtaining test results.  Since no test procedure for something as
complex as a computer system can be truly exhaustive, there is always the
possibility that a subsequent penetration attempt could succeed.  It is for
this reason that such systems must fall into the lower evaluation classes.

On the other hand, those systems that are designed and engineered to support
the TCB concepts are more amenable to analysis and structured testing.  Formal
methods can be used to analyze the correctness of their reference validation
mechanisms in enforcing the system's security policy.  Other methods,
including less-formal arguments, can be used in order to substantiate claims
for the completeness of their access mediation and their degree of
tamper-resistance.  More confidence can be placed in the results of this
analysis and in the thoroughness of the structured testing than can be placed
in the results for less methodically structured systems.  For these reasons,
it appears reasonable to conclude that these systems could be used in
higher-risk environments.  Successful implementations of such systems would be
placed in the higher evaluation classes.


6.5  THE CLASSES

It is highly desirable that there be only a small number of overall evaluation
classes.  Three major divisions have been identified in the evaluation
criteria with a fourth division reserved for those systems that have been
evaluated and found to offer unacceptable security protection.  Within each
major evaluation division, it was found that "intermediate" classes of trusted
system design and development could meaningfully be defined.  These
intermediate classes have been designated in the criteria because they
identify systems that:

    * are viewed to offer significantly better protection and assurance
      than would systems that satisfy the basic requirements for their
      evaluation class; and

    * there is reason to believe that systems in the intermediate
      evaluation classes could eventually be evolved such that they
      would satisfy the requirements for the next higher evaluation
      class.

Except within division A it is not anticipated that additional "intermediate"
evaluation classes satisfying the two characteristics described above will be
identified.

Distinctions in terms of system architecture, security policy enforcement, and
evidence of credibility between evaluation classes have been defined such that
the "jump" between evaluation classes would require a considerable investment
of effort on the part of implementors.  Correspondingly, there are expected to
be significant differentials of risk to which systems from the higher
evaluation classes will be exposed.


            7.0  THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN POLICY AND THE CRITERIA


Section 1 presents fundamental computer security requirements and Section 5
presents the control objectives for Trusted Computer Systems.  They are
general requirements, useful and necessary, for the development of all secure
systems.  However, when designing systems that will be used to process
classified or other sensitive information, functional requirements for meeting
the Control Objectives become more specific.  There is a large body of policy
laid down in the form of Regulations, Directives, Presidential Executive
Orders, and OMB Circulars that form the basis of the procedures for the
handling and processing of Federal information in general and classified
information specifically.  This section presents pertinent excerpts from these
policy statements and discusses their relationship to the Control Objectives.
These excerpts are examples to illustrate the relationship of the policies to
criteria and may not be complete.


7.1  ESTABLISHED FEDERAL POLICIES

A significant number of computer security policies and associated requirements
have been promulgated by Federal government elements.  The interested reader
is referred to reference [32] which analyzes the need for trusted systems in
the civilian agencies of the Federal government, as well as in state and local
governments and in the private sector.  This reference also details a number
of relevant Federal statutes, policies and requirements not treated further
below.

Security guidance for Federal automated information systems is provided by the
Office of Management and Budget.  Two specifically applicable Circulars have
been issued.  OMB Circular No.  A-71, Transmittal Memorandum No.  1, "Security
of Federal Automated Information Systems,"[26] directs each executive agency
to establish and maintain a computer security program.  It makes the head of
each executive branch, department and agency responsible "for assuring an
adequate level of security for all agency data whether processed in-house or
commercially.  This includes responsibility for the establishment of physical,
administrative and technical safeguards required to adequately protect
personal, proprietary or other sensitive data not subject to national security
regulations, as well as national security data."[26, para. 4 p. 2]

OMB Circular No.  A-123, "Internal Control Systems,"[27] issued to help
eliminate fraud, waste, and abuse in government programs requires: (a) agency
heads to issue internal control directives and assign responsibility, (b)
managers to review programs for vulnerability, and (c) managers to perform
periodic reviews to evaluate strengths and update controls.  Soon after
promulgation of OMB Circular A-123, the relationship of its internal control
requirements to building secure computer systems was recognized.[4] While not
stipulating computer controls specifically, the definition of Internal
Controls in A-123 makes it clear that computer systems are to be included:

    "Internal Controls - The plan of organization and all of the methods and
     measures adopted within an agency to safeguard its resources, assure the
     accuracy and reliability of its information, assure adherence to
     applicable laws, regulations and policies, and promote operational
     economy and efficiency."[27, sec. 4.C]

The matter of classified national security information processed by ADP
systems was one of the first areas given serious and extensive concern in
computer security.  The computer security policy documents promulgated as a
result contain generally more specific and structured requirements than most,
keyed in turn to an authoritative basis that itself provides a rather clearly
articulated and structured information security policy.  This basis, Executive
Order 12356, "National Security Information," sets forth requirements for the
classification, declassification and safeguarding of "national security
information" per se.[14]


7.2  DOD POLICIES

Within the Department of Defense, these broad requirements are implemented and
further specified primarily through two vehicles: 1) DoD Regulation 5200.1-R
[7], which applies to all components of the DoD as such, and 2) DoD 5220.22-M,
"Industrial Security Manual for Safeguarding Classified Information" [11],
which applies to contractors included within the Defense Industrial Security
Program.  Note that the latter transcends DoD as such, since it applies not
only to any contractors handling classified information for any DoD component,
but also to the contractors of eighteen other Federal organizations for whom
the Secretary of Defense is authorized to act in rendering industrial security
services.*

______________________________
* i.e., NASA, Commerce Department, GSA, State Department, Small Business
Administration, National Science Foundation, Treasury Department,
Transportation Department, Interior Department, Agriculture Department, U.S.
Information Agency, Labor Department, Environmental Protection Agency, Justice
Department, U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, Federal Emergency
Management Agency, Federal Reserve System, and U.S. General Accounting Office.

For ADP systems, these information security requirements are further amplified
and specified in: 1) DoD Directive 5200.28 [8] and DoD Manual 5200.28-M [9],
for DoD components; and 2) Section XIII of DoD 5220.22-M [11] for contractors.
DoD Directive 5200.28, "Security Requirements for Automatic Data Processing
(ADP) Systems," stipulates: "Classified material contained in an ADP system
shall be safeguarded by the continuous employment of protective features in
the system's hardware and software design and configuration .  .  .  ."[8,
sec.  IV] Furthermore, it is required that ADP systems that "process, store,
or use classified data and produce classified information will, with
reasonable dependability, prevent:

    a.  Deliberate or inadvertent access to classified material by
        unauthorized persons, and

    b.  Unauthorized manipulation of the computer and its associated
        peripheral devices."[8, sec. I B.3]

Requirements equivalent to these appear within DoD 5200.28-M [9] and in DoD
5220.22-M [11].

DoD Directove 5200.28 provides the security requirements for ADP systems.  For
some types of information, such as Sensitive Compartmented Information (SCI),
DoD Directive 5200.28 states that other minimum security requirements also
apply.  These minima are found in DCID l/l6 (new reference number 5) which is
implemented in DIAM 50-4 (new reference number 6) for DoD and DoD contractor
ADP systems.

From requirements imposed by these regulations, directives and circulars, the
three components of the Security Policy Control Objective, i.e., Mandatory and
Discretionary Security and Marking, as well as the Accountability and
Assurance Control Objectives, can be functionally defined for DoD
applications.  The following discussion provides further specificity in Policy
for these Control Objectives.


7.3  CRITERIA CONTROL OBJECTIVE FOR SECURITY POLICY

7.3.1  Marking

      The control objective for marking is: "Systems that are designed
      to enforce a mandatory security policy must store and preserve the
      integrity of classification or other sensitivity labels for all
      information.  Labels exported from the system must be accurate
      representations of the corresonding internal sensitivity labels
      being exported."

      DoD 5220.22-M, "Industrial Security Manual for Safeguarding
      Classified Information," explains in paragraph 11 the reasons for
      marking information:

           "a.  General.  Classification designation by physical
           marking, notation or other means serves to warn and to
           inform the holder what degree of protection against
           unauthorized disclosure is reqired for that information
           or material."  (14)

      Marking requirements are given in a number of policy statements.

      Executive Order 12356 (Sections 1.5.a and 1.5.a.1) requires that
      classification markings "shall be shown on the face of all
      classified documents, or clearly associated with other forms of
      classified information in a manner appropriate to the medium
      involved."[14]

      DoD Regulation 5200.1-R (Section 1-500) requires that: ".  .  .
      information or material that requires protection against
      unauthorized disclosure in the interest of national security shall
      be classified in one of three designations, namely: 'Top Secret,'
      'Secret' or 'Confidential.'"[7] (By extension, for use in computer
      processing, the unofficial designation "Unclassified" is used to
      indicate information that does not fall under one of the other
      three designations of classified information.)

      DoD Regulation 5200.1-R (Section 4-304b) requires that: "ADP
      systems and word processing systems employing such media shall
      provide for internal classification marking to assure that
      classified information contained therein that is reproduced or
      generated, will bear applicable classification and associated
      markings." (This regulation provides for the exemption of certain
      existing systems where "internal classification and applicable
      associated markings cannot be implemented without extensive system
      modifications."[7]  However, it is clear that future DoD ADP
      systems must be able to provide applicable and accurate labels for
      classified and other sensitive information.)

      DoD Manual 5200.28-M (Section IV, 4-305d) requires the following:
      "Security Labels - All classified material accessible by or within
      the ADP system shall be identified as to its security
      classification and access or dissemination limitations, and all
      output of the ADP system shall be appropriately marked."[9]

7.3.2  Mandatory Security

      The control objective for mandatory security is: "Security
      policies defined for systems that are used to process classified
      or other specifically categorized sensitive information must
      include provisions for the enforcement of mandatory access control
      rules.  That is, they must include a set of rules for controlling
      access based directly on a comparison of the individual's
      clearance or authorization for the information and the
      classification or sensitivity designation of the information being
      sought, and indirectly on considerations of physical and other
      environmental factors of control.  The mandatory access control
      rules must accurately reflect the laws, regulations, and general
      policies from which they are derived."

      There are a number of policy statements that are related to
      mandatory security.

      Executive Order 12356 (Section 4.1.a) states that "a person is
      eligible for access to classified information provided that a
      determination of trustworthiness has been made by agency heads or
      designated officials and provided that such access is essential
      to the accomplishment of lawful and authorized Government
      purposes."[14]

      DoD Regulation 5200.1-R (Chapter I, Section 3) defines a Special
      Access Program as "any program imposing 'need-to-know' or access
      controls beyond those normally provided for access to
      Confidential, Secret, or Top Secret information.  Such a program
      includes, but is not limited to, special clearance, adjudication,
      or investigative requirements, special designation of officials
      authorized to determine 'need-to-know', or special lists of persons
      determined to have a 'need-to- know.'"[7, para.  1-328] This
      passage distinguishes between a 'discretionary' determination of
      need-to-know and formal need-to-know which is implemented through
      Special Access Programs.  DoD Regulation 5200.1-R, paragraph 7-100
      describes general requirements for trustworthiness (clearance) and
      need-to-know, and states that the individual with possession,
      knowledge or control of classified information has final
      responsibility for determining if conditions for access have been
      met.  This regulation further stipulates that "no one has a right
      to have access to classified information solely by virtue of rank
      or position." [7, para. 7-100])

      DoD Manual 5200.28-M (Section II 2-100) states that, "Personnel
      who develop, test (debug), maintain, or use programs which are
      classified or which will be used to access or develop classified
      material shall have a personnel security clearance and an access
      authorization (need-to-know), as appropriate for the highest
      classified and most restrictive category of classified material
      which they will access under system constraints."[9]

      DoD Manual 5220.22-M (Paragraph 3.a) defines access as "the
      ability and opportunity to obtain knowledge of classified
      information.  An individual, in fact, may have access to
      classified information by being in a place where such information
      is kept, if the security measures which are in force do not
      prevent him from gaining knowledge of the classified
      information."[11]

      The above mentioned Executive Order, Manual, Directives and
      Regulations clearly imply that a trusted computer system must
      assure that the classification labels associated with sensitive
      data cannot be arbitrarily changed, since this could permit
      individuals who lack the appropriate clearance to access
      classified information.  Also implied is the requirement that a
      trusted computer system must control the flow of information so
      that data from a higher classification cannot be placed in a
      storage object of lower classification unless its "downgrading"
      has been authorized.

7.3.3  Discretionary Security

      The term discretionary security refers to a computer system's
      ability to control information on an individual basis.  It stems
      from the fact that even though an individual has all the formal
      clearances for access to specific classified information, each
      individual's access to information must be based on a demonstrated
      need-to-know.  Because of this, it must be made clear that this
      requirement is not discretionary in a "take it or leave it" sense.
      The directives and regulations are explicit in stating that the
      need-to-know test must be satisfied before access can be granted
      to the classified information.  The control objective for
      discretionary security is: "Security policies defined for systems
      that are used to process classified or other sensitive information
      must include provisions for the enforcement of discretionary
      access control rules.  That is, they must include a consistent set
      of rules for controlling and limiting access based on identified
      individuals who have been determined to have a need-to-know for the
      information."

      DoD Regulation 5200.1-R (Paragraph 7-100) In addition to excerpts
      already provided that touch on need-to- know, this section of the
      regulation stresses the need- to-know principle when it states "no
      person may have access to classified information unless .  .  .
      access is necessary for the performance of official duties."[7]

      Also, DoD Manual 5220.22-M (Section III 20.a) states that "an
      individual shall be permitted to have access to classified
      information only . . . when the contractor determines that access
      is necessary in the performance of tasks or services essential to
      the fulfillment of a contract or program, i.e., the individual has
      a need-to-know."[11]


7.4  CRITERIA CONTROL OBJECTIVE FOR ACCOUNTABILITY

The control objective for accountability is: "Systems that are used to process
or handle classified or other sensitive information must assure individual
accountability whenever either a mandatory or discretionary security policy is
invoked.  Furthermore, to assure accountability the capability must exist for
an authorized and competent agent to access and evaluate accountability
information by a secure means, within a reasonable amount of time, and without
undue difficulty."

This control objective is supported by the following citations:

    DoD Directive 5200.28 (VI.A.1) states: "Each user's identity shall be
    positively established, and his access to the system, and his activity in
    the system (including material accessed and actions taken) controlled and
    open to scrutiny."[8]

    DoD Manual 5200.28-M (Section V 5-100) states: "An audit log or file
    (manual, machine, or a combination of both) shall be maintained as a
    history of the use of the ADP System to permit a regular security review
    of system activity.  (e.g., The log should record security related
    transactions, including each access to a classified file and the nature
    of the access, e.g., logins, production of accountable classified
    outputs, and creation of new classified files.  Each classified file
    successfully accessed [regardless of the number of individual references]
    during each 'job' or 'interactive session' should also be recorded in the
    audit log.  Much of the material in this log may also be required to
    assure that the system preserves information entrusted to it.)"[9]

    DoD Manual 5200.28-M (Section IV 4-305f) states: "Where needed to assure
    control of access and individual accountability, each user or specific
    group of users shall be identified to the ADP System by appropriate
    administrative or hardware/software measures.  Such identification
    measures must be in sufficient detail to enable the ADP System to provide
    the user only that material which he is authorized."[9]

    DoD Manual 5200.28-M (Section I 1-102b) states:

    "Component's Designated Approving Authorities, or their designees
     for this purpose .  .  .  will assure:

                .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .

          (4) Maintenance of documentation on operating systems (O/S)
          and all modifications thereto, and its retention for a
          sufficient period of time to enable tracing of security-
          related defects to their point of origin or inclusion in the
          system.

                .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .

          (6) Establishment of procedures to discover, recover,
          handle, and dispose of classified material improperly
          disclosed through system malfunction or personnel action.

          (7) Proper disposition and correction of security
          deficiencies in all approved ADP Systems, and the effective
          use and disposition of system housekeeping or audit records,
          records of security violations or security-related system
          malfunctions, and records of tests of the security features
          of an ADP System."[9]

    DoD Manual 5220.22-M (Section XIII 111) states: "Audit Trails

          a. The general security requirement for any ADP system audit
          trail is that it provide a documented history of the use of
          the system.  An approved audit trail will permit review of
          classified system activity and will provide a detailed
          activity record to facilitate reconstruction of events to
          determine the magnitude of compromise (if any) should a
          security malfunction occur.  To fulfill this basic
          requirement, audit trail systems, manual, automated or a
          combination of both must document significant events
          occurring in the following areas of concern: (i) preparation
          of input data and dissemination of output data (i.e.,
          reportable interactivity between users and system support
          personnel), (ii) activity involved within an ADP environment
          (e.g., ADP support personnel modification of security and
          related controls), and (iii) internal machine activity.

          b. The audit trail for an ADP system approved to process
          classified information must be based on the above three
          areas and may be stylized to the particular system.  All
          systems approved for classified processing should contain
          most if not all of the audit trail records listed below. The
          contractor's SPP documentation must identify and describe
          those applicable:

                     1. Personnel access;

                     2. Unauthorized and surreptitious entry into the
          central computer facility or remote terminal areas;

                     3. Start/stop time of classified processing indicating
          pertinent systems security initiation and termination events
          (e.g., upgrading/downgrading actions pursuant to paragraph
          107);

                     4. All functions initiated by ADP system console
          operators;

                     5. Disconnects of remote terminals and peripheral
          devices (paragraph 107c);

                     6. Log-on and log-off user activity;

                     7. Unauthorized attempts to access files or programs,
          as well as all open, close, create, and file destroy
          actions;

                     8. Program aborts and anomalies including
          identification information (i.e., user/program name, time
          and location of incident, etc.);

                     9. System hardware additions, deletions and maintenance
          actions;

                     10. Generations and modifications affecting the
          security features of the system software.

          c. The ADP system security supervisor or designee shall
          review the audit trail logs at least weekly to assure that
          all pertinent activity is properly recorded and that
          appropriate action has been taken to correct any anomaly.
          The majority of ADP systems in use today can develop audit
          trail systems in accord with the above; however, special
          systems such as weapons, communications, communications
          security, and tactical data exchange and display systems,
          may not be able to comply with all aspects of the above and
          may require individualized consideration by the cognizant
          security office.

          d. Audit trail records shall be retained for a period of one
          inspection cycle."[11]


7.5  CRITERIA CONTROL OBJECTIVE FOR ASSURANCE

The control objective for assurance is: "Systems that are used to process or
handle classified or other sensitive information must be designed to guarantee
correct and accurate interpretation of the security policy and must not distort
the intent of that policy.  Assurance must be provided that correct
implementation and operation of the policy exists throughout the system's
life-cycle."

A basis for this objective can be found in the following sections of DoD
Directive 5200.28:

    DoD Directive 5200.28 (IV.B.1) stipulates: "Generally, security of an ADP
    system is most effective and economical if the system is designed
    originally to provide it.  Each Department of Defense Component
    undertaking design of an ADP system which is expected to process, store,
    use, or produce classified material shall:  From the beginning of the
    design process, consider the security policies, concepts, and measures
    prescribed in this Directive."[8]

    DoD Directive 5200.28 (IV.C.5.a) states: "Provision may be made to permit
    adjustment of ADP system area controls to the level of protection
    required for the classification category and type(s) of material actually
    being handled by the system, provided change procedures are developed and
    implemented which will prevent both the unauthorized access to classified
    material handled by the system and the unauthorized manipulation of the
    system and its components.  Particular attention shall be given to the
    continuous protection of automated system security measures, techniques
    and procedures when the personnel security clearance level of users
    having access to the system changes."[8]

    DoD Directive 5200.28 (VI.A.2) states: "Environmental Control.  The ADP
    System shall be externally protected to minimize the likelihood of
    unauthorized access to system entry points, access to classified
    information in the system, or damage to the system."[8]

    DoD Manual 5200.28-M (Section I 1-102b) states:

    "Component's Designated Approving Authorities, or their designees
    for this purpose .  .  .  will assure:

                 .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .

             (5) Supervision, monitoring, and testing, as appropriate, of
         changes in an approved ADP System which could affect the
         security features of the system, so that a secure system is
         maintained.

                 .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .

             (7) Proper disposition and correction of security
         deficiencies in all approved ADP Systems, and the effective
         use and disposition of system housekeeping or audit records,
         records of security violations or security-related system
         malfunctions, and records of tests of the security features
         of an ADP System.

             (8) Conduct of competent system ST&E, timely review of
         system ST&E reports, and correction of deficiencies needed
         to support conditional or final approval or disapproval of
         an ADP System for the processing of classified information.

             (9) Establishment, where appropriate, of a central ST&E
         coordination point for the maintenance of records of
         selected techniques, procedures, standards, and tests used
         in the testing and evaluation of security features of ADP
         Systems which may be suitable for validation and use by
         other Department of Defense Components."[9]

    DoD Manual 5220.22-M (Section XIII 103a) requires: "the initial approval,
    in writing, of the cognizant security office prior to processing any
    classified information in an ADP system.  This section requires
    reapproval by the cognizant security office for major system
    modifications made subsequent to initial approval.  Reapprovals will be
    required because of (i) major changes in personnel access requirements,
    (ii) relocation or structural modification of the central computer
    facility, (iii) additions, deletions or changes to main frame, storage or
    input/output devices, (iv) system software changes impacting security
    protection features, (v) any change in clearance, declassification, audit
    trail or hardware/software maintenance procedures, and (vi) other system
    changes as determined by the cognizant security office."[11]

    A major component of assurance, life-cycle assurance, as described in DoD
    Directive 7920.l, is concerned with testing ADP systems both in the
    development phase as well as during operation (17).  DoD Directive 5215.1
    (Section F.2.C.(2)) requires "evaluations of selected industry and
    government-developed trusted computer systems against these criteria."[10]


                     8.0  A GUIDELINE ON COVERT CHANNELS


A covert channel is any communication channel that can be exploited by a
process to transfer information in a manner that violates the system's
security policy.  There are two types of covert channels: storage channels and
timing channels.  Covert storage channels include all vehicles that would
allow the direct or indirect writing of a storage location by one process and
the direct or indirect reading of it by another.  Covert timing channels
include all vehicles that would allow one process to signal information to
another process by modulating its own use of system resources in such a way
that the change in response time observed by the second process would provide
information.

From a security perspective, covert channels with low bandwidths represent a
lower threat than those with high bandwidths.  However, for many types of
covert channels, techniques used to reduce the bandwidth below a certain rate
(which depends on the specific channel mechanism and the system architecture)
also have the effect of degrading the performance provided to legitimate
system users.  Hence, a trade-off between system performance and covert
channel bandwidth must be made.  Because of the threat of compromise that
would be present in any multilevel computer system containing classified or
sensitive information, such systems should not contain covert channels with
high bandwidths.  This guideline is intended to provide system developers with
an idea of just how high a "high" covert channel bandwidth is.

A covert channel bandwidth that exceeds a rate of one hundred (100) bits per
second is considered "high" because 100 bits per second is the approximate
rate at which many computer terminals are run.  It does not seem appropriate
to call a computer system "secure" if information can be compromised at a rate
equal to the normal output rate of some commonly used device.

In any multilevel computer system there are a number of relatively
low-bandwidth covert channels whose existence is deeply ingrained in the
system design.  Faced with the large potential cost of reducing the bandwidths
of such covert channels, it is felt that those with maximum bandwidths of less
than one (1) bit per second are acceptable in most application environments.
Though maintaining acceptable performance in some systems may make it
impractical to eliminate all covert channels with bandwidths of 1 or more bits
per second, it is possible to audit their use without adversely affecting
system performance.  This audit capability provides the system administration
with a means of detecting -- and procedurally correcting -- significant
compromise.  Therefore, a Trusted Computing Base should provide, wherever
possible, the capability to audit the use of covert channel mechanisms with
bandwidths that may exceed a rate of one (1) bit in ten (10) seconds.

The covert channel problem has been addressed by a number of authors.  The
interested reader is referred to references [5], [6], [19], [21], [22], [23],
and [29].


      9.0  A GUIDELINE ON CONFIGURING MANDATORY ACCESS CONTROL FEATURES


The Mandatory Access Control requirement includes a capability to support an
unspecified number of hierarchical classifications and an unspecified number
of non-hierarchical categories at each hierarchical level.  To encourage
consistency and portability in the design and development of the National
Security Establishment trusted computer systems, it is desirable for all such
systems to be able to support a minimum number of levels and categories.  The
following suggestions are provided for this purpose:

    * The number of hierarchical classifications should be greater than or
      equal to sixteen (16).

    * The number of non-hierarchical categories should be greater than or
      equal to sixty-four (64).



                    10.0  A GUIDELINE ON SECURITY TESTING


These guidelines are provided to give an indication of the extent and
sophistication of testing undertaken by the DoD Computer Security Center
during the Formal Product Evaluation process.  Organizations wishing to use
"Department of Defense Trusted Computer System Evaluation Criteria" for
performing their own evaluations may find this section useful for planning
purposes.

As in Part I, highlighting is used to indicate changes in the guidelines from
the next lower division.


10.1  TESTING FOR DIVISION C

10.1.1  Personnel

       The security testing team shall consist of at least two
       individuals with bachelor degrees in Computer Science or the
       equivalent.  Team members shall be able to follow test plans
       prepared by the system developer and suggest additions, shall
       be familiar with the "flaw hypothesis" or equivalent security
       testing methodology, and shall have assembly level programming
       experience.  Before testing begins, the team members shall have
       functional knowledge of, and shall have completed the system
       developer's internals course for, the system being evaluated.

10.1.2  Testing

       The team shall have "hands-on" involvement in an independent run
       of the tests used by the system developer.  The team shall
       independently design and implement at least five system-specific
       tests in an attempt to circumvent the security mechanisms of the
       system.  The elapsed time devoted to testing shall be at least
       one month and need not exceed three months.  There shall be no
       fewer than twenty hands-on hours spent carrying out system
       developer-defined tests and test team-defined tests.


10.2  TESTING FOR DIVISION B

10.2.1  Personnel

       The security testing team shall consist of at least two
       individuals with bachelor degrees in Computer Science or the
       equivalent and at least one individual with a master's degree in
       Computer Science or equivalent.  Team members shall be able to
       follow test plans prepared by the system developer and suggest
       additions, shall be conversant with the "flaw hypothesis" or
       equivalent security testing methodology, shall be fluent in the
       TCB implementation language(s), and shall have assembly level
       programming experience.  Before testing begins, the team members
       shall have functional knowledge of, and shall have completed the
       system developer's internals course for, the system being
       evaluated.  At least one team member shall have previously
       completed a security test on another system.

10.2.2  Testing

       The team shall have "hands-on" involvement in an independent run
       of the test package used by the system developer to test
       security-relevant hardware and software.  The team shall
       independently design and implement at least fifteen system-
       specific tests in an attempt to circumvent the security
       mechanisms of the system.  The elapsed time devoted to testing
       shall be at least two months and need not exceed four months.
       There shall be no fewer than thirty hands-on hours per team
       member spent carrying out system developer-defined tests and
       test team-defined tests.


10.3  TESTING FOR DIVISION A

10.3.1  Personnel

       The security testing team shall consist of at least one
       individual with a bachelor's degree in Computer Science or the
       equivalent and at least two individuals with masters' degrees in
       Computer Science or equivalent.  Team members shall be able to
       follow test plans prepared by the system developer and suggest
       additions, shall be conversant with the "flaw hypothesis" or
       equivalent security testing methodology, shall be fluent in the
       TCB implementation language(s), and shall have assembly level
       programming experience.  Before testing begins, the team members
       shall have functional knowledge of, and shall have completed the
       system developer's internals course for, the system being
       evaluated.  At least one team member shall be familiar enough
       with the system hardware to understand the maintenance diagnostic
       programs and supporting hardware documentation.  At least two
       team members shall have previously completed a security test on
       another system.  At least one team member shall have
       demonstrated system level programming competence on the system
       under test to a level of complexity equivalent to adding a device
       driver to the system.

10.3.2  Testing

       The team shall have "hands-on" involvement in an independent run
       of the test package used by the system developer to test
       security-relevant hardware and software.  The team shall
       independently design and implement at least twenty-five system-
       specific tests in an attempt to circumvent the security
       mechanisms of the system.  The elapsed time devoted to testing
       shall be at least three months and need not exceed six months.
       There shall be no fewer than fifty hands-on hours per team
       member spent carrying out system developer-defined tests and
       test team-defined tests.


                                 APPENDIX A

                    COMMERCIAL PRODUCE EVALUATION PROCESS


"Department of Defense Trusted Computer System Evaluation Criteria" forms the
basis upon which the Computer Security Center will carry out the commercial
computer security evaluation process.  This process is focused on commercially
produced and supported general-purpose operating system products that meet the
needs of government departments and agencies.  The formal evaluation is aimed
at "off-the-shelf" commercially supported products and is completely divorced
from any consideration of overall system performance, potential applications,
or particular processing environments.  The evaluation provides a key input to
a computer system security approval/accreditation.  However, it does not
constitute a complete computer system security evaluation.  A complete study
(e.g., as in reference [18]) must consider additional factors dealing with the
system in its unique environment, such as it's proposed security mode of
operation, specific users, applications, data sensitivity, physical and
personnel security, administrative and procedural security, TEMPEST, and
communications security.

The product evaluation process carried out by the Computer Security Center has
three distinct elements:

    * Preliminary Product Evaluation - An informal dialogue between a vendor
      and the Center in which technical information is exchanged to create a
      common understanding of the vendor's product, the criteria, and the
      rating that may be expected to result from a formal product evaluation.

    * Formal Product Evaluation - A formal evaluation, by the Center, of a
      product that is available to the DoD, and that results in that product
      and its assigned rating being placed on the Evaluated Products List.

    * Evaluated Products List - A list of products that have been subjected
      to formal product evaluation and their assigned ratings.


Preliminary Product Evaluation

Since it is generally very difficult to add effective security measures late
in a product's life cycle, the Center is interested in working with system
vendors in the early stages of product design.  A preliminary product
evaluation allows the Center to consult with computer vendors on computer
security issues found in products that have not yet been formally announced.

A preliminary evaluation is typically initiated by computer system vendors who
are planning new computer products that feature security or major
security-related upgrades to existing products.  After an initial meeting
between the vendor and the Center, appropriate non-disclosure agreements are
executed that require the Center to maintain the confidentiality of any
proprietary information disclosed to it.  Technical exchange meetings follow
in which the vendor provides details about the proposed product (particularly
its internal designs and goals) and the Center provides expert feedback to the
vendor on potential computer security strengths and weaknesses of the vendor's
design choices, as well as relevant interpretation of the criteria.  The
preliminary evaluation is typically terminated when the product is completed
and ready for field release by the vendor.  Upon termination, the Center
prepares a wrap-up report for the vendor and for internal distribution within
the Center.  Those reports containing proprietary information are not
available to the public.

During preliminary evaluation, the vendor is under no obligation to actually
complete or market the potential product.  The Center is, likewise, not
committed to conduct a formal product evaluation.  A preliminary evaluation
may be terminated by either the Center or the vendor when one notifies the
other, in writing, that it is no longer advantageous to continue the
evaluation.


Formal Product Evaluation

The formal product evaluation provides a key input to certification of a
computer system for use in National Security Establishment applications and is
the sole basis for a product being placed on the Evaluated Products List.

A formal product evaluation begins with a request by a vendor for the Center
to evaluate a product for which the product itself and accompanying
documentation needed to meet the requirements defined by this publication are
complete.  Non-disclosure agreements are executed and a formal product
evaluation team is formed by the Center.  An initial meeting is then held with
the vendor to work out the schedule for the formal evaluation.  Since testing
of the implemented product forms an important part of the evaluation process,
access by the evaluation team to a working version of the system is negotiated
with the vendor.  Additional support required from the vendor includes
complete design documentation, source code, and access to vendor personnel who
can answer detailed questions about specific portions of the product.  The
evaluation team tests the product against each requirement, making any
necessary interpretations of the criteria with respect to the product being
evaluated.

The evaluation team writes a final report on their findings about the system.
The report is publicly available (containing no proprietary or sensitive
information) and contains the overall class rating assigned to the system and
the details of the evalution team's findings when comparing the product against
the evaluation criteria.  Detailed information concerning vulnerabilities found
by the evaluation team is furnished to the system developers and designers as
each is found so that the vendor has a chance to eliminate as many of them as
possible prior to the completion of the Formal Product Evaluation.
Vulnerability analyses and other proprietary or sensitive information are
controlled within the Center through the Vulnerability Reporting Program and
are distributed only within the U.S. Government on a strict need-to-know and
non-disclosure basis, and to the vendor.

                                 APPENDIX B

                  SUMMARY OF EVALUATION CRITERIA DIVISIONS


The divisions of systems recognized under the trusted computer system
evaluation criteria are as follows.  Each division represents a major
improvement in the overall confidence one can place in the system to protect
classified and other sensitive information.

Division (D):  Minimal Protection

This division contains only one class.  It is reserved for those systems that
have been evaluated but that fail to meet the requirements for a higher
evaluation class.

Division (C):  Discretionary Protection

Classes in this division provide for discretionary (need-to-know) protection
and, through the inclusion of audit capabilities, for accountability of
subjects and the actions they initiate.

Division (B):  Mandatory Protection

The notion of a TCB that preserves the integrity of sensitivity labels and
uses them to enforce a set of mandatory access control rules is a major
requirement in this division.  Systems in this division must carry the
sensitivity labels with major data structures in the system.  The system
developer also provides the security policy model on which the TCB is based
and furnishes a specification of the TCB.  Evidence must be provided to
demonstrate that the reference monitor concept has been implemented.

Division (A):  Verified Protection

This division is characterized by the use of formal security verification
methods to assure that the mandatory and discretionary security controls
employed in the system can effectively protect classified or other sensitive
information stored or processed by the system.  Extensive documentation is
required to demonstrate that the TCB meets the security requirements in all
aspects of design, development and implementation.



                                 APPENDIX C

                   SUMMARY OF EVALUATION CRITERIA CLASSES


The classes of systems recognized under the trusted computer system evaluation
criteria are as follows.  They are presented in the order of increasing
desirablity from a computer security point of view.

Class (D):  Minimal Protection

This class is reserved for those systems that have been evaluated but that
fail to meet the requirements for a higher evaluation class.

Class (C1):  Discretionary Security Protection

The Trusted Computing Base (TCB) of a class (C1) system nominally satisfies
the discretionary security requirements by providing separation of users and
data.  It incorporates some form of credible controls capable of enforcing
access limitations on an individual basis, i.e., ostensibly suitable for
allowing users to be able to protect project or private information and to
keep other users from accidentally reading or destroying their data.  The
class (C1) environment is expected to be one of cooperating users processing
data at the same level(s) of sensitivity.

Class (C2):  Controlled Access Protection

Systems in this class enforce a more finely grained discretionary access
control than (C1) systems, making users individually accountable for their
actions through login procedures, auditing of security-relevant events, and
resource isolation.

Class (B1):  Labeled Security Protection

Class (B1) systems require all the features required for class (C2).  In
addition, an informal statement of the security policy model, data labeling,
and mandatory access control over named subjects and objects must be present.
The capability must exist for accurately labeling exported information.  Any
flaws identified by testing must be removed.

Class (B2):  Structured Protection

In class (B2) systems, the TCB is based on a clearly defined and documented
formal security policy model that requires the discretionary and mandatory
access control enforcement found in class (B1) systems be extended to all
subjects and objects in the ADP system.  In addition, covert channels are
addressed.  The TCB must be carefully structured into protection-critical and
non- protection-critical elements.  The TCB interface is well-defined and the
TCB design and implementation enable it to be subjected to more thorough
testing and more complete review.  Authentication mechanisms are strengthened,
trusted facility management is provided in the form of support for system
administrator and operator functions, and stringent configuration management
controls are imposed.  The system is relatively resistant to penetration.

Class (B3):  Security Domains

The class (B3) TCB must satisfy the reference monitor requirements that it
mediate all accesses of subjects to objects, be tamperproof, and be small
enough to be subjected to analysis and tests.  To this end, the TCB is
structured to exclude code not essential to security policy enforcement, with
significant system engineering during TCB design and implementation directed
toward minimizing its complexity.  A security administrator is supported,
audit mechanisms are expanded to signal security- relevant events, and system
recovery procedures are required.  The system is highly resistant to
penetration.

Class (A1):  Verified Design

Systems in class (A1) are functionally equivalent to those in class (B3) in
that no additional architectural features or policy requirements are added.
The distinguishing feature of systems in this class is the analysis derived
from formal design specification and verification techniques and the resulting
high degree of assurance that the TCB is correctly implemented.  This
assurance is developmental in nature, starting with a formal model of the
security policy and a formal top-level specification (FTLS) of the design.  In
keeping with the extensive design and development analysis of the TCB required
of systems in class (A1), more stringent configuration management is required
and procedures are established for securely distributing the system to sites.
A system security administrator is supported.



                                 APPENDIX D

                            REQUIREMENT DIRECTORY


This appendix lists requirements defined in "Department of Defense Trusted
Computer System Evaluation Criteria" alphabetically rather than by class.  It
is provided to assist in following the evolution of a requirement through the
classes.  For each requirement, three types of criteria may be present.  Each
will be preceded by the word: NEW, CHANGE, or ADD to indicate the following:

             NEW: Any criteria appearing in a lower class are superseded
                  by the criteria that follow.

          CHANGE: The criteria that follow have appeared in a lower class
                  but are changed for this class.  Highlighting is used
                  to indicate the specific changes to previously stated
                  criteria.

             ADD: The criteria that follow have not been required for any
                  lower class, and are added in this class to the
                  previously stated criteria for this requirement.

Abbreviations are used as follows:

              NR: (No Requirement) This requirement is not included in
                  this class.

             NAR: (No Additional Requirements) This requirement does not
                  change from the previous class.

The reader is referred to Part I of this document when placing new criteria
for a requirement into the complete context for that class.

Figure 1 provides a pictorial summary of the evolution of requirements through
the classes.


Audit

    C1: NR.

    C2: NEW: The TCB shall be able to create, maintain, and protect from
        modification or unauthorized access or destruction an audit trail of
        accesses to the objects it protects.  The audit data shall be
        protected by the TCB so that read access to it is limited to those
        who are authorized for audit data.  The TCB shall be able to record
        the following types of events:  use of identification and
        authentication mechanisms, introduction of objects into a user's
        address space (e.g., file open, program initiation), deletion of
        objects, and actions taken by computer operators and system
        administrators and/or system security officers and other security
        relevant events.  For each recorded event, the audit record shall
        identify: date and time of the event, user, type of event, and success
        or failure of the event.  For identification/authentication events the
        origin of request (e.g., terminal ID) shall be included in the audit
        record.  For events that introduce an object into a user's address
        space and for object deletion events the audit record shall include
        the name of the object.  The ADP system administrator shall be able to
        selectively audit the actions of any one or more users based on
        individual identity.

    B1: CHANGE: For events that introduce an object into a user's address
        space and for object deletion events the audit record shall include
        the name of the object and the object's security level.  The ADP
        system administrator shall be able to selectively audit the actions
        of any one or more users based on individual identity and/or object
        security level.

        ADD: The TCB shall also be able to audit any override of
        human-readable output markings.

    B2: ADD: The TCB shall be able to audit the identified events that may be
        used in the exploitation of covert storage channels.

    B3: ADD: The TCB shall contain a mechanism that is able to monitor the
        occurrence or accumulation of security auditable events that may
        indicate an imminent violation of security policy.  This mechanism
        shall be able to immediately notify the security administrator when
        thresholds are exceeded, and, if the occurrence or accumulation of
        these security relevant events continues, the system shall take the
        lease disruptive action to terminate the event.

    A1: NAR.

Configuration Management

    C1: NR.

    C2: NR.

    B1: NR.

    B2: NEW: During development and maintenance of the TCB, a configuration
        management system shall be in place that maintains control of changes
        to the descriptive top-level specification, other design data,
        implementation documentation, source code, the running version of the
        object code, and test fixtures and documentation.  The configuration
        management system shall assure a consistent mapping among all
        documentation and code associated with the current version of the TCB.
        Tools shall be provided for generation of a new version of the TCB
        from source code.  Also available shall be tools for comparing a
        newly generated version with the previous TCB version in order to
        ascertain that only the intended changes have been made in the code
        that will actually be used as the new version of the TCB.

    B3: NAR.

    A1: CHANGE: During the entire life-cycle, i.e., during the design,
        development, and maintenance of the TCB, a configuration management
        system shall be in place for all security-relevant hardware, firmware,
        and software that maintains control of changes to the formal model,
        the descriptive and formal top-level specifications, other design
        data, implementation documentation, source code, the running version
        of the object code, and test fixtures and documentation.  Also
        available shall be tools, maintained under strict configuration
        control, for comparing a newly generated version with the previous
        TCB version in order to ascertain that only the intended changes have
        been made in the code that will actually be used as the new version
        of the TCB.

   ADD: A combination of technical, physical, and procedural safeguards
        shall be used to protect from unauthorized modification or
        destruction the master copy or copies of all material used to
        generate the TCB.

Covert Channel Analysis

    C1: NR.

    C2: NR.

    B1: NR.

    B2: NEW: The system developer shall conduct a thorough search for covert
        storage channels and make a determination (either by actual
        measurement or by engineering estimation) of the maximum bandwidth of
        each identified channel.  (See the Covert Channels Guideline section.)

    B3: CHANGE: The system developer shall conduct a thorough search for
        covert channels and make a determination (either by actual
        measurement or by engineering estimation) of the maximum bandwidth
        of each identified channel.

    A1: ADD: Formal methods shall be used in the analysis.

Design Documentation

    C1: NEW: Documentation shall be available that provides a description of
        the manufacturer's philosophy of protection and an explanation of how
        this philosophy is translated into the TCB.  If the TCB is composed
        of distinct modules, the interfaces between these modules shall be
        described.

    C2: NAR.

    B1: ADD: An informal or formal description of the security policy model
        enforced by the TCB shall be available and an explanation provided to
        show that it is sufficient to enforce the security policy.  The
        specific TCB protection mechanisms shall be identified and an
        explanation given to show that they satisfy the model.

    B2: CHANGE: The interfaces between the TCB modules shall be described.  A
        formal description of the security policy model enforced by the TCB
        shall be available and proven that it is sufficient to enforce the
        security policy.

        ADD: The descriptive top-level specification (DTLS) shall be shown to
        be an accurate description of the TCB interface.  Documentation shall
        describe how the TCB implements the reference monitor concept and
        give an explanation why it is tamper resistant, cannot be bypassed,
        and is correctly implemented.  Documentation shall describe how the
        TCB is structured to facilitate testing and to enforce least
        privilege.  This documentation shall also present the results of the
        covert channel analysis and the tradeoffs involved in restricting the
        channels.  All auditable events that may be used in the exploitation
        of known covert storage channels shall be identified.  The bandwidths
        of known covert storage channels, the use of which is not detectable
        by the auditing mechanisms, shall be provided.  (See the Covert
        Channel Guideline section.)

    B3: ADD: The TCB implementation (i.e., in hardware, firmware, and
        software) shall be informally shown to be consistent with the DTLS.
        The elements of the DTLS shall be shown, using informal techniques,
        to correspond to the elements of the TCB.

    A1: CHANGE: The TCB implementation (i.e., in hardware, firmware, and
        software) shall be informally shown to be consistent with the formal
        top-level specification (FTLS).  The elements of the FTLS shall be
        shown, using informal techniques, to correspond to the elements of
        the TCB.

        ADD: Hardware, firmware, and software mechanisms not dealt with in
        the FTLS but strictly internal to the TCB (e.g., mapping registers,
        direct memory access I/O) shall be clearly described.

Design Specification and Verification

    C1: NR.

    C2: NR.

    B1: NEW: An informal or formal model of the security policy supported by
        the TCB shall be maintained over the life cycle of the ADP system that
        is shown to be consistent with its axioms.

    B2: CHANGE: A formal model of the security policy supported by the TCB
        shall be maintained over the life cycle of the ADP system that is
        proven consistent with its axioms.

        ADD: A descriptive top-level specification (DTLS) of the TCB shall be
        maintained that completely and accurately describes the TCB in terms
        of exceptions, error messages, and effects.  It shall be shown to be
        an accurate description of the TCB interface.

    B3: ADD: A convincing argument shall be given that the DTLS is consistent
        with the model.

    A1: CHANGE: The FTLS shall be shown to be an accurate description of the
        TCB interface.  A convincing argument shall be given that the DTLS is
        consistent with the model and a combination of formal and informal
        techniques shall be used to show that the FTLS is consistent with the
        model.

        ADD: A formal top-level specification (FTLS) of the TCB shall be
        maintained that accurately describes the TCB in terms of exceptions,
        error messages, and effects.  The DTLS and FTLS shall include those
        components of the TCB that are implemented as hardware and/or
        firmware if their properties are visible at the TCB interface.  This
        verification evidence shall be consistent with that provided within
        the state-of-the-art of the particular Computer Security Center-
        endorsed formal specification and verification system used.  Manual
        or other mapping of the FTLS to the TCB source code shall be
        performed to provide evidence of correct implementation.

Device Labels

    C1: NR.

    C2: NR.

    B1: NR.

    B2: NEW: The TCB shall support the assignment of minimum and maximum
        security levels to all attached physical devices.  These security
        levels shall be used by the TCB to enforce constraints imposed by
        the physical environments in which the devices are located.

    B3: NAR.

    A1: NAR.

Discretionary Access Control

    C1: NEW: The TCB shall define and control access between named users and
        named objects (e.g., files and programs) in the ADP system.  The
        enforcement mechanism (e.g., self/group/public controls, access
        control lists) shall allow users to specify and control sharing of
        those objects by named individuals or defined groups or both.

    C2: CHANGE: The enforcement mechanism (e.g., self/group/public controls,
        access control lists) shall allow users to specify and control
        sharing of those objects by named individuals, or defined groups of
        individuals, or by both, and shall provide controls to limit
        propagation of access rights.

   ADD: The discretionary access control mechanism shall, either by explicit
        user action or by default, provide that objects are protected from
        unauthorized access.  These access controls shall be capable of
        including or excluding access to the granularity of a single user.
        Access permission to an object by users not already possessing access
        permission shall only be assigned by authorized users.

    B1: NAR.

    B2: NAR.

    B3: CHANGE: The enforcement mechanism (e.g., access control lists) shall
        allow users to specify and control sharing of those objects, and shall
        provide controls to limit propagation of access rights.  These
        access controls shall be capable of specifying, for each named
        object, a list of named individuals and a list of groups of named
        individuals with their respective modes of access to that object.

   ADD: Furthermore, for each such named object, it shall be possible to
        specify a list of named individuals and a list of groups of named
        individuals for which no access to the object is to be given.

    A1: NAR.

Exportation of Labeled Information

    C1: NR.

    C2: NR.

    B1: NEW: The TCB shall designate each communication channel and I/O
        device as either single-level or multilevel.  Any change in this
        designation shall be done manually and shall be auditable by the
        TCB.  The TCB shall maintain and be able to audit any change in the
        security level or levels associated with a communication channel or
        I/O device.

    B2: NAR.

    B3: NAR.

    A1: NAR.

Exportation to Multilevel Devices

    C1: NR.

    C2: NR.

    B1: NEW: When the TCB exports an object to a multilevel I/O device, the
        sensitivity label associated with that object shall also be exported
        and shall reside on the same physical medium as the exported
        information and shall be in the same form (i.e., machine-readable or
        human-readable form).  When the TCB exports or imports an object over
        a multilevel communication channel, the protocol used on that channel
        shall provide for the unambiguous pairing between the sensitivity
        labels and the associated information that is sent or received.

    B2: NAR.

    B3: NAR.

    A1: NAR.

Exportation to Single-Level Devices

    C1: NR.

    C2: NR.

    B1: NEW: Single-level I/O devices and single-level communication channels
        are not required to maintain the sensitivity labels of the
        information they process.  However, the TCB shall include a mechanism
        by which the TCB and an authorized user reliably communicate to
        designate the single security level of information imported or
        exported via single-level communication channels or I/O devices.

    B2: NAR.

    B3: NAR.

    A1: NAR.

Identification and Authentication

    C1: NEW: The TCB shall require users to identify themselves to it before
        beginning to perform any other actions that the TCB is expected to
        mediate.  Furthermore, the TCB shall use a protected mechanism (e.g.,
        passwords) to authenticate the user's identity.  The TCB shall
        protect authentication data so that it cannot be accessed by any
        unauthorized user.

    C2: ADD: The TCB shall be able to enforce individual accountability by
        providing the capability to uniquely identify each individual ADP
        system user.  The TCB shall also provide the capability of
        associating this identity with all auditable actions taken by that
        individual.

    B1: CHANGE: Furthermore, the TCB shall maintain authentication data that
        includes information for verifying the identity of individual users
        (e.g., passwords) as well as information for determining the
        clearance and authorizations of individual users.  This data shall be
        used by the TCB to authenticate the user's identity and to ensure
        that the security level and authorizations of subjects external to
        the TCB that may be created to act on behalf of the individual user
        are dominated by the clearance and authorization of that user.


    B2: NAR.

    B3: NAR.

    A1: NAR.

Label Integrity

    C1: NR.

    C2: NR.

    B1: NEW: Sensitivity labels shall accurately represent security levels of
        the specific subjects or objects with which they are associated.  When
        exported by the TCB, sensitivity labels shall accurately and
        unambiguously represent the internal labels and shall be associated
        with the information being exported.

    B2: NAR.

    B3: NAR.

    A1: NAR.

Labeling Human-Readable Output

    C1: NR.

    C2: NR.

    B1: NEW: The ADP system administrator shall be able to specify the
        printable label names associated with exported sensitivity labels.
        The TCB shall mark the beginning and end of all human-readable,
        paged, hardcopy output (e.g., line printer output) with human-
        readable sensitivity labels that properly* represent the sensitivity
        of the output.  The TCB shall, by default, mark the top and bottom of
        each page of human-readable, paged, hardcopy output (e.g., line
        printer output) with human-readable sensitivity labels that
        properly* represent the overall sensitivity of the output or that
        properly* represent the sensitivity of the information on the page.
        The TCB shall, by default and in an appropriate manner, mark other
        forms of human-readable output (e.g., maps, graphics) with human-
        readable sensitivity labels that properly* represent the sensitivity
        of the output.  Any override of these marking defaults shall be
        auditable by the TCB.

    B2: NAR.

    B3: NAR.

    A1: NAR.

______________________________
* The hierarchical classification component in human-readable sensitivity
labels shall be equal to the greatest hierarchical classification of any of the
information in the output that the labels refer to;  the non-hierarchical
category component shall include all of the non-hierarchical categories of the
information in the output the labels refer to, but no other non-hierarchical
categories.

Labels

    C1: NR.

    C2: NR.

    B1: NEW: Sensitivity labels associated with each subject and storage
        object under its control (e.g., process, file, segment, device) shall
        be maintained by the TCB.  These labels shall be used as the basis
        for mandatory access control decisions.  In order to import non-
        labeled data, the TCB shall request and receive from an authorized
        user the security level of the data, and all such actions shall be
        auditable by the TCB.

    B2: CHANGE: Sensitivity labels associated with each ADP system resource
        (e.g., subject, storage object, ROM) that is directly or indirectly
        accessible by subjects external to the TCB shall be maintained by
        the TCB.

    B3: NAR.

    A1: NAR.

Mandatory Access Control

    C1: NR.

    C2: NR.

    B1: NEW: The TCB shall enforce a mandatory access control policy over all
        subjects and storage objects under its control (e.g., processes,
        files, segments, devices).  These subjects and objects shall be
        assigned sensitivity labels that are a combination of hierarchical
        classification levels and non-hierarchical categories, and the labels
        shall be used as the basis for mandatory access control decisions.
        The TCB shall be able to support two or more such security levels.
        (See the Mandatory Access Control guidelines.)  The following
        requirements shall hold for all accesses between subjects and objects
        controlled by the TCB: A subject can read an object only if the
        hierarchical classification in the subject's security level is
        greater than or equal to the hierarchical classification in the
        object's security level and the non-hierarchical categories in the
        subject's security level include all the non-hierarchical categories
        in the object's security level.  A subject can write an object only
        if the hierarchical classification in the subject's security level is
        less than or equal to the hierarchical classification in the object's
        security level and all the non-hierarchical categories in the
        subject's security level are included in the non-hierarchical
        categories in the object's security level.  Identification and
        authentication data shall be used by the TCB to authenticate the
        user's identity and to ensure that the security level and authori-
        zation of subjects external to the TCB that may be created to act
        on behalf of the individual user are dominated by the clearance and
        authorization of that user.

    B2: CHANGE: The TCB shall enforce a mandatory access control policy over
        all resources (i.e., subjects, storage objects, and I/O devices) that
        are directly or indirectly accessible by subjects external to the TCB.
        The following requirements shall hold for all accesses between all
        subjects external to the TCB and all objects directly or indirectly
        accessible by these subjects:

    B3: NAR.

    A1: NAR.

Object Reuse

    C1: NR.

    C2: NEW: All authorizations to the information contained within a
        storage object shall be revoked prior to initial assignment,
        allocation or reallocation to a subject from the TCB's pool of
        unused storage objects.  No information, including encrypted
        representations of information, produced by a prior subject's
        actions is to be available to any subject that obtains access to
        an object that has been released back to the system.

    B1: NAR.

    B2: NAR.

    B3: NAR.

    A1: NAR.

Security Features User's Guide

    C1: NEW: A single summary, chapter, or manual in user documentation shall
        describe the protection mechanisms provided by the TCB, guidelines on
        their use, and how they interact with one another.

    C2: NAR.

    B1: NAR.

    B2: NAR.

    B3: NAR.

    A1: NAR.

Security Testing

    C1: NEW: The security mechanisms of the ADP system shall be tested and
        found to work as claimed in the system documentation.  Testing shall
        be done to assure that there are no obvious ways for an unauthorized
        user to bypass or otherwise defeat the security protection mechanisms
        of the TCB.  (See the Security Testing guidelines.)

    C2: ADD: Testing shall also include a search for obvious flaws that would
        allow violation of resource isolation, or that would permit
        unauthorized access to the audit or authentication data.

    B1: NEW: The security mechanisms of the ADP system shall be tested and
        found to work as claimed in the system documentation.  A team of
        individuals who thoroughly understand the specific implementation of
        the TCB shall subject its design documentation, source code, and
        object code to thorough analysis and testing.  Their objectives shall
        be: to uncover all design and implementation flaws that would permit
        a subject external to the TCB to read, change, or delete data
        normally denied under the mandatory or discretionary security policy
        enforced by the TCB; as well as to assure that no subject (without
        authorization to do so) is able to cause the TCB to enter a state
        such that it is unable to respond to communications initiated by
        other users.  All discovered flaws shall be removed or neutralized
        and the TCB retested to demonstrate that they have been eliminated
        and that new flaws have not been introduced.  (See the Security
        Testing Guidelines.)

    B2: CHANGE: All discovered flaws shall be corrected and the TCB retested
        to demonstrate that they have been eliminated and that new flaws have
        not been introduced.

        ADD: The TCB shall be found relatively resistant to penetration.
        Testing shall demonstrate that the TCB implementation is consistent
        with the descriptive top-level specification.

    B3: CHANGE: The TCB shall be found resistant to penetration.

        ADD: No design flaws and no more than a few correctable
        implementation flaws may be found during testing and there shall be
        reasonable confidence that few remain.

    A1: CHANGE: Testing shall demonstrate that the TCB implementation is
        consistent with the formal top-level specification.

        ADD: Manual or other mapping of the FTLS to the source code may form
        a basis for penetration testing.

Subject Sensitivity Labels

    C1: NR.

    C2: NR.

    B1: NR.

    B2: NEW: The TCB shall immediately notify a terminal user of each change
        in the security level associated with that user during an interactive
        session.  A terminal user shall be able to query the TCB as desired
        for a display of the subject's complete sensitivity label.

    B3: NAR.

    A1: NAR.

System Architecture

    C1: NEW: The TCB shall maintain a domain for its own execution that
        protects it from external interference or tampering (e.g., by
        modification of its code or data structures).  Resources controlled
        by the TCB may be a defined subset of the subjects and objects in
        the ADP system.

    C2: ADD: The TCB shall isolate the resources to be protected so that they
        are subject to the access control and auditing requirements.

    B1: ADD: The TCB shall maintain process isolation through the provision
        of distinct address spaces under its control.

    B2: NEW: The TCB shall maintain a domain for its own execution that
        protects it from external interference or tampering (e.g., by
        modification of its code or data structures).  The TCB shall maintain
        process isolation through the provision of distinct address spaces
        under its control.  The TCB shall be internally structured into well-
        defined largely independent modules.  It shall make effective use of
        available hardware to separate those elements that are protection-
        critical from those that are not.  The TCB modules shall be designed
        such that the principle of least privilege is enforced.  Features in
        hardware, such as segmentation, shall be used to support logically
        distinct storage objects with separate attributes (namely: readable,
        writeable).  The user interface to the TCB shall be completely
        defined and all elements of the TCB identified.

    B3: ADD: The TCB shall be designed and structured to use a complete,
        conceptually simple protection mechanism with precisely defined
        semantics.  This mechanism shall play a central role in enforcing the
        internal structuring of the TCB and the system.  The TCB shall
        incorporate significant use of layering, abstraction and data hiding.
        Significant system engineering shall be directed toward minimizing
        the complexity of the TCB and excluding from the TCB modules that are
        not protection-critical.

    A1: NAR.

System Integrity

    C1: NEW: Hardware and/or software features shall be provided that can be
        used to periodically validate the correct operation of the on-site
        hardware and firmware elements of the TCB.

    C2: NAR.

    B1: NAR.

    B2: NAR.

    B3: NAR.

    A1: NAR.

Test Documentation

    C1: NEW: The system developer shall provide to the evaluators a document
        that describes the test plan, test procedures that show how the
        security mechanisms were tested and results of the security
        mechanisms' functional testing.

    C2: NAR.

    B1: NAR.

    B2: ADD: It shall include results of testing the effectiveness of the
        methods used to reduce covert channel bandwidths.

    B3: NAR.

    A1: ADD: The results of the mapping between the formal top-level
        specification and the TCB source code shall be given.

Trusted Distribution

    C1: NR.

    C2: NR.

    B1: NR.

    B2: NR.

    B3: NR.

    A1: NEW: A trusted ADP system control and distribution facility shall be
        provided for maintaining the integrity of the mapping between the
        master data describing the current version of the TCB and the on-site
        master copy of the code for the current version.  Procedures (e.g.,
        site security acceptance testing) shall exist for assuring that the
        TCB software, firmware, and hardware updates distributed to a
        customer are exactly as specified by the master copies.

Trusted Facility Management

    C1: NR.

    C2: NR.

    B1: NR.

    B2: NEW: The TCB shall support separate operator and administrator
        functions.

    B3: ADD: The functions performed in the role of a security administrator
        shall be identified.  The ADP system administrative personnel shall
        only be able to perform security administrator functions after taking
        a distinct auditable action to assume the security administrator role
        on the ADP system.  Non-security functions that can be performed in
        the security administration role shall be limited strictly to those
        essential to performing the security role effectively.

    A1: NAR.

Trusted Facility Manual

    C1: NEW: A manual addressed to the ADP system administrator shall present
        cautions about functions and privileges that should be controlled
        when running a secure facility.

    C2: ADD: The procedures for examining and maintaining the audit files as
        well as the detailed audit record structure for each type of audit
        event shall be given.

    B1: ADD: The manual shall describe the operator and administrator
        functions related to security, to include changing the
        characteristics of a user.  It shall provide guidelines on the
        consistent and effective use of the protection features of the
        system, how they interact, how to securely generate a new TCB, and
        facility procedures, warnings, and privileges that need to be
        controlled in order to operate the facility in a secure manner.

    B2: ADD: The TCB modules that contain the reference validation mechanism
        shall be identified.  The procedures for secure generation of a new
        TCB from source after modification of any modules in the TCB shall
        be described.

    B3: ADD: It shall include the procedures to ensure that the system is
        initially started in a secure manner.  Procedures shall also be
        included to resume secure system operation after any lapse in system
        operation.

    A1: NAR.

Trusted Path

    C1: NR.

    C2: NR.

    B1: NR.

    B2: NEW: The TCB shall support a trusted communication path between
        itself and user for initial login and authentication.  Communications
        via this path shall be initiated exclusively by a user.

    B3: CHANGE: The TCB shall support a trusted communication path between
        itself and users for use when a positive TCB-to-user connection is
        required (e.g., login, change subject security level).
        Communications via this trusted path shall be activated exclusively
        by a user or the TCB and shall be logically isolated and unmistakably
        distinguishable from other paths.

    A1: NAR.

Trusted Recovery

    C1: NR.

    C2: NR.

    B1: NR.

    B2: NR.

    B3: NEW: Procedures and/or mechanisms shall be provided to assure that,
        after an ADP system failure or other discontinuity, recovery without a
        protection compromise is obtained.

    A1: NAR.





   (this page is reserved for Figure 1)



                                  GLOSSARY


Access - A specific type of interaction between a subject and an object
    that results in the flow of information from one to the other.

Approval/Accreditation - The official authorization that is
    granted to an ADP system to process sensitive information in
    its operational environment, based upon comprehensive
    security evaluation of the system's hardware, firmware, and
    software security design, configuration, and implementation
    and of the other system procedural, administrative,
    physical, TEMPEST, personnel, and communications security
    controls.

Audit Trail - A set of records that collectively provide
    documentary evidence of processing used to aid in tracing
    from original transactions forward to related records and
    reports, and/or backwards from records and reports to their
    component source transactions.

Authenticate - To establish the validity of a claimed identity.

Automatic Data Processing (ADP) System - An assembly of computer
    hardware, firmware, and software configured for the purpose
    of classifying, sorting, calculating, computing,
    summarizing, transmitting and receiving, storing, and
    retrieving data with a minimum of human intervention.

Bandwidth - A characteristic of a communication channel that is
    the amount of information that can be passed through it in a
    given amount of time, usually expressed in bits per second.

Bell-LaPadula Model - A formal state transition model of computer
    security policy that describes a set of access control
    rules.  In this formal model, the entities in a computer
    system are divided into abstract sets of subjects and
    objects.  The notion of a secure state is defined and it is
    proven that each state transition preserves security by
    moving from secure state to secure state; thus, inductively
    proving that the system is secure.  A system state is
    defined to be "secure" if the only permitted access modes of
    subjects to objects are in accordance with a specific
    security policy.  In order to determine whether or not a
    specific access mode is allowed, the clearance of a subject
    is compared to the classification of the object and a
    determination is made as to whether the subject is
    authorized for the specific access mode.  The
    clearance/classification scheme is expressed in terms of a
    lattice.  See also: Lattice, Simple Security Property, *-
    Property.

Certification - The technical evaluation of a system's security
    features, made as part of and in support of the
    approval/accreditation process, that establishes the extent
    to which a particular computer system's design and
    implementation meet a set of specified security
    requirements.

Channel - An information transfer path within a system.  May also
    refer to the mechanism by which the path is effected.

Covert Channel - A communication channel that allows a process to
    transfer information in a manner that violates the system's
    security policy.  See also:  Covert Storage Channel, Covert
    Timing Channel.

Covert Storage Channel - A covert channel that involves the
    direct or indirect writing of a storage location by one
    process and the direct or indirect reading of the storage
    location by another process.  Covert storage channels
    typically involve a finite resource (e.g., sectors on a
    disk) that is shared by two subjects at different security
    levels.

Covert Timing Channel - A covert channel in which one process
    signals information to another by modulating its own use of
    system resources (e.g., CPU time) in such a way that this
    manipulation affects the real response time observed by the
    second process.

Data - Information with a specific physical representation.

Data Integrity - The state that exists when computerized data is
    the same as that in the source documents and has not been
    exposed to accidental or malicious alteration or
    destruction.

Descriptive Top-Level Specification (DTLS) - A top-level
    specification that is written in a natural language (e.g.,
    English), an informal program design notation, or a
    combination of the two.

Discretionary Access Control - A means of restricting access to
    objects based on the identity of subjects and/or groups to
    which they belong.  The controls are discretionary in the
    sense that a subject with a certain access permission is
    capable of passing that permission (perhaps indirectly) on
    to any other subject (unless restrained by mandatory access
    control).

Domain - The set of objects that a subject has the ability to
    access.

Dominate - Security level S1 is said to dominate security level
    S2 if the hierarchical classification of S1 is greater than
    or equal to that of S2 and the non-hierarchical categories
    of S1 include all those of S2 as a subset.

Exploitable Channel - Any channel that is useable or detectable
    by subjects external to the Trusted Computing Base.

Flaw Hypothesis Methodology - A system analysis and penetration
    technique where specifications and documentation for the
    system are analyzed and then flaws in the system are
    hypothesized.  The list of hypothesized flaws is then
    prioritized on the basis of the estimated probability that a
    flaw actually exists and, assuming a flaw does exist, on the
    ease of exploiting it and on the extent of control or
    compromise it would provide.  The prioritized list is used
    to direct the actual testing of the system.

Flaw - An error of commission, omission, or oversight in a system
    that allows protection mechanisms to be bypassed.

Formal Proof - A complete and convincing mathematical argument,
    presenting the full logical justification for each proof
    step, for the truth of a theorem or set of theorems.  The
    formal verification process uses formal proofs to show the
    truth of certain properties of formal specification and for
    showing that computer programs satisfy their specifications.

Formal Security Policy Model - A mathematically precise statement
    of a security policy.  To be adequately precise, such a
    model must represent the initial state of a system, the way
    in which the system progresses from one state to another,
    and a definition of a "secure" state of the system.  To be
    acceptable as a basis for a TCB, the model must be supported
    by a formal proof that if the initial state of the system
    satisfies the definition of a "secure" state and if all
    assumptions required by the model hold, then all future
    states of the system will be secure.  Some formal modeling
    techniques include:  state transition models, temporal logic
    models, denotational semantics models, algebraic
    specification models.  An example is the model described by
    Bell and LaPadula in reference [2].  See also:  Bell-
    LaPadula Model, Security Policy Model.

Formal Top-Level Specification (FTLS) - A Top-Level Specification
    that is written in a formal mathematical language to allow
    theorems showing the correspondence of the system
    specification to its formal requirements to be hypothesized
    and formally proven.

Formal Verification - The process of using formal proofs to
    demonstrate the consistency (design verification) between a
    formal specification of a system and a formal security
    policy model or (implementation verification) between the
    formal specification and its program implementation.

Front-End Security Filter - A process that is invoked to process
    data accordint to a specified security policy prior to
    releasing the data outside the processing environment or
    upon receiving data from an external source.

Functional Testing - The portion of security testing in which the
    advertised features of a system are tested for correct
    operation.

General-Purpose System - A computer system that is designed to
    aid in solving a wide variety of problems.

Granularity - The relative fineness or coarseness by which a
    mechanism can be adjusted.  The phrase "the granularity of
    a single user" means the access control mechanism can be
    adjusted to include or exclude any single user.

Lattice - A partially ordered set for which every pair of
    elements has a greatest lower bound and a least upper bound.

Least Privilege - This principle requires that each subject in a
    system be granted the most restrictive set of privileges (or
    lowest clearance) needed for the performance of authorized
    tasks.  The application of this principle limits the damage
    that can result from accident, error, or unauthorized use.

Mandatory Access Control - A means of restricting access to
    objects based on the sensitivity (as represented by a label)
    of the information contained in the objects and the formal
    authorization (i.e., clearance) of subjects to access
    information of such sensitivity.

Multilevel Device - A device that is used in a manner that
    permits it to simultaneously process data of two or more
    security levels without risk of compromise.  To accomplish
    this, sensitivity labels are normally stored on the same
    physical medium and in the same form (i.e., machine-readable
    or human-readable) as the data being processed.

Multilevel Secure - A class of system containing information with
    different sensitivities that simultaneously permits access
    by users with different security clearances and needs-to-
    know, but prevents users from obtaining access to
    information for which they lack authorization.

Object - A passive entity that contains or receives information.
    Access to an object potentially implies access to the
    information it contains.  Examples of objects are:  records,
    blocks, pages, segments, files, directories, directory
    trees, and programs, as well as bits, bytes, words, fields,
    processors, video displays, keyboards, clocks, printers,
    network nodes, etc.

Object Reuse - The reassignment to some subject of a medium
    (e.g., page frame, disk sector, magnetic tape) that
    contained one or more objects.  To be securely reassigned,
    such media must contain no residual data from the previously
    contained object(s).

Output - Information that has been exported by a TCB.

Password - A private character string that is used to
    authenticate an identity.

Penetration Testing - The portion of security testing in which
    the penetrators attempt to circumvent the security features
    of a system.  The penetrators may be assumed to use all
    system design and implementation documentation, which may
    include listings of system source code, manuals, and circuit
    diagrams.  The penetrators work under no constraints other
    than those that would be applied to ordinary users.

Process - A program in execution.  It is completely characterized
    by a single current execution point (represented by the
    machine state) and address space.

Protection-Critical Portions of the TCB - Those portions of the
    TCB whose normal function is to deal with the control of
    access between subjects and objects.

Protection Philosophy - An informal description of the overall
    design of a system that delineates each of the protection
    mechanisms employed.  A combination (appropriate to the
    evaluation class) of formal and informal techniques is used
    to show that the mechanisms are adequate to enforce the
    security policy.

Read - A fundamental operation that results only in the flow of
    information from an object to a subject.

Read Access - Permission to read information.

Read-Only Memory (ROM) - A storage area in which the contents can
    be read but not altered during normal computer processing.

Reference Monitor Concept - An access control concept that refers
    to an abstract machine that mediates all accesses to objects
    by subjects.

Resource - Anything used or consumed while performing a function.
    The categories of resources are: time, information, objects
    (information containers), or processors (the ability to use
    information).  Specific examples are: CPU time; terminal
    connect time; amount of directly-addressable memory; disk
    space; number of I/O requests per minute, etc.

Security Kernel - The hardware, firmware, and software elements
    of a Trusted Computing Base that implement the reference
    monitor concept.  It must mediate all accesses, be protected
    from modification, and be verifiable as correct.

Security Level - The combination of a hierarchical classification
    and a set of non-hierarchical categories that represents the
    sensitivity of information.

Security Policy - The set of laws, rules, and practices that
    regulate how an organization manages, protects, and
    distributes sensitive information.

Security Policy Model - An informal presentation of a formal
    security policy model.

Security Relevant Event - Any event that attempts to change the
    security state of the system, (e.g., change discretionary
    access controls, change the security level of the subject,
    change user password, etc.).  Also, any event that attempts
    to violate the security policy of the system, (e.g., too
    many attempts to login, attempts to violate the mandatory
    access control limits of a defice, attempts to downgrade a
    file, etc.).

Security Testing - A process used to determine that the security
    features of a system are implemented as designed and that
    they are adequate for a proposed application environment.
    This process includes hands-on functional testing,
    penetration testing, and verification.  See also: Functional
    Testing, Penetration Testing, Verification.

Sensitive Information - Information that, as determined by a
    competent authority, must be protected because its
    unauthorized disclosure, alteration, loss, or destruction
    will at least cause perceivable damage to someone or
    something.

Sensitivity Label - A piece of information that represents the
    security level of an object and that describes the
    sensitivity (e.g., classification) of the data in the
    object.   Sensitivity labels are used by the TCB as the basis
    for mandatory access control decisions.

Simple Security Condition - A Bell-LaPadula security model rule
    allowing a subject read access to an object only if the
    security level of the subject dominates the security level
    of the object.

Single-Level Device - A device that is used to process data of a
    single security level at any one time.  Since the device
    need not be trusted to separate data of different security
    levels, sensitivity labels do not have to be stored with the
    data being processed.

*-Property (Star Property) - A Bell-LaPadula security model rule
    allowing a subject write access to an object only if the
    security level of the subject is dominated by the security
    level of the object.  Also known as the Confinement
    Property.

Storage Object - An object that supports both read and write
    accesses.

Subject - An active entity, generally in the form of a person,
    process, or device that causes information to flow among
    objects or changes the system state.  Technically, a
    process/domain pair.

Subject Security Level - A subject's security level is equal to
    the security level of the objects to which it has both read
    and write access.  A subject's security level must always be
    dominated by the clearance of the user the subject is
    associated with.

TEMPEST - The study and control of spurious electronic signals
    emitted from ADP equipment.

Top-Level Specification (TLS) - A non-procedural description of
    system behavior at the most abstract level.  Typically a
    functional specification that omits all implementation
    details.

Trap Door - A hidden software or hardware mechanism that permits
    system protection mechanisms to be circumvented.  It is
    activated in some non-apparent manner (e.g., special
    "random" key sequence at a terminal).

Trojan Horse - A computer program with an apparently or actually
    useful function that contains additional (hidden) functions
    that surreptitiously exploit the legitimate authorizations
    of the invoking process to the detriment of security.  For
    example, making a "blind copy" of a sensitive file for the
    creator of the Trojan Horse.

Trusted Computer System - A system that employs sufficient
    hardware and software integrity measures to allow its use
    for processing simultaneously a range of sensitive or
    classified information.

Trusted Computing Base (TCB) - The totality of protection
    mechanisms within a computer system -- including hardware,
    firmware, and software -- the combination of which is
    responsible for enforcing a security policy.  A TCB consists
    of one or more components that together enforce a unified
    security policy over a product or system.  The ability of
    a trusted computing base to correctly enforce a
    security policy depends solely on the mechanisms within the
    TCB and on the correct input by system administrative
    personnel of parameters (e.g., a user's clearance) related
    to the security policy.

Trusted Path - A mechanism by which a person at a terminal can
    communicate directly with the Trusted Computing Base.  This
    mechanism can only be activated by the person or the Trusted
    Computing Base and cannot be imitated by untrusted software.

Trusted Software - The software portion of a Trusted Computing
    Base.

User - Any person who interacts directly with a computer system.

Verification - The process of comparing two levels of system
    specification for proper correspondence (e.g., security
    policy model with top-level specification, TLS with source
    code, or source code with object code).  This process may or
    may not be automated.

Write - A fundamental operation that results only in the flow of
    information from a subject to an object.

Write Access - Permission to write an object.


                                 REFERENCES


1.  Anderson, J. P.  Computer Security Technology Planning
        Study, ESD-TR-73-51, vol. I, ESD/AFSC, Hanscom AFB,
        Bedford, Mass., October 1972 (NTIS AD-758 206).

2.  Bell, D. E. and LaPadula, L. J.  Secure Computer Systems:
        Unified Exposition and Multics Interpretation, MTR-2997
        Rev. 1, MITRE Corp., Bedford, Mass., March 1976.

3.  Brand, S. L.  "An Approach to Identification and Audit of
        Vulnerabilities and Control in Application Systems," in
        Audit and Evaluation of Computer Security II: System
        Vulnerabilities and Controls, Z. Ruthberg, ed., NBS
        Special Publication #500-57, MD78733, April 1980.

4.  Brand, S. L.  "Data Processing and A-123," in Proceedings of
        the Computer Performance Evaluation User's Group 18th
        Meeting, C. B. Wilson, ed., NBS Special Publication
        #500-95, October 1982.

5.  DCID l/l6, Security of Foreign Intelligence in Automated Data
        Processing Systems and Networks (U), 4 January l983.

6.  DIAM 50-4, Security of Compartmented Computer Operations (U),
        24 June l980.

7.  Denning, D. E.  "A Lattice Model of Secure Information
        Flow," in Communications of the ACM, vol. 19, no. 5
        (May 1976), pp. 236-243.

8.  Denning, D. E.  Secure Information Flow in Computer Systems,
        Ph.D. dissertation, Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, Ind.,
        May 1975.

9.  DoD Directive 5000.29, Management of Computer Resources in Major
        Defense Systems, 26 April l976.

10.  DoD 5200.1-R, Information Security Program Regulation,
        August 1982.

11.  DoD Directive 5200.28, Security Requirements for Automatic
        Data Processing (ADP) Systems, revised April 1978.

12.  DoD 5200.28-M, ADP Security Manual -- Techniques and
        Procedures for Implementing, Deactivating, Testing, and
        Evaluating Secure Resource-Sharing ADP Systems, revised
        June 1979.

13. DoD Directive 5215.1, Computer Security Evaluation Center,
        25 October 1982.

14. DoD 5220.22-M, Industrial Security Manual for Safeguarding
        Classified Information, March 1984.

15. DoD 5220.22-R, Industrial Security Regulation, February 1984.

16. DoD Directive 5400.11, Department of Defense Privacy
        Program, 9 June 1982.

17. DoD Directive 7920.1, Life Cycle Management of Automated
        Information Systems (AIS), 17 October 1978

18. Executive Order 12356, National Security Information,
        6 April 1982.

19. Faurer, L. D.  "Keeping the Secrets Secret," in Government
        Data Systems, November - December 1981, pp. 14-17.

20. Federal Information Processing Standards Publication (FIPS
        PUB) 39, Glossary for Computer Systems Security,
        15 February 1976.

21. Federal Information Processing Standards Publication (FIPS
        PUB) 73, Guidelines for Security of Computer
        Applications, 30 June 1980.

22. Federal Information Processing Standards Publication (FIPS
        PUB) 102, Guideline for Computer Security Certification
        and Accreditation.

23. Lampson, B. W.  "A Note on the Confinement Problem," in
        Communications of the ACM, vol. 16, no. 10 (October
        1973), pp. 613-615.

24. Lee, T. M. P., et al.  "Processors, Operating Systems and
        Nearby Peripherals: A Consensus Report," in Audit and
        Evaluation of Computer Security II: System
        Vulnerabilities and Controls, Z. Ruthberg, ed., NBS
        Special Publication #500-57, MD78733, April 1980.

25. Lipner, S. B.  A Comment on the Confinement Problem, MITRE
        Corp., Bedford, Mass.

26. Millen, J. K.  "An Example of a Formal Flow Violation," in
        Proceedings of the IEEE Computer Society 2nd
        International Computer Software and Applications
        Conference, November 1978, pp. 204-208.

27. Millen, J. K.  "Security Kernel Validation in Practice," in
        Communications of the ACM, vol. 19, no. 5 (May 1976),
        pp. 243-250.

28. Nibaldi, G. H.  Proposed Technical Evaluation Criteria for
        Trusted Computer Systems, MITRE Corp., Bedford, Mass.,
        M79-225, AD-A108-832, 25 October 1979.

29. Nibaldi, G. H.  Specification of A Trusted Computing Base,
        (TCB), MITRE Corp., Bedford, Mass., M79-228, AD-A108-
        831, 30 November 1979.

30. OMB Circular A-71, Transmittal Memorandum No. 1, Security of
        Federal Automated Information Systems, 27 July 1978.

31. OMB Circular A-123, Internal Control Systems, 5 November
        1981.

32. Ruthberg, Z. and McKenzie, R., eds.  Audit and Evaluation of
        Computer Security, in NBS Special Publication #500-19,
        October 1977.

33. Schaefer, M., Linde, R. R., et al.  "Program Confinement in
        KVM/370," in Proceedings of the ACM National
        Conference, October 1977, Seattle.

34. Schell, R. R.  "Security Kernels: A Methodical Design of
        System Security," in Technical Papers, USE Inc. Spring
        Conference, 5-9 March 1979, pp. 245-250.

35. Trotter, E. T. and Tasker, P. S.  Industry Trusted Computer
        Systems Evaluation Process, MITRE Corp., Bedford,
        Mass., MTR-3931, 1 May 1980.

36. Turn, R.  Trusted Computer Systems: Needs and Incentives for
        Use in government and Private Sector, (AD # A103399),
        Rand Corporation (R-28811-DR&E), June 1981.

37. Walker, S. T.  "The Advent of Trusted Computer Operating
        Systems," in National Computer Conference Proceedings,
        May 1980, pp. 655-665.

38. Ware, W. H., ed., Security Controls for Computer Systems:
        Report of Defense Science Board Task Force on Computer
        Security, AD # A076617/0, Rand Corporation, Santa
        Monica, Calif., February 1970, reissued October 1979.