Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                         R. Sahita
Request for Comments: 5793                                         Intel
Category: Standards Track                                       S. Hanna
ISSN: 2070-1721                                                  Juniper
                                                               R. Hurst
                                                              Microsoft
                                                             K. Narayan
                                                          Cisco Systems
                                                             March 2010


          PB-TNC: A Posture Broker (PB) Protocol Compatible
                  with Trusted Network Connect (TNC)

Abstract

  This document specifies PB-TNC, a Posture Broker protocol identical
  to the Trusted Computing Group's IF-TNCCS 2.0 protocol.  The document
  then evaluates PB-TNC against the requirements defined in the NEA
  Requirements specification.

Status of This Memo

  This is an Internet Standards Track document.

  This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
  (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
  received public review and has been approved for publication by the
  Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on
  Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 5741.

  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5793.

















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Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2010 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
  document authors.  All rights reserved.

  This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
  Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
  (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
  publication of this document.  Please review these documents
  carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
  to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
  include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
  the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
  described in the Simplified BSD License.

  This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF
  Contributions published or made publicly available before November
  10, 2008.  The person(s) controlling the copyright in some of this
  material may not have granted the IETF Trust the right to allow
  modifications of such material outside the IETF Standards Process.
  Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling
  the copyright in such materials, this document may not be modified
  outside the IETF Standards Process, and derivative works of it may
  not be created outside the IETF Standards Process, except to format
  it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other
  than English.

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................4
     1.1. Prerequisites ..............................................4
     1.2. Message Diagram Conventions ................................4
     1.3. Terminology ................................................4
     1.4. Conventions Used in This Document ..........................4
  2. PB-TNC Design Considerations ....................................5
     2.1. Message Addressing .........................................5
     2.2. Vendor IDs .................................................7
     2.3. Efficiency .................................................7
  3. PB-TNC Protocol Description .....................................7
     3.1. Protocol Overview ..........................................7
     3.2. PB-TNC State Machine .......................................8
     3.3. Layering on PT ............................................11
     3.4. Example of PB-TNC Encapsulation ...........................12
  4. PB-TNC Protocol Specification ..................................13
     4.1. PB-TNC Header .............................................13
     4.2. PB-TNC Message ............................................16
     4.3. IETF Standard PB-TNC Message Types ........................19
     4.4. PB-Experimental ...........................................19



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     4.5. PB-PA .....................................................20
     4.6. PB-Assessment-Result ......................................25
     4.7. PB-Access-Recommendation ..................................26
     4.8. PB-Remediation-Parameters .................................28
     4.9. PB-Error ..................................................32
     4.10. PB-Language-Preference ...................................37
     4.11. PB-Reason-String .........................................38
  5. Security Considerations ........................................41
     5.1. Threat Model ..............................................41
     5.2. Countermeasures ...........................................42
  6. IANA Considerations ............................................43
     6.1. Designated Expert Guidelines ..............................44
     6.2. Registry for PB-TNC Message Types .........................45
     6.3. Registry for PA Subtypes ..................................45
     6.4. Registry for PB-TNC Remediation Parameters Types ..........46
     6.5. Registry for PB-TNC Error Codes ...........................46
  7. Acknowledgments ................................................47
  8. References .....................................................47
     8.1. Normative References ......................................47
     8.2. Informative References ....................................48
  Appendix A. Use Cases .............................................49
     A.1. Initial Client-Triggered Assessment .......................49
     A.2. Server-Initiated Assessment with Remediation ..............54
     A.3. Client-Triggered Reassessment .............................63
  Appendix B. Evaluation against NEA Requirements ...................70
     B.1. Evaluation against Requirement C-1 ........................70
     B.2. Evaluation against Requirement C-2 ........................70
     B.3. Evaluation against Requirement C-3 ........................70
     B.4. Evaluation against Requirement C-4 ........................71
     B.5. Evaluation against Requirement C-5 ........................71
     B.6. Evaluation against Requirement C-6 ........................71
     B.7. Evaluation against Requirement C-7 ........................72
     B.8. Evaluation against Requirement C-8 ........................72
     B.9. Evaluation against Requirement C-9 ........................72
     B.10. Evaluation against Requirement C-10 ......................73
     B.11. Evaluation against Requirement C-11 ......................73
     B.12. Evaluation against Requirement PB-1 ......................74
     B.13. Evaluation against Requirement PB-2 ......................74
     B.14. Evaluation against Requirement PB-3 ......................74
     B.15. Evaluation against Requirement PB-4 ......................75
     B.16. Evaluation against Requirement PB-5 ......................75
     B.17. Evaluation against Requirement PB-6 ......................76









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1.  Introduction

  This document specifies PB-TNC, a Posture Broker (PB) protocol
  identical to the Trusted Computing Group's IF-TNCCS 2.0 protocol [7].
  The document then evaluates PB-TNC against the requirements defined
  in the Network Endpoint Assessment (NEA) Requirements specification
  [8].

1.1.  Prerequisites

  This document does not define an architecture or reference model.
  Instead, it defines a protocol that works within the reference model
  described in the NEA Requirements specification [8].  The reader is
  assumed to be thoroughly familiar with that document.  No familiarity
  with TCG specifications is assumed.

1.2.  Message Diagram Conventions

  This specification defines the syntax of PB-TNC messages using
  diagrams.  Each diagram depicts the format and size of each field in
  bits.  Implementations MUST send the bits in each diagram as they are
  shown, traversing the diagram from top to bottom and then from left
  to right within each line (which represents a 32-bit quantity).
  Multi-byte fields representing numeric values must be sent in network
  (big endian) byte order.

  Descriptions of bit field (e.g., flag) values are described referring
  to the position of the bit within the field.  These bit positions are
  numbered from the most significant bit through the least significant
  bit, so a 1-octet field with only bit 0 set has the value 0x80.

1.3.  Terminology

  This document reuses the terminology defined in the NEA Requirements
  document.  One new term is defined in this section.

  Batch - A group of PB-TNC messages sent over a Posture Transport (PT)
  protocol at one time.  Since the PB-TNC protocol needs to be able to
  work over a half-duplex PT protocol, PB-TNC messages are grouped into
  batches.  The Posture Broker Client sends one batch to the Posture
  Broker Server, which responds with a batch.

1.4.  Conventions Used in This Document

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
  document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [1].




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2.  PB-TNC Design Considerations

  The primary purpose of the PB-TNC protocol is to carry Posture
  Attribute (PA) messages between Posture Collectors and Posture
  Validators.  Also, PB-TNC must carry messages between the Posture
  Broker Client and the Posture Broker Server (known as PB-TNC
  messages) and manage the state of the assessment.

2.1.  Message Addressing

  The NEA Overview and Requirements document [8] describes in section
  5.1.1.1 several ways that messages can be addressed and delivered to
  the proper Posture Collector(s) and Posture Validator(s).  Of the
  techniques described in that section, PB-TNC supports dynamic
  identifiers and message types.

2.1.1.  Message Types

  Message types are the simplest and most common way to handle message
  delivery.  Each PA message sent via PB-TNC has an associated PA
  message type, composed of a PA Message Vendor ID and a PA subtype.

  The PA-TNC specification [10] provides a list of IETF Standard PA
  Subtypes, which are used with a PA Message Vendor ID of 0.  These
  include values such as Operating System and Anti-Virus, which are
  used for messages relating to operating system and anti-virus
  posture.

  Vendor-specific PA message types may be indicated by placing the
  defining vendor's Structure of Management Information (SMI) Private
  Enterprise Number into the PA Message Vendor ID field and a PA
  Subtype value assigned by that vendor in the PA Subtype field.  This
  allows each vendor to define its own set of PA Subtype values without
  worrying about collisions with other vendors or with standard values.

  The PA message type is somewhat analogous to a MIME type in that it
  indicates the type of the PA message.  Posture Collectors and Posture
  Validators can use local APIs to indicate to the Posture Broker
  Client and Posture Broker Server which PA message types they are
  interested in receiving.  For instance, a Posture Validator that
  evaluates anti-virus posture might indicate that it would like to
  receive PA messages with a PA Message Vendor ID of 0 and a PA Subtype
  that matches the IETF Standard PA Subtype for Anti-Virus.  It might
  also indicate interest in some vendor-specific PA message types to
  get additional vendor-specific information on anti-virus posture.






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  This type-based subscription model allows great flexibility in design
  and implementation.  One Posture Validator may be responsible for
  evaluating several functions: anti-virus and host-based firewall, for
  instance.  Posture Collectors do not need to know which Posture
  Validators are installed on the Posture Broker Server or what they
  handle.  The Posture Collector simply sends PA messages with message
  types and the Posture Broker Server delivers them to the right
  Posture Validators.

  Because the Posture Broker Client and Posture Broker Server must have
  access to the PA Message Vendor ID and PA Subtype fields and because
  these are routing identifiers independent of the contents of the PA
  messages, these fields are located in PB-TNC not inside the PA
  messages themselves.

  A similar type-based system is used to tag PB-TNC messages.  In this
  case, the extensibility benefits are not as essential as with PA-TNC
  messages, but the ability to define IETF Standard PB-TNC Message
  Types and vendor-specific PB-TNC message types is still valuable.

2.1.2.  Dynamic Identifiers

  The type-based message delivery model described above is not ideal
  for all circumstances.  Sometimes it is important for a Posture
  Collector to deliver a message to a particular Posture Validator.
  For example, a particular Posture Validator might send a remediation
  message and the Posture Collector might need to send a response only
  to that one Posture Validator.  To handle this circumstance, PB-TNC
  provides delivery based on dynamic identifiers.

  When a Posture Broker Server loads a Posture Validator, it assigns it
  a Posture Validator ID.  Any PA messages sent by a Posture Validator
  include that Posture Validator's Posture Validator ID in the Posture
  Validator ID field of the PB-PA message.  A Posture Collector that
  receives such a message can send a message in response and request
  exclusive delivery to the Posture Validator identified by that
  Posture Validator ID.

  Dynamic identifiers avoid problems caused by the multicast nature of
  message types.  Multiple Posture Collectors or Posture Validators may
  be registered for the same message type, and this can cause confusion
  if they all respond and the software designer did not consider that
  possibility.  The dynamic identifier system allows more directed
  responses, but it does not work until at least one message has been
  received (so that the dynamic identifiers can be received).  Static
  identifiers were considered as another alternative but rejected
  because they result in a brittle system that only works with a




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  particular set of Posture Collectors and Posture Validators and
  causes problems if two Posture Collectors or Posture Validators with
  the same static identifier are installed.

2.2.  Vendor IDs

  In several places, PB-TNC needs to define a set of standard values
  but also allow vendor-specific extensions.  In each of these places
  (PB-TNC Message Types, PA Subtypes, Remediation Parameters Types, and
  Error Codes), the solution chosen was to preface the values with a
  vendor ID.  If a vendor ID is 0, the values in the next field are
  registered in an IANA registry and their meanings defined in an RFC.
  If a vendor ID is non-zero, the values in the next field are vendor
  specific and defined by the vendor whose SMI Private Enterprise
  Number matches the vendor ID.  Vendor-specific messages that are not
  understood by the recipient are ignored and skipped unless they have
  the NOSKIP flag set, in which case an error code is returned.

2.3.  Efficiency

  PB-TNC needs to work with low bandwidth transports and low power
  devices.  Therefore, a simple, compact format was chosen for the PB-
  TNC protocol: binary messages with a Type-Length-Value structure.

3.  PB-TNC Protocol Description

3.1.  Protocol Overview

  The PB-TNC protocol carries batches of PB messages between a Posture
  Broker Client and a Posture Broker Server.  It encapsulates PA
  messages and manages the NEA session.  It runs over a PT protocol.

  In order to work well over half-duplex PT protocols (such as those
  based on EAP [9]), PB-TNC supports half-duplex protocol operation.
  In this mode, the Posture Broker Client and Posture Broker Server
  take turns sending a single batch of messages to each other.  While
  the half-duplex nature of PB-TNC could slow exchanges that require
  many round trips or bidirectional multimedia exchanges, this is not a
  problem in practice because endpoint assessments do not typically
  involve multimedia or a large number of round trips.  The benefit of
  working over half-duplex transports outweighs any limitations
  imposed.

  PB-TNC also supports full-duplex protocol operation so that PB-TNC
  exchanges can be re-initialized immediately when needed (e.g., if the
  Posture Broker Server policy changes or if the Posture Broker Client
  detects a suspicious event).




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  Each PB-TNC batch consists of a header followed by a sequence of PB-
  TNC messages.  Each PB-TNC message has a Type-Length-Value (TLV)
  format with a few flags.  The TLV format allows a recipient to skip
  messages that it does not understand.  The TLV format also provides a
  standard way to mark messages as mandatory to ensure interoperability
  between a Posture Broker Client and a Posture Broker Server.

  This specification defines certain standard PB-TNC message types.  It
  also permits vendors to define their own vendor-specific message
  types.  One of the most important standard PB-TNC message types is
  PB-PA.  A message with this type contains a PA message and various
  message routing information.  A Posture Broker Client or Posture
  Broker Server that receives such a message does not interpret the PA
  message within.  Instead, it delivers the PA message to the
  appropriate set of Posture Collectors or Posture Validators, as
  determined using the message routing information contained in the PB-
  PA message.

  A Posture Broker Server will often need to communicate with several
  Posture Broker Clients at once.  The reverse may also be true, as
  when an endpoint has multiple network interfaces connected to
  different networks.  Each connection between a Posture Broker Server
  and a Posture Broker Client is instantiated as a separate PB-TNC
  session.  There may be several simultaneous sessions between a single
  Posture Broker Server and Posture Broker Client, but this is unusual.

3.2.  PB-TNC State Machine

  Figure 1 illustrates the PB-TNC state machine, showing the set of
  states that a PB-TNC session can have and the possible transitions
  among these states.  The following paragraphs describe this state
  machine in more detail.



















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              Receive CRETRY        SRETRY
                   or SRETRY   +----------------+
                        +--+   |                |
                        v  |   v                |
                       +---------+  CRETRY  +---------+
             CDATA     | Server  |<---------| Decided | CLOSE
          +----------->| Working |--------->|         |-------+
          |            +---------+  RESULT  +---------+       |
          |                ^ |  |                             v
          |                | |  +---------------------->=======
        ========           | |              CLOSE       " End "
        " Init "      CDATA| |SDATA                     =======
        ========           | |                          ^    ^
          |  |             | v                          |    |
          |  | SDATA   +---------+          CLOSE       |    |
          |  +-------->| Client  |----------------------+    |
          |            | Working |                           |
          |            +---------+                           |
          |                |  ^                              |
          |                +--+                              |
          |            Receive CRETRY                        |
          |   CLOSE                                          |
          +--------------------------------------------------+

                        Figure 1: PB-TNC state machine

  In this diagram, states are indicated by rectangular boxes.  The
  initial and terminal states have double outlines (with = and ").
  State transitions are indicated by unidirectional arrows marked with
  the cause of the transition.

  Many transitions (CDATA, SDATA, CRETRY, SRETRY, and RESULT) are
  triggered by the transmission or reception of a PB-TNC batch of a
  particular type.  The type of a PB-TNC batch is indicated by the
  contents of the Batch Type field in the PB-TNC header for that batch.
  For brevity, this document says "a FOO batch" instead of "a PB-TNC
  batch whose Batch Type field contains FOO".  Other transitions are
  triggered by receiving a PB-TNC batch of a particular type (e.g.,
  Receive CRETRY).  The CLOSE transition may be triggered by sending or
  receiving a CLOSE batch but may also be triggered by termination of
  the underlying PT connection.

  A PB-TNC session starts in the Init state when the underlying
  transport protocol (PT) establishes a connection between a Posture
  Broker Client and a Posture Broker Server.  If the Posture Broker
  Client initiated the underlying transport session, it starts by
  sending a CDATA batch to the Posture Broker Server, thus causing a
  transition to the Server Working state.  If the Posture Broker Server



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  initiated the transport session, it starts by sending a PB-TNC batch
  of type SDATA to the Posture Broker Client, thus causing a transition
  to the Client Working state.

  The Posture Broker Client and Posture Broker Server may now alternate
  sending CDATA and SDATA batches to each other.  Only the Posture
  Broker Client can send a data batch when the session is in the Client
  Working state, and only the Posture Broker Server can send a data
  batch when the session is in the Server Working state.

  The most common way to end an exchange is for the Posture Broker
  Server to send a RESULT batch.  This causes a transition into the
  Decided state.  This is not a terminal state.  The PT session can
  remain open and another exchange can be initiated by having the
  Posture Broker Client send a CRETRY batch.  This can be useful when
  the Posture Broker Client (or more likely a Posture Collector)
  discovers a suspicious condition on the endpoint, for example.  If
  the underlying transport protocol (PT) supports full-duplex
  operation, the Posture Broker Server can also initiate another
  exchange from this state by sending a SRETRY batch.  This can be
  useful when the policy changes on the server, for example.

  Whether an SRETRY or CRETRY message or both are sent, the next state
  is the Server Working State.  From this state, the Posture Broker
  Server sends an SDATA batch and the new exchange begins.  The state
  transitions marked Receive CRETRY and Receive CRETRY or SRETRY
  indicate that it is permissible to receive such messages in the
  indicated states, generally when the Posture Broker Client sent a
  CRETRY message at roughly the same time as the Posture Broker Server
  decided to send an SRETRY.  In that case, a CRETRY message may be
  received while in the Server Working or Client Working state.  Also,
  an SRETRY message may be received while in the Server Working state.
  These messages are redundant and therefore ignored, as indicated by
  the relevant transitions, which don't cause a state change.

  The only terminal state is the End state.  This state is reached if
  the underlying PT connection closes.  This can be caused by an action
  of the Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server or it can be
  caused by some external factor, such as pulling the network plug.
  When possible, a CLOSE batch SHOULD be sent before the underlying PT
  connection is terminated.  However, there may be cases where the PT
  connection is closed without notice.  For example, a plug may be
  pulled, a software program may fail, or a Posture Broker Client or
  Posture Broker Server may be unable to send a CLOSE message due to
  half-duplex limitations in the underlying PT protocol.  In these
  cases, the Posture Broker Client and Posture Broker Server will
  generally receive some form of notification from the Posture
  Transport Client and Posture Transport Server that the PT connection



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  has been closed.  This notification can trigger the CLOSE transition.
  However, the notification interaction is not standardized since the
  vertical interfaces in the NEA Reference Model are not standardized.
  In any case, the reception of the CLOSE batch or notification of
  termination of the transport causes the transition to the End state.

  Note that a Posture Broker Client and Posture Broker Server may not
  always have exactly the same state for a given PB-TNC session.  For
  example, say that a session is in the Client Working state and the
  Posture Broker Client transmits a CDATA batch.  While this batch is
  in transit (transmitted by the Posture Broker Client but not yet
  received by the Posture Broker Server), the Posture Broker Client
  will think that the session is in Server Working state but the
  Posture Broker Server will think that the session is in Client
  Working state.  However, this is a temporary condition and does not
  cause problems in practice.  The only possible issue is that a
  Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server does not know whether
  the other party has received its message until it receives a response
  from the other party.

  If a half-duplex transport is used, note that the Posture Broker
  Server cannot send a SRETRY batch when the session is in the Decided
  state because the Posture Broker Server sent the most recent batch
  (the RESULT batch) and this would violate the half-duplex nature of
  the transport protocol.  Instead, a server that wishes to initiate a
  new exchange in the Decided state when a half-duplex transport is in
  use should close the PT connection without sending a CLOSE batch and
  start a new PB-TNC session.  This limitation does not exist when a
  full-duplex transport is used.

  The Posture Broker Server and Posture Broker Client MUST follow the
  state machine described in this section.

3.3.  Layering on PT

  PB-TNC batches are carried over protocol bindings of the PT protocol,
  which provides the interaction between a Posture Transport Client and
  a Posture Transport Server.  PB-TNC counts on PT to provide a secure
  transport.  In particular, PT MUST support mutual authentication of
  the Posture Transport Client and the Posture Transport Server,
  confidentiality and integrity protection for PB-TNC batches, and
  protection against replay attacks.  PB-TNC is unaware of the
  underlying transport protocols being used.  PB-TNC operates directly
  on PT; no further layer of PB-TNC is expected.







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RFC 5793                         PB-TNC                       March 2010


3.3.1.  Posture Transport (PT) Protocol Requirements Addendum

  RFC 5209 [8] describes normative requirements for the Posture
  Transport protocol.  This section specifies additional requirements
  for the Posture Transport protocol.  Candidate Posture Transport
  protocols must indicate conformance to requirements specified in this
  section as well as section 7.4 of RFC 5209.

  The additional requirements for candidate PT protocols are:

  PT-6 The PT protocol MUST be connection oriented; it MUST support
       confirmed initiation and close down.

  PT-7 The PT protocol MUST be able to carry binary data.

  PT-8 The PT protocol MUST provide mechanisms for flow control and
       congestion control.

  PT-9 PT protocol specifications MUST describe the capabilities that
       they provide for and limitations that they impose on the PB
       protocol (e.g., half/full duplex, maximum message size).

3.4.  Example of PB-TNC Encapsulation

  This section shows how PA messages can be carried inside a PB-TNC
  batch that is inside a PT protocol.

  Within the PT protocol, the PB-TNC header is packaged next, followed
  by two PB-PA messages that contain PA messages meant for the Posture
  Collectors and Posture Validators on the platform.

     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                           PT Protocol                         |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                          PB-TNC Header                        |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                           PB-PA Message                       |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                           PB-PA Message                       |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

             Figure 2: Example of PB-TNC message encapsulation

  This figure is conceptual, of course, and not an exact byte-for-byte
  replica.






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4.  PB-TNC Protocol Specification

  This section defines the syntax and semantics of the PB-TNC protocol
  fields.  If a Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server receives
  a batch that violates the requirements of this specification, it MUST
  respond by sending a fatal Invalid Parameter error in a CLOSE batch
  unless this document specifies otherwise.

4.1.  PB-TNC Header

  Every PB-TNC batch MUST start with the following header.  A PB-TNC
  batch MUST contain only one instance of this header followed by zero
  or more PB-TNC messages.  The PB-TNC messages are defined in
  subsequent sections of this specification.

      0                   1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |    Version    |D|     Reserved                        | B-Type|
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                       Batch Length                            |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  Version (8 bits)

     This field indicates the version of the format for the PB-TNC
     message.  This version is intended to allow for evolution of the
     PB-TNC protocol in a manner that can easily be detected by message
     recipients.

     This field MUST be set to 2 when the batch conforms to this
     specification.  Later versions of PB-TNC may define other values
     for this field.  The values 0x00, 0x09, 0x0a, 0x0d, 0x20, and 0x3c
     are reserved and cannot be used for any version of PB-TNC to
     ensure that PB-TNC can be easily distinguished from earlier
     posture broker protocols already in use.

     If a Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server receives a
     Version value that it does not support, it MUST respond with a PB-
     TNC batch with batch type CLOSE that contains only a fatal Version
     Not Supported error code and whose Version header field has the
     value 2.  Implementations responding to a PB-TNC message
     containing a supported version MUST use the same Version number to
     minimize the risk of version incompatibility.  PB-TNC message
     initiators that support multiple PB-TNC protocol versions SHOULD
     be able to alter which version of PB-TNC message they send based
     on prior message exchanges with a particular peer Posture Broker
     Client or Posture Broker Server.



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  Directionality (D) (1 bit)

     When a Posture Broker Client is sending this message, the
     Directionality bit MUST be set to 0.  When a Posture Broker Server
     is sending this message, the Directionality bit MUST be set to 1.
     This helps avoid any situation where two Posture Broker Clients or
     two Posture Broker Servers engage in a dialog.  It also helps with
     debugging.

  Reserved (19 bits)

     This field is reserved.  For this version of this specification,
     it MUST be set to 0 on transmission and ignored on reception.
     Future versions of this specification may allow senders to set
     some of these bits and recipients to interpret them.

  B-Type (Batch Type) (4 bits)

     This field is used to drive the state machine described in section
     3.2.  This field MUST have one of the values from the following
     table.  If any other value is received, the recipient MUST ignore
     the contents of the batch and send a fatal Invalid Parameter error
     code in a CLOSE batch.  If the value received is not permitted for
     the current state, according to the state machine in section 3.2.,
     the recipient MUST ignore the contents of the batch and send a
     fatal Unexpected Batch Type error code in a CLOSE batch.

























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     Number   Name     Definition
     ------   ----     ----------

     1        CDATA    The Posture Broker Client may send a batch with
                       this Batch Type to convey messages to the
                       Posture Broker Server.  A Posture Broker Server
                       MUST NOT send this Batch Type.  A CDATA batch
                       may be empty (contain no messages) if the
                       Posture Broker Client has nothing to send.

     2        SDATA    The Posture Broker Server may send a batch with
                       this Batch Type to convey messages to the
                       Posture Broker Client.  A Posture Broker Client
                       MUST NOT send this Batch Type.  An SDATA batch
                       may be empty (contain no messages) if the
                       Posture Broker Server has nothing to send.

     3        RESULT   The Posture Broker Server may send a batch with
                       this Batch Type to indicate that it has
                       completed its evaluation.  The batch MUST
                       include a PB-Assessment-Result message and MAY
                       include a PB-Access-Recommendation message.

     4        CRETRY   The Posture Broker Client may send a batch with
                       this Batch Type to indicate that it wishes to
                       restart an exchange.  A Posture Broker Server
                       MUST NOT send this Batch Type.  A CRETRY batch
                       may be empty (contain no messages) if the
                       Posture Broker Client has nothing else to send.

     5        SRETRY  The Posture Broker Server may send a batch with
                      this Batch Type to indicate that it wishes to
                      restart the exchange.  A Posture Broker Client
                      MUST NOT send this Batch Type.  A SRETRY batch
                      may be empty (contain no messages) if the
                      Posture Broker Server has nothing else to send.

     6        CLOSE   The Posture Broker Server or Posture Broker
                      Client may send a batch with this Batch Type to
                      indicate that it is about to terminate the
                      underlying PT connection.  A CLOSE batch may be
                      empty (contain no messages) if there is nothing
                      to send.  However, if the termination is due to a
                      fatal error, then the CLOSE batch MUST contain a
                      PB-Error message.






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  Batch Length (32 bits)

     This length field contains the size of the full PB-TNC batch in
     octets.  This length includes the PB-TNC header and all the PB-TNC
     messages in the batch.  In other words, it includes the entire
     contents of the batch.  This field MUST contain at least the value
     8 for the fixed-length fields in this header.  Any Posture Broker
     Client or Posture Broker Server that receives a PB-TNC message
     with a PB-TNC Message Length field whose value is less than 8 MUST
     respond with a fatal Invalid Parameter error code in a CLOSE
     batch.

4.2.  PB-TNC Message

  All PB-TNC messages have the same overall structure, which is
  described in this section.  Of course, the format and semantics of
  the PB-TNC Message Value field will vary, depending on the values of
  the PB-TNC Vendor ID and PB-TNC Message Type fields.

      0                   1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |     Flags     |               PB-TNC Vendor ID                |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                       PB-TNC Message Type                     |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                      PB-TNC Message Length                    |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |               PB-TNC Message Value (Variable Length)          |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  Flags (8 bits)

     This field defines flags impacting the processing of this message.

     Bit 0 of this Flags field (the most significant bit) is known as
     the NOSKIP flag.  If this flag is cleared (value 0), then the
     recipient (a Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server) may
     skip (ignore) this message if the message type is not understood
     or the recipient cannot or will not process the message as
     required in the definition of that message.  If this flag is set
     (value 1), then recipients MUST NOT skip this attribute.

     This flag does not mean that all recipients must support this
     message.  Instead, any recipient that receives a message with this
     flag set to 1 but cannot or will not process it as required MUST
     NOT act on any part of the PB-TNC batch.  Instead, the recipient
     MUST respond with a fatal Unsupported Mandatory Message error code



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     in a CLOSE batch.  In order to avoid taking action on some
     messages in a batch only to later find an unsupported NOSKIP
     flagged message, recipients of a PB-TNC batch might choose to scan
     all of the messages in the batch prior to acting upon any of the
     messages, checking to determine whether one of them is an
     unsupported message with the NOSKIP flag set.

     The other bits in this Flags field are reserved.  For this version
     of PB-TNC, they MUST be set to 0 on transmission and ignored on
     reception.

  PB-TNC Vendor ID (24 bits)

     The PB-TNC Vendor ID field identifies a vendor by using the SMI
     Private Enterprise Number (PEN).  Any organization can receive its
     own unique PEN from IANA, the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority.
     This Vendor ID qualifies the PB-TNC Message Type field so that
     each vendor has 2^32-1 separate message types available for their
     use.

     Message types standardized by the IETF use zero (0) in this field.
     The Vendor ID 0xffffff is reserved.  Posture Broker Clients and
     Posture Broker Servers MUST NOT send messages in which the Vendor
     ID has this reserved value (0xffffff).  If a Posture Broker Client
     or Posture Broker Server receives a message in which the PB-TNC
     Vendor ID has this reserved value (0xffffff), it MUST respond with
     a fatal Invalid Parameter error code in a CLOSE batch.

  PB-TNC Message Type (32 bits)

     The PB-TNC Message Type field identifies the type of the PB-TNC
     message contained in the PB-TNC Message Value field.  The PB-TNC
     message type 0xffffffff is reserved.  Posture Broker Clients and
     Posture Broker Servers MUST NOT send messages in which the PB-TNC
     Message Type field has this reserved value (0xffffffff).  If a
     Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server receives a message
     in which the PB-TNC Message Type field has this reserved value
     (0xffffffff), it MUST respond with a fatal Invalid Parameter error
     code in a CLOSE batch.  Unless otherwise prohibited in the
     definition of a particular PB-TNC message type (e.g., PB-Language-
     Preference), a single PB-TNC batch may contain multiple messages
     with the same message type and/or vendor ID.

     The IETF and any other organization with a PEN can define 2^32-1
     unique PB-TNC message types, as long as the organization's PEN is
     placed in the PB-TNC Vendor ID field of the message.  Since the
     PB-TNC message type is qualified by the vendor ID, there is no




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     risk of conflicts as long as each organization uses its own PEN
     for the vendor ID and manages its own set of 2^32-1 message type
     values.

     This document defines certain PB-TNC message types that, when used
     with the IETF SMI PEN (0), have standard meanings.  These are
     known as IETF Standard PB-TNC Message Types.  Some of these PB-TNC
     message types are mandatory and therefore MUST be implemented by
     all Posture Broker Client and Posture Broker Server
     implementations that claim compliance with this specification.
     For details on which PB-TNC message types are mandatory, see the
     description of these message types later in section 4.

     IANA maintains a registry of PB-TNC message types.  Entries in
     this registry are added by Expert Review with Specification
     Required, following the guidelines in section 6.1.

     New vendor-specific PB-TNC message types (those used with a non-
     zero PB-TNC vendor ID) may be defined and employed by vendors
     without IETF or IANA involvement.  However, Posture Broker Clients
     and Posture Broker Servers MUST NOT require support for particular
     vendor-specific PB-TNC message types and MUST interoperate with
     other parties despite any differences in the set of vendor-
     specific PB-TNC message types supported (although they MAY permit
     administrators to configure them to require support for specific
     PB-TNC message types).

     Note that the PB-TNC Message Type field is completely separate
     from the PA Subtype field.  The same value (e.g., 0) may have
     different meanings as a PB-TNC message type and as a PA subtype.

  PB-TNC Message Length (32 bits)

     This field specifies the length of this PB-TNC message in octets.
     It includes this header (the fields Flags, PB-TNC Vendor ID, PB-
     TNC Message Type, and PB-TNC Message Length).  Therefore, this
     value MUST always be at least 12.  Any Posture Broker Client or
     Posture Broker Server that receives a message with a PB-TNC
     Message Length field whose value is less than 12 MUST respond with
     a fatal Invalid Parameter error code in a CLOSE batch.

  PB-TNC Message Value (variable length)

     The syntax and semantics of this field vary, depending on the
     values in the PB-TNC Vendor ID and PB-TNC Message Type fields.
     The syntax and semantics of several standard messages are defined
     in subsequent sections of this specification.




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4.3.  IETF Standard PB-TNC Message Types

  The following table provides a reference list with brief descriptions
  of the IETF Standard PB-TNC Message Types defined in this
  specification.  These PB-TNC message types must be used with a PB-TNC
  vendor ID of zero (0).  If these PB-TNC message type values are used
  with a different PB-TNC vendor ID, they have a completely different
  meaning that is not defined in this specification.

  For more details on these message types, see the remainder of section
  4.  For IETF Standard PA Subtypes (which are completely different
  from PB-TNC message types), please refer to the PA-TNC specification
  [10].

  Message Type   Definition
  ------------   ----------
  0              PB-Experimental - reserved for experimental use
  1              PB-PA - contains a PA message
  2              PB-Assessment-Result - the overall assessment result
                 computed by the Posture Broker Server
  3              PB-Access-Recommendation - includes Posture Broker
                 Server access recommendation
  4              PB-Remediation-Parameters - includes Posture Broker
                 Server remediation parameters
  5              PB-Error - error indicator
  6              PB-Language-Preference - sender's preferred
                 language(s) for human-readable strings
  7              PB-Reason-String - string explaining reason for
                 Posture Broker Server access recommendation

4.4.  PB-Experimental

  The PB-Experimental PB-TNC message type is a PB-TNC message type
  (value 0) that has been set aside for experimental purposes.  It may
  be used to test code or for other experimental purposes.  It MUST NOT
  be used in a production environment or in a product.  This meaning
  for this PB-TNC message type only applies if the PB-TNC Vendor ID
  field in the PB-TNC Message Header contains the value zero (0).  If a
  different Vendor ID is contained in that field, the PB-TNC message
  type 0 has a completely different meaning not defined in this
  specification.

  The contents of the PB-TNC Message Length and PB-TNC Message Value
  fields for this PB-TNC message type are not specified.  They may have
  almost any value, depending on what experiments are being conducted.
  Similarly, the Flags field for this message may have the NOSKIP bit
  set or cleared, depending on what experiments are being conducted.
  However, note that the PB-TNC Message Length field must have a value



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  of at least 12 since that is the total of the length of the fixed-
  length fields at the start of the PB-TNC message (the fields Flags,
  PB-TNC Vendor ID, PB-TNC Message Type, and PB-TNC Message Length).
  Any Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server that receives a
  message with a PB-TNC Message Length field whose value is invalid
  MUST respond with a fatal Invalid Parameter error code in a CLOSE
  batch.

  A Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server implementation
  intended for production use MUST NOT send a message with this Message
  Type with the value zero (0) as the vendor ID.  If it receives a
  message with this message type and with the value zero (0) as the
  vendor ID, it MUST ignore the message unless the NOSKIP bit is set,
  in which case it MUST respond with a fatal Unsupported Mandatory
  Message error code in a CLOSE batch.

4.5.  PB-PA

  The PB-TNC message type named PB-PA (value 1) contains one PA
  message.  Many batches will contain several PB-PA messages, but some
  batches may not contain any messages of this type.

  All Posture Broker Client and Posture Broker Server implementations
  MUST implement support for this PB-TNC message type.  Generally, this
  support will consist of forwarding the enclosed PA message to the
  appropriate Posture Collectors and Posture Validators.  Specific
  requirements are contained later in the description of this message
  type.

  The type of the PA message contained in a PB-PA message is indicated
  by the PA Message Vendor ID and PA Subtype fields, as described later
  in this section.  The PA-TNC specification [10] describes several
  standard PA message types that can be identified by the PA Message
  Vendor ID and PA Subtype values listed in the PA-TNC specification.
  Other PA message types may also be defined, as described in the
  description of the PA Subtype field later in this section.

  The NOSKIP flag in the PB-TNC Message Header MUST be set for this
  message type.  Any Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server
  that receives a PB-PA message with the NOSKIP flag not set MUST
  ignore the message and MUST respond with a fatal Invalid Parameter
  error code in a CLOSE batch.

  For the PB-PA message type, the PB-TNC Vendor ID field MUST contain
  the value zero (0) and the PB-TNC Message Type field MUST contain 1.
  If a non-zero value is contained in the PB-TNC Vendor ID field,
  message type 1 has a completely different meaning not defined in this
  specification.



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  The PB-TNC Message Length field MUST contain the length of the entire
  PB-TNC message, including the fixed-length fields at the start of the
  PB-TNC message (the fields Flags, PB-TNC Vendor ID, PB-TNC Message
  Type, and PB-TNC Message Length), the fixed-length fields listed
  below (Flags, PA Message Vendor ID, PA Subtype, Posture Collector
  Identifier, and Posture Validator Identifier), and the PA Message
  Body.  Since the PA Message Body is variable length, the value in the
  PB-TNC Message Length field will vary also.  However, it MUST always
  be at least 24 to cover the fixed-length fields listed in the
  preceding sentences.  Any Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker
  Server that receives a PB-PA message with a PB-TNC Message Length
  field that has an invalid value MUST respond with a fatal Invalid
  Parameter error code in a CLOSE batch.

  The following diagram illustrates the format and contents of the PB-
  TNC Message Value field for this message type.  The text after this
  diagram describes the fields shown here.

      0                   1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |    Flags      |               PA Message Vendor ID            |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                           PA Subtype                          |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |  Posture Collector Identifier | Posture Validator Identifier  |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                 PA Message Body (Variable Length)             |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  Flags (8 bits)

     This field contains flags relating to the PA message.

     Bit 0 of this flags field (the most significant bit) is known as
     the EXCL flag (for exclusive).  If the EXCL bit is cleared (value
     0), the Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server that
     receives this PB-TNC message SHOULD deliver the PA message
     contained in this PB-TNC message to all Posture Collectors or
     Posture Validators that have expressed an interest in PA messages
     with this PA Message Vendor ID and PA subtype.  If a Posture
     Broker Client receives a message with the EXCL flag set (value 1),
     the Posture Broker Client SHOULD deliver the PA message contained
     in this PB-TNC message only to the Posture Collector identified by
     the Posture Collector Identifier field.  However, if the
     identified Posture Collector has not expressed an interest in PA
     messages with this PA Message Vendor ID and PA subtype, the PA




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     message should be silently discarded.  Analogous requirements
     apply to a Posture Broker Server that receives a message with the
     EXCL flag set.

     The EXCL bit allows, for example, a Posture Validator to handle
     the circumstance where there are two Posture Collectors on the
     endpoint that are interested in a particular kind of PA messages
     and the Posture Validator has remediation instructions that only
     apply to one of those Posture Collectors.

     The other bits in this Flags field are reserved.  For this version
     of PB-TNC, they MUST be set to 0 on transmission and ignored on
     reception.

  PA Message Vendor ID (24 bits)

     The PA Message Vendor ID field identifies a vendor by using the
     SMI Private Enterprise Number (PEN).  Any organization can receive
     its own unique PEN from IANA, the Internet Assigned Numbers
     Authority.  The PA Message Vendor ID qualifies the PA Subtype
     field so that each vendor has 2^32-1 separate PA subtypes
     available for its use.  PA subtypes standardized by the IETF are
     always used with a PA Message Vendor ID of the value zero (0) in
     this field.  The PA Message Vendor ID 0xffffff is reserved.  A
     Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server MUST NOT send
     messages in which the PA Message Vendor ID field has this reserved
     value (0xffffff).  If a Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker
     Server receives a message in which the PA Message Vendor ID has
     this reserved value (0xffffff), it MUST respond with a fatal
     Invalid Parameter error code in a CLOSE batch.

  PA Subtype (32 bits)

     The PA Subtype field identifies the type of the PA message
     contained in the PA Message Body field.  The PA subtype 0xffffffff
     is reserved.  A Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server
     MUST NOT send messages in which the PA Subtype field has this
     reserved value (0xffffffff).  If a Posture Broker Client or
     Posture Broker Server receives a message in which the PA Subtype
     has this reserved value (0xffffffff), it MUST respond with a fatal
     Invalid Parameter error code in a CLOSE batch.  A Posture Broker
     Client or Posture Broker Server MUST support having multiple PA
     messages in a single PB-TNC batch that have the same PA subtype
     and/or PA Message Vendor ID.

     IANA maintains a registry of PA subtypes.  Entries in this
     registry are added by Expert Review with Specification Required,
     following the guidelines in section 6.1.  No PA subtypes are



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     defined in this specification.  Definitions of IETF Standard PA
     Subtypes are contained in the PA-TNC specification [10] and other
     specifications.  IETF Standard PA Subtypes are always used with a
     PA Message Vendor ID of zero (0).

     New vendor-specific PA subtypes (those used with a non-zero PA
     Message Vendor ID) may be defined and employed by vendors without
     IETF or IANA involvement.  However, Posture Broker Clients and
     Posture Broker Servers MUST NOT require support for particular
     vendor-specific PA subtypes and MUST interoperate with other
     parties despite any differences in the set of vendor-specific PA
     subtypes supported (although they MAY permit administrators to
     configure them to require support for specific PA subtypes).

     Note that the PB-TNC Message Type field is completely separate
     from the PA Subtype field.  The same value (e.g., 0) may have
     different meanings as a PB-TNC message type and as a PA subtype.

  Posture Collector Identifier (16 bits)

     The Posture Collector Identifier field contains the identifier of
     the Posture Collector associated with this PA message.

     The Posture Broker Client is responsible for assigning one or more
     Posture Collector Identifier values (but not 0xffff) to each
     Posture Collector involved in a message exchange.  Multiple
     Posture Collector identifiers are required for appropriate
     correlation in cases where there are multiple components of the
     same type handled by a single Posture Collector, e.g., an endpoint
     with two VPN client implementations handled by a single VPN
     Posture Collector.  Please refer to section 3.3 of the PA-TNC
     specification for an example that illustrates the use of multiple
     Posture Collector Identifiers.  The Posture Collector Identifier
     value(s) assigned to a Posture Collector by a Posture Broker
     Client MUST NOT change during the course of a PT session.  This
     identifier is used to identify a unique Posture Collector
     communicating with the Posture Broker Client on the endpoint
     during a NEA exchange, and is used by the Posture Validator to
     send response attributes to a specific Posture Collector component
     if required.

     When a Posture Broker Server sets the EXCL flag for a PA message,
     the Posture Broker Server MUST set the Posture Collector
     Identifier field to the identifier of the Posture Collector that
     should receive the PA message.  If the EXCL flag is not set, a
     Posture Broker Server MAY still set the Posture Collector
     Identifier value for PA messages that it sends to indicate that
     the PA message is intended as a response to a message sent by the



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     Posture Collector associated with the specified Posture Collector
     Identifier.  If the Posture Broker Server does not wish to
     indicate any Posture Collector in this manner, it SHOULD set this
     field to the reserved value 0xffff.

  Posture Validator Identifier (16 bits)

     The Posture Validator Identifier field contains the identifier of
     the Posture Validator associated with this PA message.

     The Posture Broker Server MUST assign a unique Posture Validator
     Identifier value (but not 0xffff) to each Posture Validator
     involved in a message exchange and include this Posture Validator
     identifier in this field for any PA messages sent by that Posture
     Validator.  The Posture Validator Identifier value assigned to a
     Posture Validator by a Posture Broker Server MUST NOT change
     during the course of a PT session.  This identifier is used to
     identify a unique Posture Validator communicating with the Posture
     Broker Server endpoint during a NEA exchange, and is used by the
     Posture Collector to send attributes to a specific Posture
     Validator if required.

     When a Posture Broker Client sets the EXCL flag for a PA message,
     the Posture Broker Client MUST set the Posture Validator
     Identifier field to the identifier of the Posture Validator that
     should receive the PA message.  If the EXCL flag is not set, a
     Posture Broker Client MAY still set the Posture Validator
     Identifier value for PA messages that it sends to indicate that
     the PA message is intended as a response to a message sent by the
     Posture Validator associated with the specified Posture Validator
     Identifier.  If the Posture Broker Client does not wish to
     indicate any Posture Validator in this manner, it SHOULD set this
     field to the reserved value 0xffff.

  PA Message Body (variable length)

     The PA Message Body field contains the body of the PA message that
     is being carried in this PB-TNC message.  The length of this field
     can be determined by subtracting the length of the fixed-length
     fields at the start of the PB-TNC message (the fields Flags, PB-
     TNC Vendor ID, PB-TNC Message Type, and PB-TNC Message Length) and
     the fixed-length fields at the start of the PB-PA message (Flags,
     PA Message Vendor ID, PA Subtype, Posture Collector Identifier,
     and Posture Validator Identifier) from the message length
     contained in the PB-TNC Message Length field.  The length of these
     fixed-length fields is 24 octets.  Therefore, any Posture Broker
     Client or Posture Broker Server that receives a PB-PA message with




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     a PB-TNC Message Length field whose value is less than 24 MUST
     respond with a fatal Invalid Parameter error code in a CLOSE
     batch.

4.6.  PB-Assessment-Result

  The PB-TNC message type named PB-Assessment-Result (value 2) is used
  by the Posture Broker Server to provide the assessment result after
  the Posture Broker Server has completed the assessment of the
  endpoint.  The Posture Broker Server will typically compute the
  assessment result as a cumulative of the individual assessment
  results received from the various Posture Validators; the algorithm
  for computation of assessment result at the Posture Broker layer is
  implementation specific and can also change based on policies in a
  specific deployment.  The Posture Broker Server MUST include one
  message of this type in any batch of type RESULT and MUST NOT include
  a message of this type in any other type of batch.  The Posture
  Broker Client MUST NOT send a PB-TNC message with this message type.
  If a Posture Broker Server receives a PB-TNC message with this
  message type, it MUST respond with a fatal Invalid Parameter error in
  a CLOSE batch.  The Posture Broker Client MUST implement and process
  this message and MUST ignore any message with this message type that
  is not part of a batch of type RESULT.

  The NOSKIP flag in the PB-TNC Message Header MUST be set for this
  message type.  The PB-TNC Vendor ID field MUST contain the value zero
  (0) and the PB-TNC Message Type field MUST contain 2.  If a non-zero
  value is contained in the PB-TNC Vendor ID field, message type 2 has
  a completely different meaning not defined in this specification.
  The PB-TNC Message Length field MUST contain the value 16 since that
  is the total of the length of the fixed-length fields at the start of
  the PB-TNC message (the fields Flags, PB-TNC Vendor ID, PB-TNC
  Message Type, and PB-TNC Message Length) along with the Assessment
  Result field described below.  Any Posture Broker Client or Posture
  Broker Server that receives a PB-Assessment-Result message with a PB-
  TNC Message Length field that does not have a value of 16 MUST
  respond with a fatal Invalid Parameter error code in a CLOSE batch.

  The following diagram illustrates the format and contents of the PB-
  TNC Message Value field for this message type.  The text after this
  diagram describes the fields shown here.

                          1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                       Assessment Result                       |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+




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  Assessment Result

     This 32-bit field MUST contain one of the following values

     Value   Description
     -----   -----------
     0       Posture Broker Server assessed the endpoint to be
             compliant with policy.

     1       Posture Broker Server assessed the endpoint to be non-
             compliant with policy but the difference from compliance
             was minor.

     2       Posture Broker Server assessed the endpoint to be non-
             compliant with policy and the assessed difference from
             compliance was very significant.

     3       Posture Broker Server was unable to determine policy
             compliance due to an error.

     4       Posture Broker Server was unable to determine whether the
             assessed endpoint is compliant with policy based on the
             attributes provided by endpoint.

     If a Posture Broker Client receives an Assessment Result value
     other than the five values described above, it MUST respond with a
     fatal Invalid Parameter error in a CLOSE batch.  Other values may
     be defined in future versions of PB-TNC but only if the PB-TNC
     version number is changed.  Therefore, there is no need for an
     IANA registry for Assessment Result values.

4.7.  PB-Access-Recommendation

  The PB-TNC message type named PB-Access-Recommendation (value 3) is
  used by the Posture Broker Server to provide an access recommendation
  after the Posture Broker Server has completed some assessment of the
  endpoint.  The PB-Assessment-Result and the PB-Access-Recommendation
  attribute together constitute the global assessment decision for an
  endpoint.  The PB-Access-Recommendation is not authoritative, and the
  network and host-based access control systems would typically use
  additional information to determine the network access that is
  granted to the endpoint.  The Posture Broker Server MAY include one
  message of this type in any batch of type RESULT and MUST NOT include
  a message of this type in any other type of batch.  Posture Broker
  Clients MUST NOT send a PB-TNC message with this message type.  If a
  Posture Broker Server receives a PB-TNC message with this message
  type, it MUST respond with a fatal Invalid Parameter error in a CLOSE




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  batch.  The Posture Broker Client MUST implement and process this
  message and MUST ignore any message with this message type that is
  not part of a batch of type RESULT.

  The NOSKIP flag in the PB-TNC Message Header MUST NOT be set for this
  message type.  Any Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server
  that receives a PB-Access-Recommendation message with the NOSKIP flag
  set MUST ignore the message and MUST respond with a fatal Invalid
  Parameter error code in a CLOSE batch.  The PB-TNC Vendor ID field
  MUST contain the value zero (0) and the PB-TNC Message Type field
  MUST contain 3.  If a non-zero value is contained in the PB-TNC
  Vendor ID field, message type 3 has a completely different meaning
  not defined in this specification.  The PB-TNC Message Length field
  MUST contain the value 16 since that is the total of the length of
  the fixed-length fields at the start of the PB-TNC message (the
  fields Flags, PB-TNC Vendor ID, PB-TNC Message Type, and PB-TNC
  Message Length) along with the Access Recommendation field described
  below.  Any Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server that
  receives a PB-Access-Recommendation message with a PB-TNC Message
  Length field that does not have a value of 16 MUST respond with a
  fatal Invalid Parameter error code in a CLOSE batch.

  The following diagram illustrates the format and contents of the PB-
  TNC Message Value field for this message type.  The text after this
  diagram describes the fields shown here.

      0                   1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |          Reserved             |   Access Recommendation Code  |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  Reserved (16 bits)

     These Reserved bits MUST be set to 0 on transmission and ignored
     on reception.

  Access Recommendation Code (16 bits)

     The Access Recommendation Code field identifies the Access
     Recommendation that the Posture Broker Server has made for this
     Posture Broker Client at this time.  This field MUST have one of
     these three values: 1 for Access Allowed (full access), 2 for
     Access Denied (no access), or 3 for Quarantined (partial access).
     If a Posture Broker Client receives an Access Recommendation Code
     value other than these three values, it MUST respond with a fatal
     Invalid Parameter error code in a CLOSE batch.  Other values may




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     be defined in future versions of PB-TNC but only if the PB-TNC
     version number is changed.  Therefore, there is no need for an
     IANA registry for Access Recommendation Codes.

4.8.  PB-Remediation-Parameters

  The PB-TNC message type named PB-Remediation-Parameters (value 4) is
  used by the Posture Broker Server to provide global (not Posture
  Validator-specific) remediation parameters after the Posture Broker
  Server has completed some assessment of the endpoint.  The Posture
  Broker Server MAY include one or more messages of this type in any
  batch of any type, but this message type is most useful in batches of
  type RESULT.

  The Posture Broker Client MUST NOT send a PB-TNC message with this
  message type.  If a Posture Broker Server receives a PB-TNC message
  with this message type, it MUST respond with a fatal Invalid
  Parameter error in a CLOSE batch.  The Posture Broker Client may
  implement and process this message but is not required to do so.  It
  may skip this message.  Even if the Posture Broker Client implements
  this message type, it is not obligated to act on it.

  The NOSKIP flag in the PB-TNC Message Header MUST NOT be set for this
  message type.  The PB-TNC Vendor ID field MUST contain the value zero
  (0) and the PB-TNC Message Type field MUST contain 4.  If a non-zero
  value is contained in the PB-TNC Vendor ID field, message type 4 has
  a completely different meaning not defined in this specification.

  The PB-TNC Message Length field MUST contain the length of the entire
  PB-TNC message, including the fixed-length fields at the start of the
  PB-TNC message (the fields Flags, PB-TNC Vendor ID, PB-TNC Message
  Type, and PB-TNC Message Length), the fixed-length fields listed
  below (Reserved, Remediation Parameters Vendor ID, and Remediation
  Parameters Type), and the Remediation Parameters.  Since the
  Remediation Parameters field is variable length, the value in the PB-
  TNC Message Length field will vary also.  However, it MUST always be
  at least 20 to cover the fixed-length fields listed in the preceding
  sentences.  Any Posture Broker Client that receives a PB-Remediation-
  Parameters message with a PB-TNC Message Length field that contains
  an invalid value (e.g., less than 20) MUST respond with a fatal
  Invalid Parameter error code in a CLOSE batch.

  The following diagram illustrates the format and contents of the PB-
  TNC Message Value field for this message type.  The text after this
  diagram describes the fields shown here.






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      0                   1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |    Reserved   |       Remediation Parameters Vendor ID        |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                  Remediation Parameters Type                  |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |            Remediation Parameters (Variable Length)           |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  Reserved (8 bits)

     These Reserved bits MUST be set to 0 on transmission and ignored
     on reception.

  Remediation Parameters Vendor ID (24 bits)

     The Remediation Parameters Vendor ID field identifies a vendor by
     using the SMI Private Enterprise Number (PEN).  Any organization
     can receive its own unique PEN from IANA, the Internet Assigned
     Numbers Authority.  The Remediation Parameters Vendor ID qualifies
     the Remediation Parameters Type field so that each vendor has 2^32
     separate Remediation Parameters Types available for its use.
     Remediation Parameters Types standardized by the IETF are always
     used with the value zero (0) in this field.

  Remediation Parameters Type (32 bits)

     The Remediation Parameters Type field identifies the type of
     remediation parameters contained in the Remediation Parameters
     field.  A Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server MUST
     support having multiple Remediation Parameters messages contained
     in a single PB-TNC batch that have the same Remediation Parameters
     Type and/or Remediation Parameters Vendor ID.

     IANA maintains a registry of PB-TNC Remediation Parameters Types.
     Entries in this registry are added by Expert Review with
     Specification Required, following the guidelines in section 6.1.
     A list of IETF Standard PB-TNC Remediation Parameters Types
     defined in this specification appears later in this section.

     New vendor-specific Remediation Parameters Types (those used with
     a non-zero Remediation Parameters vendor ID) may be defined and
     employed by vendors without IETF or IANA involvement.  However,
     Posture Broker Clients and Posture Broker Servers MUST NOT require
     support for particular vendor-specific Remediation Parameters
     Types and MUST interoperate with other parties despite any
     differences in the set of vendor-specific Remediation Parameters



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     Types supported (although they MAY permit administrators to
     configure them to require support for specific Remediation
     Parameters Types).

     Note that the Remediation Parameters Type is completely separate
     from the PB-TNC Message Type and the PA Subtype fields.  The same
     value (e.g., 0) may have different meanings in each of these
     fields.

  Remediation Parameters (variable length)

     The Remediation Parameters field contains the actual remediation
     parameters carried in this PB-TNC message.  The length of this
     field can be determined by subtracting the length of the fixed-
     length fields at the start of the PB-TNC message (the fields
     Flags, PB-TNC Vendor ID, PB-TNC Message Type, and PB-TNC Message
     Length) and the fixed-length fields at the start of the PB-
     Remediation-Parameters message (Reserved, Remediation Parameters
     Vendor ID, and Remediation Parameters Type) from the message
     length contained in the PB-TNC Message Length field.  The length
     of these fixed-length fields is 20 octets.  Therefore, any Posture
     Broker Client that receives a PB-Remediation-Parameters message
     with a PB-TNC Message Length field whose value is less than 20
     MUST consider this a malformed message.  The Posture Broker Client
     MUST respond with a fatal Invalid Parameter error code in a CLOSE
     batch.

4.8.1.  IETF Standard PB-TNC Remediation Parameters Types

     This subsection defines several Remediation Parameters Types that
     have been standardized by the IETF.

  Remediation-URI

     This Remediation Parameters Type is employed by creating a PB-
     Remediation-Parameters message with a Remediation Parameters
     Vendor ID equal to the value zero (0) and a Remediation Parameters
     Type of 1.  The Remediation Parameters field in the PB-
     Remediation-Parameters message MUST contain a URI, as described in
     RFC 3986 [2].  This URI contains instructions and resources for
     remediation.  The Posture Broker Client MAY load the URI and
     display the resulting web page to the user.  The Posture Broker
     Client MAY also ignore the URI or take another action with it.
     The Posture Broker Server and any other parties involved in
     configuring this remediation URI should consider the likely
     capabilities of the Posture Broker Client when creating the URI





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     and the content referenced by the URI.  For example, they should
     consider the Posture Broker Client's language preferences as
     expressed in the PB-Language-Preference message.

  Remediation-String

     This Remediation Parameters Type is employed by creating a PB-
     Remediation-Parameters message with a Remediation Parameters
     Vendor ID equal to the value zero (0) and a Remediation Parameters
     Type of 2.  The Remediation Parameters field in the PB-
     Remediation-Parameters message MUST contain the structure defined
     below, which contains human-readable instructions for remediation.

     The Posture Broker Client MAY display the instructions to the
     user.  The Posture Broker Client MAY also ignore the instructions
     or take another action with them.  The Posture Broker Server and
     any other parties involved in configuring these instructions
     should consider the likely capabilities of the Posture Broker
     Client when creating the instructions.  For example, they should
     consider the Posture Broker Client's language preferences as
     expressed in the PB-Language-Preference message.

     The following diagram illustrates the format and contents of the
     Remediation Parameters field when carrying a Remediation-String
     parameter.  The text after this diagram describes the fields shown
     here.

                         1                   2                   3
     0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                   Remediation String Length                   |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                Remediation String (Variable Length)           |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     | Lang Code Len |  Remediation String Lang Code (Variable Len)  |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  Remediation String Length (32 bits)

     The Remediation String Length contains the length of the
     Remediation String field in octets.

  Remediation String (variable length)

     The Remediation String field MUST contain a UTF-8 [6] encoded
     string.  This string contains human-readable instructions for
     remediation that MAY be displayed to the user by the Posture
     Broker Client.  NUL termination MUST NOT be included.  If a



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     Posture Broker Client receives a Reason String that does contain a
     NUL termination, it MUST respond with a fatal Invalid Parameter
     error in a CLOSE batch.

  Lang Code Len (8 bits)

     The Lang Code Len field contains the length of the Remediation
     String Lang Code field in octets.  This value may be set to zero
     to indicate that the language code for the Remediation String
     field is not known.

  Remediation String Lang Code (variable length)

     The Remediation String Lang Code field contains a US-ASCII string
     composed of a well-formed RFC 4646 [3] language tag that indicates
     the language(s) used in the Remediation String in the Remediation
     Parameters field.  A zero-length string may be sent for this field
     (essentially omitting this field) to indicate that the language
     code for the Remediation String field is not known.

4.9.  PB-Error

  The PB-TNC message type named PB-Error (value 5) is used by the
  Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server to indicate that an
  error has occurred.  The Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker
  Server MAY include one or more messages of this type in any batch of
  any type.  Other messages may also be included in the same batch.
  The party that receives a PB-Error message MAY log it or take other
  action as deemed appropriate.  If the FATAL flag is set (value 1),
  the recipient MUST terminate the PB-TNC session after processing the
  batch without sending any messages in response.  Every Posture Broker
  Client and Posture Broker Server MUST implement this message type.

  The NOSKIP flag in the PB-TNC Message Header MUST be set for this
  message type.  The PB-TNC Vendor ID field MUST contain the value zero
  (0) and the PB-TNC Message Type field MUST contain 5.  If a non-zero
  value is contained in the PB-TNC Vendor ID field, message type 5 has
  a completely different meaning not defined in this specification.

  The PB-TNC Message Length field MUST contain the length of the entire
  PB-TNC message, including the fixed-length fields at the start of the
  PB-TNC message (the fields Flags, PB-TNC Vendor ID, PB-TNC Message
  Type, and PB-TNC Message Length), the fixed-length fields listed
  below (Flags, Error Code Vendor ID, Error Code, and Reserved), and
  the Error Parameters.  Since the Error Parameters field is variable
  length, the value in the PB-TNC Message Length field will vary also.





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  However, it MUST always be at least 20 to cover the fixed-length
  fields listed in the preceding sentences.  Any Posture Broker Client
  or Posture Broker Server that receives a PB-Error message with a PB-
  TNC Message Length field that contains an invalid value (e.g., less
  than 20) MUST respond with a fatal Invalid Parameter error code in a
  CLOSE batch.  Any PB-Error message generated while processing a PB-
  Error message MUST be a fatal error to avoid the chance of generating
  an infinite loop of errors.

  The following diagram illustrates the format and contents of the PB-
  TNC Message Value field for this message type.  The text after this
  diagram describes the fields shown here.

      0                   1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |    Flags      |              Error Code Vendor ID             |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |           Error Code          |           Reserved            |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                Error Parameters (Variable Length)             |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  Flags (8 bits)

     This field defines flags relating to the error.

     Bit 0 of this flags field (the most significant bit) is known as
     the FATAL flag.  If the FATAL bit is cleared (value 0), the
     Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server that receives this
     PB-TNC message SHOULD process this error and then continue with
     the exchange.  If the FATAL flag is set (value 1), the Posture
     Broker Client or Posture Broker Server that receives this PB-TNC
     message MUST terminate the exchange after processing the error.
     In addition, any Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server
     that sends a fatal error MUST NOT process the batch that caused
     the error and MUST terminate the exchange after sending the batch
     containing the error report.  A PB-Error message with the FATAL
     flag set MUST always be sent in a CLOSE batch since the sender
     will be terminating the exchange immediately after sending the
     batch.

     The FATAL bit allows a Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker
     Server to signal a fatal error (like an invalid batch type) and/or
     a non-fatal error (like an invalid language tag for a preferred
     language).





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     The other bits in this Flags field are reserved.  For this version
     of PB-TNC, they MUST be set to 0 on transmission and ignored on
     reception.

  Error Code Vendor ID (24 bits)

     The Error Code Vendor ID field identifies a vendor by using the
     SMI Private Enterprise Number (PEN).  Any organization can receive
     its own unique PEN from IANA, the Internet Assigned Numbers
     Authority.  The Error Code Vendor ID qualifies the Error Code
     field so that each vendor has 2^16 separate Error Codes available
     for its use.  Error codes standardized by the IETF are always used
     with the value zero (0) in this field.  For detailed descriptions
     of those messages, see the next few subsections.

  Error Code (16 bits)

     The Error Code field identifies the type of error being signaled
     with this message.  The format of the Error Parameters field
     depends on the value of the Error Code Vendor ID and the Error
     Code.  However, any recipient that does not understand a
     particular error code can process the error fairly well by using
     the FATAL flag to determine whether the error is fatal and the PB-
     TNC Message Length to skip over the Error Parameters field (or log
     it).

     IANA maintains a registry of PB-TNC Error Codes.  Entries in this
     registry are added by Expert Review with Specification Required,
     following the guidelines in section 6.1.  A list of IETF Standard
     PB-TNC Error Codes defined in this specification appears later in
     section 4.9.1.

     New vendor-specific error codes (those used with a non-zero error
     code vendor ID) may be defined and employed by vendors without
     IETF or IANA involvement.  Posture Broker Clients and Posture
     Broker Servers that receive an unknown error code MUST process
     this error code gracefully by ignoring or logging it if it is not
     marked as fatal and terminating the exchange if it is marked as
     fatal.

  Reserved (16 bits)

     The Reserved bits MUST be set to 0 on transmission and ignored on
     reception.







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4.9.1.  IETF Standard PB-TNC Error Codes

  The following error codes are IETF Standard PB-TNC Error Codes, hence
  the Error Code Vendor ID MUST be the value zero (0).  The following
  table defines the 16-bit error code.  Vendor-specific error codes may
  be defined by setting the Error Code Vendor ID to the defining
  vendor's SMI PEN and setting the Error Code field to whatever error
  code(s) that vendor has defined.  The format, length, and meaning of
  the Error Parameters field varies, based on the Error Code Vendor ID
  and Error Code.  Subsequent sections of this document define the
  format, length, and meaning of the Error Parameters for the IETF
  Standard PB-TNC Error Codes defined in this section.

  Error Code  Definition
  ----------  ----------
  0           Unexpected Batch Type.  Error Parameters are empty.

  1           Invalid Parameter.  Error Parameters has offset where
              invalid value was found.

  2           Local Error.  Error Parameters are empty.

  3           Unsupported Mandatory Message.  Error Parameters has
              offset of offending PB-TNC Message

  4           Version Not Supported.  Error Parameters has information
              about which versions are supported.

4.9.2.  Error Parameters Structures for IETF Standard PB-TNC Error Codes

  This section defines the format, length, and meaning of the Error
  Parameters field for the IETF Standard PB-TNC Error Codes defined in
  this specification.

  The Error Parameters field is zero length for the IETF Standard PB-
  TNC Error Code 0.  The FATAL flag MUST be set for this error code.

  The Error Parameters field has the following structure for the IETF
  Standard PB-TNC Error Code 1.  The Offset field is the offset in
  octets from the start of the PB-TNC batch to the invalid value.  The
  FATAL flag may be either set or cleared for this error code.

      0                   1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                              Offset                           |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+




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  The Error Parameters field is zero length for the IETF Standard PB-
  TNC Error Code 2.  The FATAL flag MUST be set for this error code.

  The Error Parameters field has the following structure for the IETF
  Standard PB-TNC Error Code 3.  The Offset field is the offset in
  octets from the start of the PB-TNC batch to the PB-TNC message whose
  message type was not recognized (and where the NOSKIP flag was set).
  The FATAL flag MUST be set for this error code.

      0                   1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                              Offset                           |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  The Error Parameters field has the following structure for the IETF
  Standard PB-TNC Error Code 4.  The FATAL flag MUST be set for this
  error code.

      0                   1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |  Bad Version  |  Max Version  |  Min Version  |   Reserved    |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  The Bad Version field is the version number that was received and is
  not supported.  The Max Version and Min Version fields indicate which
  PB-TNC version numbers are supported by the sender of the error code.
  The sender MUST support all PB-TNC versions between the Min Version
  and the Max Version, inclusive (i.e., including the Min Version and
  the Max Version) but excluding the reserved versions listed in
  section 4.1.  The Reserved field MUST be set to 0 on transmission and
  ignored upon reception.  When possible, recipients of this error code
  SHOULD send future messages to the Posture Broker Server or Posture
  Broker Client that originated this error message with a PB-TNC
  version number within the stated range.

  Any party that is sending the Version Not Supported error code MUST
  include that error code as the only PB-TNC message in a PB-TNC CLOSE
  batch with version number 2.  All parties that send PB-TNC batches
  SHOULD be able to properly process a batch that meets this
  description, even if they cannot process any other aspect of PB-TNC
  version 2.  This ensures that a PB-TNC version exchange can proceed
  properly, no matter what versions of PB-TNC the parties implement.







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4.10.  PB-Language-Preference

  The PB-TNC message type named PB-Language-Parameters (value 6) is
  used by the Posture Broker Client to indicate which language or
  languages it would prefer for any human-readable strings that might
  be sent to it.  This allows the Posture Broker Server and Posture
  Validators to adapt any messages they may send to the Posture Broker
  Client's preferences (probably determined by the language preferences
  of the endpoint's users).

  The Posture Broker Server may also send this message type to the
  Posture Broker Client to indicate the Posture Broker Server's
  language preferences, but this is not very useful since the Posture
  Broker Client rarely sends human-readable strings to the Posture
  Broker Server and, if it does, rarely can adapt those strings to the
  preferences of the Posture Broker Server.

  No Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server is required to send
  or implement this message type.  However, a Posture Broker Server
  SHOULD attempt to adapt to user language preferences by implementing
  this message type, passing the language preference information to
  Posture Validators, and allowing administrators to configure human-
  readable languages in whatever languages are preferred by their
  users.

  A Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server may include a
  message of this type in any batch of any type.  However, it is
  suggested that this message be included in the first batch sent by
  the Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server in a PB-TNC
  session so that the recipient can start adapting its human-readable
  messages as soon as possible.  If one PB-Language-Parameters message
  is received and then another one is received in a later batch for the
  same PB-TNC session, the value included in the later message should
  be considered to replace the value in the earlier message.

  A Posture Broker Client or Posture Broker Server MUST NOT include
  more than one message of this type in a single batch.  If a Posture
  Broker Client or Posture Broker Server receives more than one message
  of this type in a single batch, it should ignore all but the last
  one.

  The NOSKIP flag in the PB-TNC Message Header MUST NOT be set for this
  message type.  The PB-TNC Vendor ID field MUST contain the value zero
  (0) and the PB-TNC Message Type field MUST contain 6.  If a non-zero
  value is contained in the PB-TNC Vendor ID field, message type 6 has
  a completely different meaning not defined in this specification.





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  The PB-TNC Message Length field MUST contain the length of the entire
  PB-TNC message, including the fixed-length fields at the start of the
  PB-TNC message (the fields Flags, PB-TNC Vendor ID, PB-TNC Message
  Type, and PB-TNC Message Length) and the Language Preference field.
  Since the Language Preference field is variable length, the value in
  the PB-TNC Message Length field will vary also.  However, it MUST
  always be at least 12 to cover the fixed-length fields listed in the
  preceding sentences.

  The following diagram illustrates the format and contents of the PB-
  TNC Message Value field for this message type.  The text after this
  diagram describes the fields shown here.

      0                   1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |              Language Preference (Variable Length)            |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  Language Preference (variable length)

     The Language Preference field contains an Accept-Language header,
     as described in RFC 3282 [4] (using the RFC 2234 ABNF definition
     of Accept-Language included in that RFC, US-ASCII only, no control
     characters allowed, no comments, no NUL termination).  Any Posture
     Broker Client or Posture Broker Server that sends a PB-Language-
     Preference message MUST ensure that the Language Preference field
     conforms to this format.  For example, one acceptable value would
     be "Accept-Language: fr, en" (without the quote marks).

     A zero-length Language Preference field indicates that no language
     preference information is available.  Generally, there's no need
     to send a PB-Language-Preference message with a zero-length
     Language Preference field since this is equivalent to sending no
     PB-Language-Preference message at all, but it may be useful to
     send a zero-length Language Preference field if a PB-Language-
     Preference message with a non-zero-length Language Preference
     field was sent in an earlier batch but these preferences no longer
     apply.

4.11.  PB-Reason-String

  The PB-TNC message type named PB-Reason-String (value 7) is used by
  the Posture Broker Server to provide a human-readable explanation for
  the global assessment decision conveyed in the PB-Assessment-Result &
  PB-Access-Recommendation messages.  Therefore, a PB-Reason-String





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  message SHOULD only be included in the same batch as the PB-
  Assessment-Result and PB-Access-Recommendation message.  The Posture
  Broker Client MUST NOT ever send a PB-Reason-String message.

  The Posture Broker Client is not required to implement this message
  type and the Posture Broker Server is not required to send it.
  However, there is some benefit to doing so since users are often
  curious about why the endpoint was considered non-compliant.  The
  manner in which a Posture Broker Client uses this field is up to the
  implementer and not specified here.  The Posture Broker Client MAY
  display the message to the user, log it, ignore it, or take any other
  action that is not inconsistent with the requirements of this
  specification.  Since the strings contained in this message are
  human-readable, the Posture Broker Server SHOULD adapt them to the
  Posture Broker Client's language preferences as expressed in any PB-
  Language-Preference message sent by the Posture Broker Client in this
  PB-TNC session.

  A Posture Broker Server MAY include more than one message of this
  type in any batch of any type.  However, it is suggested that this
  message be included in the same batch as the PB-Assessment-Result and
  PB-Access-Recommendation message.  If more than one PB-Reason-String
  message is included in a single batch, the Posture Broker Client
  SHOULD consider the strings included in these messages to be
  equivalent in meaning.  This allows the Posture Broker Server to
  return multiple equivalent reason strings in different languages,
  which may help if the Posture Broker Server is not able to
  accommodate the Posture Broker Client's language preferences.

  The NOSKIP flag in the PB-TNC Message Header MUST NOT be set for this
  message type.  The PB-TNC Vendor ID field MUST contain the value zero
  (0) and the PB-TNC Message Type field MUST contain 7.  If a non-zero
  value is contained in the PB-TNC Vendor ID field, message type 7 has
  a completely different meaning not defined in this specification.

  The PB-TNC Message Length field MUST contain the length of the entire
  PB-TNC message, including the fixed-length fields at the start of the
  PB-TNC message (the fields Flags, PB-TNC Vendor ID, PB-TNC Message
  Type, and PB-TNC Message Length), the fixed-length fields listed
  below (Reason String Length and Lang Code Len), and the Reason String
  and Reason String Language Code fields.  Since the Reason String and
  Reason String Language Code fields are variable length, the value in
  the PB-TNC Message Length field will vary also.  However, it MUST
  always be at least 17 to cover the fixed-length fields listed in the
  preceding sentences.  In fact, the PB-TNC Message Length field MUST
  be exactly the sum of 17 (for the fixed-length fields) and the values





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  of the Reason String Length and Lang Code Len fields.  If this is not
  the case, the recipient MUST respond with a fatal Invalid Parameter
  error code in a CLOSE batch.

  The following diagram illustrates the format and contents of the PB-
  TNC Message Value field for this message type.  The text after this
  diagram describes the fields shown here.

      0                   1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                      Reason String Length                     |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                Reason String (Variable Length)                |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     | Lang Code Len | Reason String Language Code (Variable Length) |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  Reason String Length (32 bits)

     The Reason String Length field contains the length of the Reason
     String field in octets.

  Reason String (variable length)

     The Reason String field contains a UTF-8 encoded string that
     provides a human-readable reason for the Posture Broker Server's
     assessment decision.  NUL termination MUST NOT be included.  If a
     Posture Broker Client receives a Reason String that does contain a
     NUL termination, it MUST respond with a fatal Invalid Parameter
     error code in a CLOSE batch.  A zero-length string MUST NOT be
     sent since this is the same as sending no reason string at all,
     leaving the reason unspecified.

  Lang Code Len (8 bits)

     The Lang Code Len field contains the length of the Reason String
     Language Code field in octets.

  Reason String Language Code (variable length)

     The Reason String Language Code field contains a US-ASCII string
     containing a well-formed RFC 4646 [3] language tag that indicates
     the language(s) used in the Reason String in this message.  NUL
     termination MUST NOT be included in this field.  A zero-length
     string MAY be sent for this field (essentially omitting this
     field) to indicate that the language code for the reason string is
     not known.



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5.  Security Considerations

  PT is required and assumed to provide reliable and secure transport
  for the PB-TNC protocol (including authentication, confidentiality,
  integrity protection, and replay protection).  Still, it is useful to
  describe the possible threats to PB-TNC and the countermeasures that
  are or can be employed.  This section does that.

5.1.  Threat Model

  There are several possible threats to the PB-TNC protocol.

  Untrusted intermediaries on the network between the NEA Client and
  the NEA Server may attempt to observe data sent between the Posture
  Broker Client and the Posture Broker Server via PB-TNC, modify this
  data in transit, reorder it, or replay it.  They may also attempt to
  mount a denial-of-service attack against either party or truncate the
  exchange prematurely.  If successful, these attacks may result in
  improper assessment decisions relating to the NEA Client, failure to
  reassess these decisions in light of changed circumstances, improper
  remediation instructions sent to the NEA Client (which could lead to
  the compromise of the NEA Client), unauthorized access to
  confidential information about the NEA Client's health and/or
  identity, improper reason strings or other messages that might be
  displayed to the user, access to reusable credentials such as posture
  assertions, denial of service on the NEA Client, and even complete
  denial of access to the network (if a denial-of-service attack
  against the NEA Server was successful and the network required
  permission from the NEA Server to grant network access).

  Trusted intermediaries between the Posture Broker Client and the
  Posture Broker Server include the Posture Transport Client and the
  Posture Transport Server.  These parties are considered trusted
  because they are responsible for properly implementing the security
  protections provided by PT.  If they fail to do so properly, these
  security protections may be diminished or eliminated altogether.  The
  possible attacks are the same as those listed in the previous
  paragraph.  To give one fairly likely example, if a Posture Transport
  Client fails to properly authenticate and authorize the Posture
  Transport Server (whether through implementation error or through
  user configuration to "trust anyone"), the improperly authorized
  Posture Transport Server may mount any of the previously described
  attacks against the NEA Client.

  Compromise of any of the trusted parties (the Posture Broker Client,
  the Posture Transport Client, the Posture Broker Server, or the
  Posture Transport Server) may result in failures that are equivalent
  to those listed in the first paragraph.  These failures may be even



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  more dangerous since they will not be detectable by observing network
  traffic or by examining and comparing audit logs.  Failure to
  properly secure communications between the Posture Broker Client and
  the Posture Transport Client or between the Posture Broker Server and
  the Posture Transport Server is usually indistinguishable from
  compromise of those parties.  Compromise of the operating system or
  other critical software, firmware, or hardware components on the NEA
  Client or NEA Server will typically result in an equivalent result.
  And an attacker's ability to gain privileged access to the NEA Client
  or NEA Server (even for a brief time, long enough to disable or
  misconfigure security settings) is generally equivalent as well.  If
  the NEA Client or NEA Server are dependent on other services for
  their proper operation (including Posture Collectors, Posture
  Validators, directories, and patch management services), compromise
  of those services may result in compromise or failure of the
  dependent parties.  Of course, compromise or failure of NEA Server
  components is most serious since this would probably affect a large
  number of NEA Clients while the effects of NEA Client compromise
  might well be limited to a single machine.

5.2.  Countermeasures

  The primary countermeasure against attacks by untrusted network
  intermediaries is the security provided by the PT protocol.  Any
  candidate PT protocols should be carefully examined to ensure that
  all the threats described above are adequately addressed.

  As noted above, compromise or erroneous operation of any of the
  trusted parties is a serious matter with substantial security
  implications.  This includes the Posture Broker Client, the Posture
  Broker Server, the Posture Transport Client, and the Posture
  Transport Server.  These are all security-sensitive components so
  they should be built and managed in accordance with best practices
  for security devices.  This is especially important for the NEA
  Server and its components since a compromise of this device would
  affect the security and availability of the entire network (similar
  to compromise of a AAA server).  Communications between the trusted
  parties must also be secured.  For example, if the Posture Broker
  Server and the Posture Transport Server are separate components,
  their communications must be secured.

  Since the NEA Client may be a mobile device with little physical
  security (such as a laptop computer or even a public telephone), it
  should generally be assumed that some proportion of Access NEA
  Clients will be compromised and therefore hostile.  The NEA Server
  should be designed to be robust against hostile NEA Clients.  Once a





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  compromised NEA Client is detected, it can be treated in a manner
  equivalent to an untrusted party and should pose no greater threat
  than any other untrusted party.

  Countermeasures against a compromised NEA Server (or a component
  thereof such as a Posture Broker Server or a Posture Transport
  Server) include prevention of compromise, detection of compromise,
  and mitigation of the effects of compromise.  For prevention, the NEA
  Server and its components and dependencies should be implemented
  using secure implementation techniques (e.g., secure coding and
  minimization) and managed using secure practices (e.g., strong
  authentication and separation of duty).  For detection, the behavior
  of the NEA Server should be monitored (e.g., via logging especially
  of remediation instructions, intrusion detection systems, and probes
  that impersonate a valid NEA Client and record NEA Server behavior)
  and any anomalies analyzed.  For mitigation, NEA Clients should not
  blindly follow remediation instructions received from a trusted NEA
  Server.  At least for patches and other dangerous actions, they
  should validate these actions (e.g., via user confirmation) before
  proceeding.  It should not be possible to configure a NEA Client to
  trust all NEA Servers without proper authentication and
  authorization.

6.  IANA Considerations

  Four new IANA registries are defined by this specification: PB-TNC
  Message Types, PA Subtypes, PB-TNC Remediation Parameters Types, and
  PB-TNC Error Codes.  This section explains how these registries work.

  All of these registries support IETF standard values and vendor-
  defined values.  To explain this phenomenon, we will use the PB-TNC
  Message Type as an example but the other three registries work the
  same way.  Whenever a PB-TNC Message Type appears on a network, it is
  always accompanied by an SMI Private Enterprise Number (PEN), also
  known as a vendor ID.  If this vendor ID is zero, the accompanying
  PB-TNC Message Type is an IETF standard value listed in the IANA
  registry for PB-TNC Message Types and its meaning is defined in the
  specification listed for that PB-TNC Message Type in that registry.
  If the vendor ID is not zero, the meaning of the PB-TNC Message Type
  is defined by the vendor identified by the vendor ID (as listed in
  the IANA registry for SMI PENs).  The identified vendor is encouraged
  but not required to register with IANA some or all of the PB-TNC
  Message Types used with their vendor ID and publish a specification
  for each of these values.

  This delegation of namespace is analogous to the technique used for
  OIDs.  It can result in interoperability problems if vendors require
  support for particular vendor-specific values.  However, such



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  behavior is explicitly prohibited by this specification, which
  dictates that "Posture Broker Clients and Posture Broker Servers MUST
  NOT require support for particular vendor-specific PB-TNC message
  types and MUST interoperate with other parties despite any
  differences in the set of vendor-specific PB-TNC message types
  supported (although they MAY permit administrators to configure them
  to require support for specific PB-TNC message types)." Similar
  requirements are included for PA Subtypes, Remediation Parameters
  Types, and PB-TNC Error Codes.

6.1.  Designated Expert Guidelines

  For all of the four IANA registries defined by this specification,
  new values are added to the registry by Expert Review with
  Specification Required, using the Designated Expert process defined
  in RFC 5226 [5].

  This section provides guidance to designated experts so that they may
  make decisions using a philosophy appropriate for these registries.

  The registries defined in this document have plenty of values.  In
  most cases, the IETF has approximately 2^32 values available for it
  to define and each vendor the same number of values for its use.  The
  only exception is the registry for PB-TNC Error Codes where 2^16
  values are available for the IETF and 2^16 values for each vendor.
  Because there are so many values available, designated experts should
  not be terribly concerned about exhausting the set of values.

  Instead, designated experts should focus on the following
  requirements.  All values in these IANA registries MUST be documented
  in a specification that is permanently and publicly available.  IETF
  standard values MUST also be useful, not harmful to the Internet, and
  defined in a manner that is clear and likely to ensure
  interoperability.

  Designated experts should encourage vendors to avoid defining similar
  but incompatible values and instead agree on a single IETF standard
  value.  However, it is beneficial to document existing practice.

  There are several ways to ensure that a specification is permanently
  and publicly available.  It may be published as an RFC.
  Alternatively, it may be published in another manner that makes it
  freely available to anyone.  However, in this latter case, the vendor
  MUST supply a copy to the IANA and authorize the IANA to archive this
  copy and make it freely available to all if at some point the
  document becomes no longer freely available to all through other
  channels.




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6.2.  Registry for PB-TNC Message Types

  The name for this registry is "PB-TNC Message Types".  Each entry in
  this registry should include a human-readable name, an SMI Private
  Enterprise Number, a decimal integer value between 0 and 2^32-2, and
  a reference to a specification where the contents of this message
  type are defined.  This specification must define the meaning of this
  PB-TNC message type and the format and semantics of the PB-TNC
  Message Value field for PB-TNC messages that include the designated
  numeric value in the PB-TNC Message Type field and the designated
  Private Enterprise Number in the PB-TNC Vendor ID field.

  Entries to this registry are added by Expert Review with
  Specification Required, following the guidelines in section 6.1.

  The following entries for this registry are defined in this document.
  They are the initial entries in the registry for PB-TNC Message
  Types.

  PEN Integer Name                         Defining Specification
  --- ------- ----                         ----------------------
  0   0       PB-Experimental              RFC 5793
  0   1       PB-PA                        RFC 5793
  0   2       PB-Assessment-Result         RFC 5793
  0   3       PB-Access-Recommendation     RFC 5793
  0   4       PB-Remediation-Parameters    RFC 5793
  0   5       PB-Error                     RFC 5793
  0   6       PB-Language-Preference       RFC 5793
  0   7       PB-Reason-String             RFC 5793
  0 0xffffffff Reserved                    RFC 5793

6.3.  Registry for PA Subtypes

  The name for this registry is "PA Subtypes".  Each entry in this
  registry should include a human-readable name, an SMI Private
  Enterprise Number, a decimal integer value between 0 and 2^32-2, and
  a reference to a specification where the contents of this PA subtype
  are defined.  This specification must define the meaning of this PA
  subtype and the format and semantics of the PA Message Body field for
  PB-TNC messages that have a PB-TNC Vendor ID of 0, a PB-TNC Message
  Type of PB-PA, the designated numeric value in the PA Subtype field,
  and the designated Private Enterprise Number in the PA Message Vendor
  ID field.

  Entries to this registry are added by Expert Review with
  Specification Required, following the guidelines in section 6.1.





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  This document does not define any initial entries for this registry.
  Therefore, this registry should initially be empty.  Subsequent RFCs
  (such as PA-TNC) will define entries in this registry.

6.4.  Registry for PB-TNC Remediation Parameters Types

  The name for this registry is "PB-TNC Remediation Parameters Types".
  Each entry in this registry should include a human-readable name, an
  SMI Private Enterprise Number, a decimal integer value between 0 and
  2^32-1, and a reference to a specification where the contents of this
  remediation parameters type are defined.  This specification must
  define the meaning of this remediation parameters type value and the
  format and semantics of the Remediation Parameters field for PB-TNC
  messages that have a PB-TNC Vendor ID of 0, a PB-TNC Message Type of
  PB-Remediation-Parameters, the designated numeric value in the
  Remediation Parameters Type field, and the designated Private
  Enterprise Number in the Remediation Parameters Vendor ID field.

  Entries to this registry are added by Expert Review with
  Specification Required, following the guidelines in section 6.1.

  The following entries for this registry are defined in this document.
  They are the initial entries in the registry for PB-TNC Remediation
  Parameters Types.

  PEN Integer Name                      Defining Specification
  --- ------- ----                      ----------------------
  0   1       Remediation-URI           RFC 5793
  0   2       Remediation-String        RFC 5793

6.5.  Registry for PB-TNC Error Codes

  The name for this registry is "PB-TNC Error Codes".  Each entry in
  this registry should include a human-readable name, an SMI Private
  Enterprise Number, a decimal integer value between 0 and 2^16-1, and
  a reference to a specification where this error code is defined.
  This specification must define the meaning of this error code and the
  format and semantics of the Error Parameters field for PB-TNC
  messages that have a PB-TNC Vendor ID of 0, a PB-TNC Message Type of
  PB-Error, the designated numeric value in the Error Code field, and
  the designated Private Enterprise Number in the Error Code Vendor ID
  field.

  Entries to this registry are added by Expert Review with
  Specification Required, following the guidelines in section 6.1.

  The following entries for this registry are defined in this document.
  They are the initial entries in the registry for PB-TNC Error Codes.



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  PEN Integer Name                          Defining Specification
  --- ------- ----                          ----------------------
  0   0       Unexpected Batch Type         RFC 5793
  0   1       Invalid Parameter             RFC 5793
  0   2       Local Error                   RFC 5793
  0   3       Unsupported Mandatory Message RFC 5793
  0   4       Version Not Supported         RFC 5793

7.  Acknowledgments

  Thanks to the Trusted Computing Group for contributing the initial
  text upon which this document was based.

  The authors of this document would like to acknowledge the following
  people who have contributed to or provided substantial input on the
  preparation of this document or predecessors to it: Bernard Aboba,
  Amit Agarwal, Morteza Ansari, Diana Arroyo, Stuart Bailey, Boris
  Balacheff, Gene Chang, Roger Chickering, Scott Cochrane, Pasi Eronen,
  Aman Garg, Sandilya Garimella, Lauren Giroux, Mudit Goel, Charles
  Goldberg, Thomas Hardjono, Chris Hessing, Hidenobu Ito, John Jerrim,
  Meenakshi Kaushik, Greg Kazmierczak, Scott Kelly, Tom Kelnar, Bryan
  Kingsford, PJ Kirner, Houcheng Lee, Sung Lee, Lisa Lorenzin,
  Mahalingam Mani, Paul Mayfield, Michael McDaniels, Bipin Mistry, Rod
  Murchison, Barbara Nelson, Kazuaki Nimura, Ron Pon, Ivan Pulleyn,
  Alex Romanyuk, Chris Salter, Mauricio Sanchez, Paul Sangster, Dean
  Sheffield, Curtis Simonson, Jeff Six, Ned Smith, Michelle Sommerstad,
  Joseph Tardo, Lee Terrell, Chris Trytten, Brad Upson, Ram Vadali,
  Guha Prasad Venataraman, John Vollbrecht, Jun Wang, and Han Yin.

8.  References

8.1.  Normative References

  [1]    Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
         Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [2]    Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform
         Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66, RFC 3986,
         January 2005.

  [3]    Phillips, A., Ed., and M. Davis, Ed., "Tags for Identifying
         Languages", BCP 47, RFC 5646, September 2009.

  [4]    Alvestrand, H., "Content Language Headers", RFC 3282, May
         2002.

  [5]    Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an IANA
         Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC 5226, May 2008.



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  [6]    Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO 10646",
         STD 63, RFC 3629, November 2003.

8.2.  Informative References

  [7]    Hanna, S., Hurst, R. and R. Sahita, "TNC IF-TNCCS: TLV
         Binding", Trusted Computing Group, February 2008.

  [8]    Sangster, P., Khosravi, H., Mani, M., Narayan, K., and J.
         Tardo, "Network Endpoint Assessment (NEA): Overview and
         Requirements", RFC 5209, June 2008.

  [9]    Aboba, B., Blunk, L., Vollbrecht, J., Carlson, J., and H.
         Levkowetz, Ed., "Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)",
         RFC 3748, June 2004.

 [10]    Sangster, P., and K. Narayan, "PA-TNC: A Posture Attribute
         (PA) Protocol Compatible with Trusted Network Connect (TNC)",
         RFC 5792, March 2010.
































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Appendix A.  Use Cases

A.1.  Initial Client-Triggered Assessment

  This scenario involves the assessment of an endpoint initiated during
  network join.  The assessment is triggered by the Posture Broker
  Client (PBC) and involves collection of patch information from both
  Standard Operating System (OS) Posture Collector and vendor-specific
  Patch Posture Collector (PC).  The assessment by both the vendor-
  specific Patch Posture Validator (PV) and Standard OS Posture
  Validator result in a compliant assessment decision that results in a
  compliant System Assessment Decision to be returned by the Posture
  Broker Server (PBS).

  +--------+ +-------+ +---------+ +--------+ +-------++--------+

  | Vndr. X| |  Std. | |   Std.  | |  Std.  | | Std.  || Vndr. X|

  |Patch PC| | OS PC | |   PBC   | |  PBS   | | OS PV ||Patch PV|

  +----+---+ +---+---+ +-----+---+ +---+----+ +---+----++---+---+

     |         |   N/W Join|         |          |         |

     |         |     ----->|         |          |         |

     |         | Req Post. |         |          |         |

     |         +<----------+         |          |         |

     |         | Req Post. |         |          |         |

     +<--------------------|         |          |         |

     |Vndr X Patch Posture |         |          |         |

     |-------------------->|         |          |         |

     |         |OS Posture |         |          |         |

     |         |---------->|         |          |         |

     |         |           | Posture |          |         |

     |         |           | Report  |          |         |

     |         |           +-------->|          |         |




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     |         |           |         |  Verify  |         |

     |         |           |         |  Posture |         |

     |         |           |         |--------->          |

     |         |           |         |          | Verify  |

     |         |           |         |          | Posture |

     |         |           |         |------------------->|

     |         |           |         | OS Reslt |         |

     |         |           |         |<---------|         |

     |         |           |         | VndrX Patch Result |

     |         |           | Assess  |<-------------------|

     |         |           | Result  |                    |

     |         |           <---------|          |         |

     |         | OS PRslt  |         |          |         |

     |         |<----------|         |          |         |

     | VndrX Patch PResult |         |          |         |

     |<--------------------|         |          |         |


A.1.1.  Message Contents

  This section shows the contents of the key fields in each of the PA
  messages exchanged in this use case.  When necessary, additional
  commentary is provided to explain why certain fields contain the
  shown values.  Note that many of the flows shown are between
  components on the same system so no message contents are shown.

A.1.1.1.  N/W Join

  This flow represents the event that causes the PBC to decide to start
  an assessment of the endpoint in order to gain access to the network.
  This is merely an event and doesn't include a message being sent.





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A.1.1.2.  Request Posture (Req Post.)

  This flow illustrates an invocation of the OS and Patch Posture
  Collectors requesting particular posture attributes to be sent.
  Because this use case is triggered locally, NEA doesn't specify the
  contents of this flow.

A.1.1.3.  Vendor X Patch Posture (VndrX Patch Posture)

  This flow contains the PA message from the Vendor X Patch Posture
  Collector; the message content is described in the PA-TNC
  specification.

A.1.1.4.  OS Posture

  This flow contains the PA message from the OS Posture Collector; the
  message content is described in the PA-TNC specification.

A.1.1.5.  Posture Report

  This flow contains the PB message containing the PA messages from the
  Patch and OS Posture Collectors:

  PB Envelope {

   HDR {

    D bit=0 (Posture Broker Client is originator)

    Batch Type=CDATA

    Batch Length

    }

     PB Message 1 {

      Vendor-id=0

      Type =2 (PB-PA)

      Length

      Value = {

         PA-Msg-vendor-id=0 (Standard)

         PA-subtype=1 (OS)



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         OS Posture PA Message

      }

    }

    PB Message 2 {

      Vendor-id=0

      Type =2 (PB-PA)

      Length

      Value = {

         PA-Msg-vendor-id=1 (Vendor X)

         PA-subtype=1 (Vendor X PA sub-type for patch management)

         Vendor X Patch Posture PA Message

       }

     }

  }

A.1.1.6.  Verify Posture

  This flow illustrates an invocation of the OS and Patch Posture
  Validators requesting verification of the posture attributes
  received.  Because this flow happens locally within the NEA server,
  NEA doesn't specify the message content.

A.1.1.7.  OS Posture Result (OS Reslt)

  This flow contains the PA message (Posture Assessment Result) from
  the OS Posture Validator; the message content is described in the PA-
  TNC specification.

A.1.1.8.  Vendor X Patch Posture Result (VndrX Patch Result)

  This flow contains the PA message (Posture Assessment Result) from
  the Vendor X Patch Posture Validator; the message content is
  described in the PA-TNC specification.





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A.1.1.9.  Assessment Result (Assess Result)

  This flow contains the PB message containing the system assessment
  result computed by the Posture Broker Server and the PA messages from
  the Patch and OS Posture Validators:

  PB Envelope {

   HDR {

    D bit=1 (Posture Broker Server is originator)

    Batch Type=RESULT

    Batch Length

    }

     PB Message 1 {

      Vendor-id=0,

      Type =3 (Access-Recommendation)

      Length

      Value = {

        System-Evaluation-Result=0 (Compliant)

      }

    }

    PB Message 2 {

      Vendor-id=0,

      Type=2 (PB-PA)

      Length

      Value = {

         PA-Msg-vendor-id=0

         PA-subtype=1 (OS)




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         OS Posture Result PA Message

       }

     }

    PB Message 3 {

      Vendor-id=0,

      Type=2 (PB-PA)

      Length

      Value = {

         PA-Msg-vendor-id=1 (Vendor X)

         PA-subtype=1 (Vendor X PA sub-type for patch management)

         Vendor X Patch Posture Result PA Message

       }

     }

  }

A.1.1.10.  Posture Result (OS PRslt & Vndr X Post PResult)

  These flows illustrate an invocation of the OS and Vendor X Patch
  Posture Collectors to receive the posture assessment results.
  Because this flow is triggered locally, NEA doesn't specify the
  contents of this flow.

A.2.  Server-Initiated Assessment with Remediation

  This scenario involves the assessment of an endpoint initiated by the
  NEA server.  The assessment is triggered by the Posture Broker Server
  and involves collection of Anti-Virus attributes for two Anti-Virus
  components running on the endpoint.  The endpoint is assessed to be
  compliant by one of the vendor (Vendor X) anti-virus posture
  validators and non-compliant by the other vendor (Vendor Y) anti-
  virus posture validator.  This results in a non-compliant System
  Assessment Decision to be returned by the Posture Broker Server.  The
  Posture Broker Server also returns remediation instructions for the
  endpoint as part of the response.




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  +--------+  +-------+ +---------+ +--------+ +-------+ +--------+

  | Vndr Y |  | Vndr X| |   Std.  | |  Std.  | | Vndr X| | Vndr Y |

  |  AV PC |  | AV PC | |   PBC   | |  PBS   | | AV PV | |  AV PV |

  +----+---+  +---+---+ +-----+---+ +---+----+ +---+---+ +----+---+

       |          |           | N/W Join|          |          |

       |          |           |   ----->|          |          |

       |          |           |         |  Create  |          |

       |          |           |         |Post. Req |          |

       |          |           |         |--------->|          |

       |          |           |         |Create Posture Req   |

       |          |           |         |----------+--------->|

       |          |           |         |Vndr Y AV Posture Req|

       |          |           |         |<---------+----------|

       |          |           |         |Vndr X AV |          |

       |          |           |         |Post. Req |          |

       |          |           | Posture |<---------|          |

       |          |           | Request |          |          |

       |          | Vndr X AV |<--------|          |          |

       |          | Post. Req |         |          |          |

       |          |<----------|         |          |          |

       |      Vndr Y AV       |         |          |          |

       |     Posture Req      |         |          |          |

       +<---------+-----------|         |          |          |

       |  Vndr Y AV Posture   |         |          |          |




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       +----------+---------->|         |          |          |

       |          | Vndr X AV |         |          |          |

       |          |  Posture  |         |          |          |

       |          |---------->| Posture |          |          |

       |          |           |Response |          |          |

       |          |           |-------->|          |          |

       |          |           |         |  Verify  |          |

       |          |           |         |  Posture |          |

       |          |           |         |--------->|          |

       |          |           |         |     Verify Posture  |

       |          |           |         |----------+--------->|

       |          |           |         |Vndr Y Posture Result|

       |          |           |         |<---------+----------|

       |          |           |         |Vndr X AV |          |

       |          |           |         |Post Reslt|          |

       |          |           |  Assess |<---------|          |

       |          |           |  Result |          |          |

       |          | Vndr X AV |<--------|          |          |

       |          |Post Reslt |<--------|          |          |

       |          |<----------|         |          |          |

       | Vndr Y AV Post Reslt |         |          |          |

       +<---------+-----------|         |          |          |

       |          |           |         |          |          |






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A.2.1.  Message Contents

  This section shows the contents of the key fields in each of the PA
  messages exchanged in this use case.  When necessary, additional
  commentary is provided to explain why certain fields contain the
  shown values.  Note that many of the flows shown are between
  components on the same system so no message contents are shown.

A.2.1.1.  N/W Join

  This flow represents the event that causes the PBS to decide to start
  an assessment of the endpoint in order to gain access to the network.
  This is merely an event and doesn't include a message being sent.

A.2.1.2.  Create Posture Request (Create Posture Req)

  This flow illustrates an invocation of the Vendor X and Vendor Y
  Anti-Virus posture validators requesting posture requests to be
  created.  Because this use case is triggered locally, NEA doesn't
  specify the contents of this flow.

A.2.1.3.  Vendor X Anti-Virus Posture Request (Vndr X AV Post. Req)

  This flow contains the PA message (Posture Request) from the Vendor X
  Anti-Virus Posture Validator; the message content is described in the
  PA-TNC specification.

A.2.1.4.  Vendor Y Anti-Virus Posture Request

  This flow contains the PA message (Posture Request) from the Vendor Y
  Anti-Virus Posture Validator; the message content is described in the
  PA-TNC specification.

A.2.1.5.  Posture Request

  This flow contains the PB message containing the PA messages from the
  Vendor X and Vendor Y Anti-Virus Posture Validators:

  PB Envelope {

   HDR {

    D bit=1 (Posture Broker Server is originator)

    Batch Type=SDATA

    Batch Length




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   }

    PB Message 1 {

      Vendor-id=0

      Type =2 (PB-PA)

      Length

      Value = {

         PA-Msg-vendor-id=1 (Vendor X)

         PA-subtype=2 (Vendor X PA sub-type for Anti-Virus)

         Vendor X AV Posture Request PA Message

      }

    }

    PB Message 2 {

      Vendor-id=0

      Type =2 (PB-PA)

      Length

      Value = {

         PA-Msg-vendor-id=2 (Vendor Y)

         PA-subtype=1 (Vendor Y PA sub-type for Anti-Virus)

         Vendor Y AV Posture Request PA Message

       }

     }

  }








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A.2.1.6.  Process Posture Request (Vndr X AV Post Req & Vndr Y AV
         Posture Req)

  This flow illustrates an invocation of the Vendor X and Vendor Y
  Anti-Virus Posture Collectors to process the Posture Request and
  return particular posture attributes requested.  Because this use
  case is triggered locally, NEA doesn't specify the contents of this
  flow.

A.2.1.7.  Vendor Y Anti-Virus Posture (Vndr Y AV Posture)

  This flow contains the PA message (response to the Posture Request)
  from the Vendor Y Anti-Virus Posture Collector; the message content
  is described in the PA-TNC specification.

A.2.1.8.  Vendor X Anti-Virus Posture (Vndr X AV Posture)

  This flow contains the PA message (response to the Posture Request)
  from the Vendor X Anti-Virus Posture Collector; the message content
  is described in the PA-TNC specification.

A.2.1.9.  Posture Response

  This flow contains the PB message containing the PA messages from the
  Vendor X and Vendor Y Anti-Virus Posture Collectors:

  PB Envelope {

   HDR {

    D bit=0 (Posture Broker Client is originator)

    Batch Type=CDATA

    Batch Length

   }

    PB Message 1 {

      Vendor-id=0

      Type =2 (PB-PA)

      Length

      Value = {




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          PA-Msg-vendor-id=1 (Vendor X)

          PA-subtype=2 (Vendor X PA sub-type for Anti-Virus)

          Vendor X AV Posture PA Message

      }

    }

    PB Message 2 {

      Vendor-id=0

      Type =2 (PB-PA)

      Length

      Value = {

          PA-Msg-vendor-id=2 (Vendor Y)

          PA-subtype=1 (Vendor Y PA sub-type for Anti-Virus)

          Vendor Y AV Posture PA Message

       }

     }

  }

A.2.1.10.  Verify Posture

  This flow illustrates an invocation of the Vendor X and Vendor Y
  Anti-Virus Posture Validators requesting verification of the posture
  attributes received.  Because this flow happens locally within the
  NEA server, NEA doesn't specify the message contents.

A.2.1.11.  Vendor Y Anti-Virus Posture Result (Vndr Y AV Post Result)

  This flow contains the PA message (Posture Assessment Result) from
  the Vendor Y Anti-Virus Posture Validator; the message content is
  described in the PA-TNC specification.







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A.2.1.12.  Vendor X Anti-Virus Posture Result (Vndr Y AV Post Result)

  This flow contains the PA message (Posture Assessment Result) from
  the Vendor X Anti-Virus Posture Validator; the message content is
  described in the PA-TNC specification.

A.2.1.13.  Assessment Result (Assess Result)

  This flow contains the PB message containing the system assessment
  result computed by the Posture Broker Server and the PA messages from
  the Patch and OS Posture Validators:

  PB Envelope {

   HDR {

    D bit=1 (Posture Broker Server is originator)

    Batch Type=RESULT

    Batch Length

   }

    PB Message 1 {

      Vendor-id=0,

      Type=3 (Access-Recommendation)

      Length

      Value = {

        PB-Assessment-Result=1 (Non-Compliant)

      }

    }

    PB Message 2 {

      Vendor-id=0,

      Type=4 (Remediation-Parameters)

      Length




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      Value = {

       Remediation-Param-Vendor-ID=0

       Remediation-Param-Type=1 (Remediation-URI)

       Remediation-Param=''http://xyz''

       }

     }

   PB Message 3 {

      Vendor-id=0,

      Type=4 (Remediation-Parameters)

      Length

      Value = {

       Remediation-Param-Vendor-ID=0

       Remediation-Param-Type=2 (Remediation-String)

       Remediation-Param=''Try Step1, Step2,...''

       }

     }

    PB Message 4 {

      Vendor-id=0,

      Type=2 (PB-PA)

      Length

      Value = {

          PA-Msg-vendor-id=1 (Vendor X)

          PA-subtype=2 (Vendor X PA sub-type for Anti-Virus)

          Vendor X AV Posture Result PA Message




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       }

     }

    PB Message 5 {

      Vendor-id=0,

      Type=2 (PB-PA)

      Length

      Value = {

          PA-Msg-vendor-id=2 (Vendor Y)

          PA-subtype=1 (Vendor Y PA sub-type for Anti-Virus)

          Vendor Y AV Posture Result PA Message

       }

     }

  }

A.2.1.14.  Posture Result (Vndr X AV Post Reslt & Vndr Y AV Post Reslt)

  These flows illustrate an invocation of the Vendor X and Vendor Y
  Anti-Virus Posture Collectors to receive the posture assessment
  results.  Because this flow is triggered locally, NEA doesn't specify
  the contents of this flow.

A.3.  Client-Triggered Reassessment

  This scenario involves the reassessment of an endpoint as a result of
  enabling a software component on the endpoint.  The endpoint has two
  VPN client software components, one from vendor X for the user's home
  network and other from vendor Y for the network that the endpoint is
  currently accessing.  The assessment is triggered when the user tries
  to use the Vendor X VPN client; this is a violation of the posture
  policy.  The Posture Broker Client triggers the posture assessment
  when it receives a notification from the Standard VPN Posture
  Collector about the change to the operational state of the VPN
  component on the endpoint.  Note that the VPN Posture Collector
  supports standard attributes and some vendor-defined attributes from
  vendor X's and vendor Y's namespaces.  This use case doesn't leverage
  vendor-defined attributes.  The assessment involves verification of



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  the standard VPN posture attributes by the Standard VPN Posture
  Validator that results in a non-compliant assessment result.  This
  use case relies on the use of a virtual Posture Collector concept
  described in section 3.3 of the PA-TNC specification.  As illustrated
  in this example, the Posture Broker Client will assign two Posture
  Collector IDs to a single Posture Collector (Standard VPN PC), and
  the Posture Collector will generate two separate PA messages to
  report the posture for Vendor X and Vendor Y VPN Clients.  The
  Posture Broker Client will use the assigned IDs in the PB message
  sent to the NEA Server.  This entire behavior will be completely
  opaque to the NEA Server, which will handle the PB message as if
  there were two VPN Posture Collectors on the NEA Client.

  +--------+  +-------+ +---------+ +--------+ +--------+ +--------+

  |Vndr X  |  |Vndr Y | |Standard | |Standard| |Standard| |Standard|

  |VPNClnt |  |VPNClnt| | VPN PC  | |  PBC   | |   PBS  | | VPN PV |

  +----+---+  +---+---+ +-----+---+ +---+----+ +---+----+ +----+---+
  Enble|          |           |         |          |           |

  ---->|          |           |         |          |           |

       |  VPN Status Change   |         |          |           |

       |--------------------->| Posture |          |           |

       |          |           | Change  |          |           |

       |          |           |-------->|          |           |

       |          |           |Req. Post|          |           |

       |          |           |<--------|          |           |

       |          |Ins/Rq Info|         |          |           |

       |          |<----------|         |          |           |

       | Inspect/Request Info |         |          |           |

       |<---------+-----------|VPNX Post|          |           |

       |          |           |-------->|          |           |

       |          |           |VPNY Post|          |           |




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       |          |           |-------->|          |           |

       |          |           |         | Posture  |           |

       |          |           |         |  Report  |           |

       |          |           |         |--------->|           |

       |          |           |         |          |Vrfy Post. |

       |          |           |         |          |---------->|

       |          |           |         |          |VPN PRslt  |

       |          |           |         |  Assess  |<----------|

       |          |           |         |  Result  |           |

       |          |           |         |<---------|           |

       |          |           |VPN PRslt|          |           |

       |          |           |<--------|          |           |

A.3.1.  Message Contents

  This section shows the contents of the key fields in each of the PA
  messages exchanged in this use case.  When necessary, additional
  commentary is provided to explain why certain fields contain the
  shown values.  Note that many of the flows shown are between
  components on the same system so no message contents are shown.

A.3.1.1.  Enable VPN Client (Enble)

  This flow represents the end user triggered event of starting the VPN
  Client software from Vendor X.  This is merely an event and doesn't
  include a message being sent.

A.3.1.2.  Notify Status Change (VPN Status Change)

  This flow represents the detection of the active state of the Vendor
  X VPN Client software by the Standard VPN Posture Collector.  This is
  merely an event and doesn't include a message being sent.








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A.3.1.3.  Notify Posture Change (Posture Change)

  This flow represents the notification of the VPN Posture change sent
  from the VPN Posture Collector to the Standard Posture Broker Client.
  This is merely an event and doesn't include a message being sent.

A.3.1.4.  Request Posture (Req. Post)

  This flow illustrates an invocation of the VPN Posture Collector
  requesting particular posture attributes to be sent.  Because this
  use case is triggered locally, the contents of this flow aren't
  specified by NEA.

A.3.1.5.  Inspect/Request Information (Ins/Rq Info)

  This flow illustrates the acquisition of the posture attributes by
  the Standard VPN Posture Collector from the Vendor X and Vendor Y VPN
  Client components.  Because this flow is triggered locally, NEA
  doesn't specify the message contents.

A.3.1.6.  Vendor X VPN Posture (VPNX Post.)

  This flow contains the PA message from the VPN Posture Collector for
  Vendor X VPN Client posture; the message content is described in the
  PA-TNC specification.

A.3.1.7.  Vendor Y VPN Posture (VPNY Post.)

  This flow contains the PA message from the VPN Posture Collector for
  Vendor Y VPN Client posture; the message content is described in the
  PA-TNC specification.

A.3.1.8.  Posture Report (Post. Rpt.)

  This flow contains the PB message containing the PA message from the
  VPN Posture Collector:

  PB Envelope {

   HDR {

    D bit=0 (Posture Broker Client is originator)

    Batch Type=CRETRY

    Batch Length

   }



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    PB Message 1 {

      Vendor-id=0

      Type =2 (PB-PA)

      Length

      Value = {

         PA-Msg-vendor-id=0

         PA-subtype=7 (VPN)

         Posture-Collector-ID=1 //Virtual Posture Collector ID for
  Vendor X VPN Client

         Vendor X VPN Posture PA Message

      }

    }

    PB Message 2 {

      Vendor-id=0

      Type =2 (PB-PA)

      Length

      Value = {

         PA-Msg-vendor-id=0

         PA-subtype=7 (VPN)

         Posture-Collector-ID=2 //Virtual Posture Collector ID for
  Vendor Y VPN Client

         Vendor Y VPN Posture PA Message

      }

    }






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A.3.1.9.  Verify Posture (Vrfy Post.)

  This flow illustrates an invocation of the VPN Posture Validator
  requesting verification of the posture attributes received.  Because
  this flow happens locally within the NEA server, NEA doesn't specify
  the message contents.

A.3.1.10.  VPN Posture Result (VPN PRslt)

  This flow contains the PA message (Posture Assessment Result) from
  the VPN Posture Validator; the message content is described in the
  PA-TNC specification.

A.3.1.11.  Assessment Result (Assess Result)

  This flow contains the PB message containing the system assessment
  result computed by the Posture Broker Server and the PA messages from
  the VPN Posture Validator:

   PB Envelope {

     HDR {

      D bit=1 (Posture Broker Server is originator)

      Batch Type=RESULT

      Batch Length

     }


    PB Message 1 {

      Vendor-id=0,

      Type =3 (Access-Recommendation)

      Length

      Value = {

        PB-Assessment-Result=1 (Non-Compliant)

      }

    }




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    PB Message 2 {

      Vendor-id=0,

      Type=2 (PB-PA)

      Length

      Value = {

         PA-Msg-vendor-id=0

         PA-subtype=7 (VPN)

         VPN Posture Result PA Message

       }

     }

A.3.1.12.  Posture Result (VPN PRslt)

  This flow illustrate an invocation of the VPN Posture Collectors to
  receive the posture assessment result.  Because this flow is
  triggered locally, NEA doesn't specify the contents of this flow.


























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Appendix B.  Evaluation against NEA Requirements

  This section evaluates the PB-TNC protocol against the requirements
  defined in the NEA Requirements document.  Each subsection considers
  a separate requirement from the NEA Requirements document.  Only
  common requirements (C-1 through C-11) and PB requirements (PB-1
  through PB-6) are considered, since these are the only ones that
  apply to PB.

B.1.  Evaluation against Requirement C-1

  Requirement C-1 says:

  C-1   NEA protocols MUST support multiple round trips between the NEA
        Client and NEA Server in a single assessment.

  PB-TNC meets this requirement.  It allows an unlimited number of
  round trips between the NEA Client and NEA Server.

B.2.  Evaluation against Requirement C-2

  Requirement C-2 says:

  C-2   NEA protocols SHOULD provide a way for both the NEA Client and
        the NEA Server to initiate a posture assessment or reassessment
        as needed.

  PB-TNC meets this requirement.  Either the NEA Client or the NEA
  Server can initiate a posture assessment or reassessment.

  There is one limitation on this support.  If a NEA Server wishes to
  initiate a reassessment after it has sent a RESULT batch, it must
  close the underlying transport session and initiate a new assessment.
  For half-duplex transports, this is unavoidable unless a constant
  exchange of messages is maintained, which would be very wasteful.
  For full-duplex transports, it would be possible to allow the Posture
  Broker Server to send an SRETRY batch even in the Decided state.  If
  the NEA working group reaches consensus that this change should be
  made, it will be.

B.3.  Evaluation against Requirement C-3

  Requirement C-3 says:

  C-3   NEA protocols including security capabilities MUST be capable
        of protecting against active and passive attacks by
        intermediaries and endpoints including prevention from replay-
        based attacks.



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  PB-TNC does not include any security capabilities.  It depends on PT
  to supply a secure transport.  This addresses all the necessary
  threats without adding an extra layer of security.  Since this
  requirement only applies to NEA protocols that include security
  capabilities, PB-TNC meets this requirement.

B.4.  Evaluation against Requirement C-4

  Requirement C-4 says:

  C-4   The PA and PB protocols MUST be capable of operating over any
        PT protocol.  For example, the PB protocol must provide a
        transport-independent interface allowing the PA protocol to
        operate without change across a variety of network protocol
        environments (e.g., EAP/802.1X, PANA, TLS, and IKE/IPsec).

  PB-TNC meets this requirement.  PB-TNC can operate over any PT
  protocol that meets the requirements for PT stated in the NEA
  Requirements document.  Also, PB-TNC insulates the PA protocol from
  any specifics of the PT protocol.  With PB-TNC, all PT protocols are
  equivalent from the perspective of the PA protocol.

B.5.  Evaluation against Requirement C-5

  Requirement C-5 says:

  C-5   The selection process for NEA protocols MUST evaluate and
        prefer the reuse of existing open standards that meet the
        requirements before defining new ones.  The goal of NEA is not
        to create additional alternative protocols where acceptable
        solutions already exist.

  Based on this requirement, PB-TNC should receive a strong preference.
  PB-TNC is equivalent with IF-TNCCS 2.0, an open TCG specification.
  IF-TNCCS 2.0 is an extension of the existing IF-TNCCS 1.X protocols,
  which have been implemented by dozens of vendors and open source
  projects.

B.6.  Evaluation against Requirement C-6

  Requirement C-6 says:

  C-6   NEA protocols MUST be highly scalable; the protocols MUST
        support many Posture Collectors on a large number of NEA
        Clients to be assessed by numerous Posture Validators residing
        on multiple NEA Servers.





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  PB-TNC meets this requirement.  PB-TNC supports up to 2^16-1 Posture
  Collectors and an equal number of Posture Validators in a given PB-
  TNC session.  It also supports an unlimited number of NEA Clients and
  NEA Servers.

  The scalability of PB-TNC extends into other areas as well.  For
  example, PB-TNC supports an unlimited number of batches and each
  batch can contain up to 2^32-1 octets and about 2^24 PA messages.
  Each PA message can contain up to 2^32-1 octets.  Of course, sending
  this much data in a NEA assessment is not generally advisable, but
  the point is that PB-TNC is highly scalable.

B.7.  Evaluation against Requirement C-7

  Requirement C-7 says:

  C-7   The protocols MUST support efficient transport of a large
        number of attribute messages between the NEA Client and the NEA
        Server.

  PB-TNC meets this requirement.  Each PB-TNC batch can contain about
  2^24 PA messages.  Since PB-TNC supports an unlimited number of
  batches in a session, this number is actually unlimited (except
  perhaps by PT protocols, user patience, or other external factors).
  As for efficiency, PB-TNC adds only 24 octets of overhead per PA
  message.  PA-TNC can include many attributes in a single PA message
  so this overhead is diluted further.

B.8.  Evaluation against Requirement C-8

  Requirement C-8 says:

  C-8   NEA protocols MUST operate efficiently over low bandwidth or
        high latency links.

  PB-TNC meets this requirement.  A minimal PB-TNC exchange can be as
  small as 72 octets and one round trip.  Even if privacy policies or
  other factors require multiple round trips, PB-TNC generally imposes
  an overhead of only 8 octets per batch and 24 octets per PA message.

B.9.  Evaluation against Requirement C-9

  Requirement C-9 says:

  C-9   For any strings intended for display to a user, the protocols
        MUST support adapting these strings to the user's language
        preferences.




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        PB-TNC meets this requirement.  It defines a standard way for
        the NEA Client and NEA Server to send their language
        preferences to each other, leveraging the widely implemented
        Accept-Language format defined in RFC 3282.

B.10.  Evaluation against Requirement C-10

  Requirement C-10 says:

  C-10  NEA protocols MUST support encoding of strings in UTF-8 format.

  PB-TNC meets this requirement.  All strings in the PB-TNC protocol
  are encoded in UTF-8 format.  This allows the protocol to support a
  wide range of languages efficiently.

B.11.  Evaluation against Requirement C-11

  Requirement C-11 says:

  C-11  Due to the potentially different transport characteristics
        provided by the underlying candidate PT protocols, the NEA
        Client and NEA Server MUST be capable of becoming aware of and
        adapting to the limitations of the available PT protocol.  For
        example, some PT protocol characteristics that might impact the
        operation of PA and PB include restrictions on which end can
        initiate a NEA connection, maximum data size in a message or
        full assessment, upper bound on number of round trips, and
        ordering (duplex) of messages exchanged.  The selection process
        for the PT protocols MUST consider the limitations the
        candidate PT protocol would impose upon the PA and PB
        protocols.

  PB-TNC meets this requirement.  The PB-TNC protocol is designed to be
  flexible enough to operate with a variety of underlying PT protocols,
  including those that may have limitations on message or assessment
  size, number of round trips, and duplex.  Local APIs can allow
  Posture Collectors and Posture Validators to discover when they are
  operating in a less constrained deployment and then make use of more
  verbose attributes.  Similarly, Posture Collectors could choose not
  to send or use smaller attributes (including assertions from previous
  assessments) when faced with a very constrained network connection.










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B.12.  Evaluation against Requirement PB-1

  Requirement PB-1 says:

  PB-1  The PB protocol MUST be capable of carrying attributes from the
        Posture Broker Server to the Posture Broker Client.  This
        enables the Posture Broker Client to learn the posture
        assessment decision and if appropriate to aid in remediation
        and notification of the endpoint owner.

  PB-TNC meets this requirement.  It can carry attributes from the
  Posture Broker Client to the Posture Broker Server and back in an
  unlimited number of round trips.  Furthermore, PB-TNC provides
  explicit attribute support for posture decision and remediation aid
  notification.

B.13.  Evaluation against Requirement PB-2

  Requirement PB-2 says:

  PB-2  The PB protocol MUST NOT interpret the contents of PA messages
        being carried; i.e., the data it is carrying must be opaque to
        it.

  PB-TNC meets this requirement.  It does not parse or interpret PA
  messages in any way.

B.14.  Evaluation against Requirement PB-3

  Requirement PB-3 says:

  PB-3  The PB protocol MUST carry unique identifiers that are used by
        the Posture Brokers to route (deliver) PA messages between
        Posture Collectors and Posture Validators.  Such message
        routing should facilitate dynamic registration or
        deregistration of Posture Collectors and Validators.  For
        example, a dynamically registered anti-virus Posture Validator
        should be able to subscribe to receive messages from its
        respective anti-virus Posture Collector on NEA Clients.

  PB-TNC meets this requirement.  PB-TNC tags each PA message with a PA
  subtype that the Posture Brokers can use to deliver the PA messages
  to the proper Posture Collectors and Posture Validators.  By tagging
  messages according to their content, PB-TNC allows Posture Collectors
  and Posture Validators to be dynamically registered and deregistered,
  ensuring that each one receives the proper data.  PB-TNC also
  supports exclusive delivery, which allows messages to be targeted at
  a particular Posture Collector or Posture Validator.



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B.15.  Evaluation against Requirement PB-4

  Requirement PB-4 says:

  PB-4  The PB protocol MUST be capable of supporting a half-duplex PT
        protocol.  However, this does not preclude PB from operating
        full-duplex when running over a full-duplex PT.

  PB-TNC meets this requirement.  In order to insulate PA from any
  differences between half-duplex and full-duplex PT protocols, PB-TNC
  always operates in a half-duplex mode, regardless of the capabilities
  of the PT protocol.  While this could in theory slow assessments that
  require many round trips or bidirectional multimedia exchanges, this
  is not a problem in practice because endpoint assessments do not
  typically involve multimedia or a large number of round trips.

B.16.  Evaluation against Requirement PB-5

  Requirement PB-5 says:

  PB-5  The PB protocol MAY support authentication, integrity, and
        confidentiality protection for the attribute messages it
        carries between a Posture Broker Client and Posture Broker
        Server.  This provides security protection for a message dialog
        of the groupings of attribute messages exchanged between the
        Posture Broker Client and Posture Broker Server.  Such
        protection is orthogonal to PA protections (which are end to
        end) and allows for simpler Posture Collector and Validators to
        be implemented, and for consolidation of cryptographic
        operations possibly improving scalability and manageability.

  PB-TNC does not address this optional requirement.  It leaves
  security to PT (which is required to address it) and PA (which SHOULD
  do so).  There seems to be minimal benefit in adding a third layer of
  security to the NEA protocol stack.  However, if the NEA working
  group determines that PB should include support for authentication,
  integrity protection, and confidentiality protection, then this could
  be added to PB in a similar manner to the way that the PA-TNC
  security is done.












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B.17.  Evaluation against Requirement PB-6

  Requirement PB-6 says:

  PB-6  The PB protocol MUST support grouping of attribute messages to
        optimize transport of messages and minimize round trips.

  PB-TNC meets this requirement.  Multiple attribute messages can be
  conveyed in a single PA message.  In fact, that's how PA-TNC works.

Authors' Addresses

  Ravi Sahita
  Intel Corporation
  2200 Mission College Blvd.
  Santa Clara, CA 95054 USA
  EMail: [email protected]

  Steve Hanna
  Juniper Networks, Inc.
  1194 North Mathilda Avenue
  Sunnyvale, CA 94089 USA
  EMail: [email protected]

  Ryan Hurst
  Microsoft Corporation
  One Microsoft Way
  Redmond, WA 98052 USA
  EMail: [email protected]

  Kaushik Narayan
  Cisco Systems Inc.
  10 West Tasman Drive
  San Jose, CA 95134 USA
  EMail: [email protected]
















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