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<rfc ipr="trust200902" docName="draft-ietf-sacm-architecture-05" category="info">

  <front>
    <title abbrev="Abbreviated Title">Secure Automation and Continuous Monitoring (SACM) Architecture</title>

    <author initials="N." surname="Cam-Winget" fullname="Nancy Cam-Winget" role="editor">
      <organization>Cisco Systems</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>3550 Cisco Way</street>
          <city>San Jose</city>
          <region>CA</region>
          <code>95134</code>
          <country>US</country>
        </postal>
        <email>ncamwing@cisco.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author initials="L." surname="Lorenzin" fullname="Lisa Lorenzin">
      <organization>Pulse Secure</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>2700 Zanker Rd, Suite 200</street>
          <city>San Jose</city>
          <region>CA</region>
          <code>95134</code>
          <country>US</country>
        </postal>
        <email>llorenzin@pulsesecure.net</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author initials="I." surname="McDonald" fullname="Ira E McDonald">
      <organization>High North Inc</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>PO Box 221</street>
          <city>Grand Marais</city>
          <region>MI</region>
          <code>49839</code>
          <country>US</country>
        </postal>
        <email>blueroofmusic@gmail.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author initials="A." surname="Woland" fullname="Aaron Woland">
      <organization>Cisco Systems</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>1900 South Blvd. Suite 200</street>
          <city>Charlotte</city>
          <region>NC</region>
          <code>28203</code>
          <country>US</country>
        </postal>
        <email>loxx@cisco.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <date year="2015" month="October"/>

    <area>General</area>
    <workgroup>SACM</workgroup>
    <keyword>template</keyword>

    <abstract>


<t>This document defines an architecture for standardization of interfaces,
protocols, and information
models related to security automation and continuous monitoring. It describes
the basic architecture, components, and interfaces defined to enable the collection, acquisition,
and verification of Posture
and Posture Assessments.</t>



    </abstract>

  </front>

  <middle>
     

<section anchor="intro" title="Introduction">

<t>Several data models and protocols (including - but not limited to - NEA, TCG TNC, SCAP, SWIDs, XMPP, etc.) are in use today that allow different applications to perform the collection, acquisition, and assessment of posture.  These applications can vary from being focused on general system and security management to specialized configuration, compliance, and control systems. With an existing varied set of applications, there is a strong desire to standardize data models, protocols, and interfaces to better allow for the automation of such data processes.</t>

<t>This document addresses general and architectural requirements defined in <xref target="I-D.ietf-sacm-requirements"/>.
The architecture described enables standardized collection, acquisition,
and verification
of Posture and Posture Assessments.  This architecture includes the components
and interfaces that can be
used to better identify the Information Model and type(s) of transport protocols
needed for communication.</t>

<t>This document uses terminology defined in <xref target="I-D.ietf-sacm-terminology"/>.</t>

<section title="Requirements Language">
    <t>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 <xref
            target="RFC2119">RFC 2119</xref>.</t>
    <t>When the words appear in lower case, their natural language meaning is used.</t>
</section>

</section>


<section anchor="problem-statement" title="Problem Statement">

<t>Securing information and the systems that store, process, and transmit that
information is a
challenging task for organizations of all sizes, and many security practitioners
spend much of their
time on manual processes.  Administrators can’t get technology from disparate
sources to work together;
they need information to make decisions, but the information is not available.
Everyone is collecting
the same data, but storing it as different information.  Administrators therefore
need to collect data
and craft their own information, which may not be accurate or interoperable
because it’s customized by
each administrator, not shared.</t>

<t>Security automation and continuous monitoring require a large and broad set
of mission and business
processes; to make the most effective use of technology, the same data
must support multiple processes.
The need for complex characterization and assessment necessitates components
and functions that
interoperate and can build off each other to enable far-ranging and/or deep-diving
analysis. SACM is standardizing an information model, data models, operations, and transports that will allow for administrators to share with others and to use data from others interoperably.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="arch" title="Architectural Overview">
<t>At a high level, the SACM architecture describes "Where" and "How" information and assessment of posture may be collected, processed (e.g. normalization, translation, aggregation, etc.), assessed, exchanged, and/or stored. This section provides an architectural overview of </t>
 <t><list style="symbols">
    <t>
  the basic architectural building blocks, which – in combination – constitute SACM components (the entities, the "where"), and </t>
    <t>the relationships and interaction between these building blocks on the data plane and control plane (communications and flows between entities, the "how").</t>
    </list></t>

<t>The SACM architecture provides the basic means to describe and compose SACM components. Components enable the basic functionality in SACM, such as Endpoint Attribute Collection or Target Endpoint Posture Assessment.</t>

<t>The role(s) a component plays in the SACM architecture are determined by the function(s) that component instantiates. Three main component roles are defined: a Consumer (Cs), a Provider (Pr), and a Controller (Cr) used to facilitate some of the security functions such as authentication and authorization and other metadata functions. See <xref target="roles"/> for details on roles.</t>
  
<t>In SACM, components are composed of functions, the modular building blocks in the SACM architecture. The SACM architecture defines the purpose of these functions. Attributes and operations used by component functions are described in other SACM documents. See <xref target="functions"/> for details on component functions.</t>

<t>Functions use SACM interfaces for communications between components.  Interfaces handle management and control functions (such as authentication, authorization, registration, and discovery), and enable SACM components to share information (via publication, query, and subscription). Three primary interfaces are defined: an interface for management and control (A), an interface for data communication between the controller and providers or consumers (B), and an interface for data communication directly between a provider and a consumer (C). See <xref target="interfaces"/> for details on interfaces.</t>

<t><xref target="simple-architectural-model"/> illustrates the relationships between component roles and interfaces:</t>

<figure title="Simple Architectural Model" anchor="simple-architectural-model"><artwork><![CDATA[
                       +--------------------------------------+
                       | +--------------------------------------+
                       | | +--------------------------------------+
                       | | |                                      |
                       +-| |            Consumer (Cs)             |
                         +-|                                      |
                           +--------------------------------------+
                             /   \         /   \            /   \
                            /     \       /     \          /     \
                            -     -       -  d  -          -     -
                             || ||A        | a  |B          |   |C
                             || ||         | t  |           |   |
                            -     -       -  a  -           |   |
                            \     /       \     /           |   |
                             \   /         \   /            |   |
                          /|---------------------|\         |   |
                   /|----/                         \--------| d |--|\
                  /     /      Controller (Cr)      \ ctrl  | a |    \
                  \     \                           / plane | t |    /
                   \|----\                         /--------| a |--|/
                          \|---------------------|/         |   |
                             /   \         /   \            |   |
                            /     \       /     \           |   |
                            -     -       -  d  -           |   |
                             || ||A        | a |B           |   |C
                             || ||         | t |            |   |
                            -     -       -  a  -          -     -
                            \     /       \     /          \     /
                             \   /         \   /            \   /
                           +------------------------------------+
                           |                                    |-+
                           |            Provider (Pr            | |
                           |                                    | |-+
                           +------------------------------------+ | |
                             +------------------------------------+ |
                               +------------------------------------+



]]></artwork></figure>

<section anchor="roles" title="Component Roles">

<t>An endpoint, as defined in <xref target="I-D.ietf-sacm-terminology"/>, can operate in two primary ways: as the target of an assessment, and/or as a
functional component
of the SACM architecture that can instantiate one or more functions (see <xref target="functions"/>).
In the SACM architecture, individual endpoints may be a target endpoint,
a component, or both simultaneously.  An
endpoint acting as a component may perform one or more roles.
Components can take on the role(s) of Provider, Consumer, and/or Controller.</t>

<section anchor="provider" title="Provider">

<t>The Provider (Pr) is the component
that
contributes Posture Assessment Information and/or Guidance either spontaneously
or
in response to a request. A Provider can be a Posture Evaluator, Posture
Collector,
Data Store (see <xref target="provider-consumer-types"/>), or an application that has
aggregated Posture Assessment Information that can be shared.</t>

<t>The Provider implements the capabilities and functions that must be handled
to share or
provide Posture Assessment information.</t>

<t>One means by which a Provider shares information, is in response to a direct request
from a Consumer.</t>
<t> A Provider may also share information spontaneously. Use cases such as the change in a posture state require that a
Provider be able to provide such changes or updates especially to Consumers such as Security
Information and Event Management (SIEM) systems; similarly, SIEM applications that
are providing live information require any such updates or changes to posture information
to be provided spontaneously. Authorization for the enabling for these
unsolicited messages happens through the Controller at the time that both Provider and
Consumers request authorization for (spontaneous) messages.
</t>
<t> The information provided, may be filtered or truncated to provide
a subset of the
requested information to honor the request. This truncation may be performed
based on the
Consumer’s request and/or the Provider’s ability to filter. The latter case
may be due
to security considerations (e.g. authorization restrictions due to domain
segregation,
privacy, etc.).</t>

<t>The Provider may only be able to share the Posture Assessment Information
using a
specific data model and protocol. It may use a standard data model and/or
protocol, a
non-standard data model and/or protocol, or any combination of standard and
non-standard
data models and protocols.  However, it must support either one or more standard data models, or one or more standard protocols. It may also choose to advertise its capabilities
through a
metadata abstraction within the data model itself, or through the use of
the registration
function of the Controller (see <xref target="controller"/>).</t>

<t>The Provider must be authorized to provide the Posture Assessment Information
for
specific consumers.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="requestor" title="Consumer">

<t>The Consumer (Cs) is the component
that
requests or accepts Posture Assessment Information and/or Guidance. A Consumer
can be
a Posture Evaluator, Report Generator, Data Store (see <xref target="data-plane-functions"/>),
or an application that consumes Posture Assessment Information in order to
perform another function.</t>

<t>As described in Section 2.2 of the SACM Use Cases <xref target="I-D.ietf-sacm-use-cases"/>,
several usage scenarios are posed with different application types requesting
posture assessment
information. Whether it is a configuration verification system; a checklist
verification system;
or a system for detecting posture deviations, compliance or vulnerabilities,
they all need to
acquire information about Posture Assessment. The architectural component
performing such
requests is a Consumer.</t>

<t>The Consumer implements the capabilities and functions that must be handled
in order to
enable a Posture Assessment Information Request. Requests can be either
for a
single posture attribute or a set of posture attributes; those attributes
can be the
raw information, or an evaluation result based upon that information.
The
Consumer may further choose to query for the information directly (one-time
query), or
to request for updates to be provided as the Posture Assessment Information
changes
(subscription). A request could be made directly to an explicitly identified
Provider,
but a Consumer may also desire to obtain the information without having to
know the
available Providers.</t>

<t>There may be instances where a Consumer may be requesting information from
various
Providers and, due to its policy or application requirements, may need to
be better
informed of the Providers and their capabilities. In those use cases, a Consumer
may
also request to discover the respective capabilities of those Providers using
the
discovery function of the Controller (see <xref target="controller"/>) or may request
metadata reflecting the capabilities of the Providers.</t>

<t>The Controller (described below) must authorize a Consumer to acquire the
information
it is requesting. The Consumer may also be subject to limits or constraints
on the
numbers, types, sizes, and rate of requests.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="provider-consumer-types" title="Types of Providers and Consumers">
<t>SACM Providers and Consumers can perform a variety of SACM-related tasks.  For example, a Collector can perform Collection tasks; an Evaluator can perform Evaluation tasks.  A single Provider or Consumer may be able to perform only one task, or multiple tasks. SACM defines the following types of Providers/Consumers:</t>

<section anchor="collector" title="Collector">

<t>A collector consumes Guidance and/or other Posture Assessment Information; it provides Posture Assessment Information. Collectors may be internal or external. As a SACM component, a Collector may be a Consumer as it may consume guidance information and may also be a Provider as it may publish the collected information.</t>

<section anchor="internal-collector" title="Internal Collector">

<t>An internal collector is a collector that runs on the endpoint and collects posture information locally.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="external-collector" title="External Collector">

<t>An external collector is a collector that observes endpoints from outside. These collectors may be configured and operated to manage assets for reasons including, but not limited to, posture assessment. Collectors that are not primarily intended to support posture assessment (e.g. intrusion detection systems) may still provide information that speaks to endpoint posture (e.g. behavioral information).</t>

<t>Examples:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>A RADIUS server, which collects information about which endpoints have logged onto the network</t>
  <t>A network profiling system, which collects information by discovering and classifying network nodes</t>
  <t>A Network Intrusion Detection System (NIDS) sensor, which collects information about endpoint behavior by observing network traffic</t>
  <t>A vulnerability scanner, which collects information about endpoint configuration by scanning endpoints</t>
  <t>A hypervisor, which collects information about endpoints running as virtual guests in its host environment</t>
  <t>A management system that configures and installs software on the endpoint, which collects information based on its provisioning activities</t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="interactions-with-endpoint" title="Collector Interactions With Target Endpoints">

<t>TODO - examples of endpoint interactions with local internal collector (e.g. NEA client), endpoint with remote internal collector (SNMP query), and external collector (sensor)</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="evaluator" title="Evaluator">

<t>An evaluator consumes Posture Assessment Information, Evaluation Results, and/or Guidance; it provides Evaluation Results. An evaluator may consume endpoint attribute assertions, previous evaluations of posture attributes, or previous reports of Evaluation Results.</t>

<t>TODO: update the terminology doc to reflect this definition</t>

<t>Example: a NEA posture validator <xref target="RFC5209"/></t>

</section>
<section anchor="report-generator" title="Report Generator">

<t>A report generator consumes Posture Assessment Information, Evaluation Results, and/or Guidance; it provides reports. These reports are based on:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Endpoint Attribute Assertions, including Evaluation Results</t>
  <t>Other Reports (e.g., a weekly report may be created from daily reports)</t>
</list></t>

<t>It may summarize data continually, as the data arrives. It also may summarize data in response to an ad hoc query.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="data-store" title="Data Store">

<t>A data store consumes any data; it provides any data.</t>

</section>
  </section>
<section anchor="controller" title="Controller">

<t>The Controller (Cr or Controller) is a component defined to facilitate the
    overall SACM management and control system functions.  This component
    is responsible for handling the secure communications establishment
    (such as the authentication and authorization) between Providers and Consumers.
    In addition, the Controller may also handle how the data may be routed.  While
    the architecture defines the Controller as a single component, implementations
    may implement this to suit the different deployment and scaling requirements.
    In particular, for the data handling,
    SACM defines three types of Controller:</t>

<t><list style="hanging" hangIndent="1">
  <t hangText='Broker:'>
  Intermediary negotiating connection between Provider and Consumer. Implements only control plane functions. A Controller
acting as a Broker:

      <list style="symbols">
        <t>Receives a request for information from a Consumer and instructs the Consumer
where and how
retrieve the requested information.</t>
        <t>Receives a publication request from a Provider and instructs the Provider
where and how to
deliver the published information.</t>
        <t>The information itself is neither distributed nor stored by the Controller.</t>
      </list>
  </t>
</list></t>



<t><list style="hanging" hangIndent="1">
  <t hangText='Proxy:'>
  Intermediary negotiating on behalf of a Consumer or Provider. Implements both control and data plane functions. A Controller
acting
as a Proxy:

      <list style="symbols">
        <t>Receives a request for information from a Consumer, retrieves the information
from the
appropriate Providers, and provides the information to the Consumer.</t>
        <t>Receives a publication request from a Provider, accepts the published information,
and
distributes it to appropriate consumers.</t>
              <t>The information itself is distributed by, but not stored by, the Controller.</t>
      </list>
      

  </t>
</list></t>


<t><list style="hanging" hangIndent="1">
  <t hangText='Repository:'>
  Intermediary receiving and storing data from a Provider, and providing stored
data to a Consumer.  Implements both control and data plane functions. A Controller acting as a Repository:

      <list style="symbols">
        <t>Receives a request for information from a Consumer, retrieves the information
from its data
stores, and provides the information to the Consumer.</t>
        <t>Receives a publication request from a provider, stores the published information,
and
distributes it to appropriate Consumers.</t>
        <t>The information itself is both handled by and stored by the Controller.</t>
      </list>
  </t>
</list></t>


<t>A single instantiation of a Controller may be a Broker, Proxy, or Repository, or any combination thereof.</t>

<t>Through the use of a discovery mechanism, Consumers can have visibility into
the Providers
present, the type(s) of Posture Assessment Information available, and how
it can be requested.
Similarly, a Provider may need to publish what Posture Assessment Information
it can share and
how it can share it (e.g. protocol, filtering capabilities, etc.). Enabling
this visibility
through a Controller or through metadata publication also allows for the
distinct definition of
security considerations (e.g. authorized registration / publication of capabilities
by Providers)
beyond how a Provider may define its own capability.</t>

<t>Beyond the control and management functions for the SACM system, a Controller
may also provide
proxy or broker or repository (and possibly routing) services in the
data plane.  In the deployment
scenario where Providers do not assert the need to know their Consumers and/or
vice versa, the
Controller can thus provide the appropriate services to ensure the Posture
Assessment Information
is appropriately communicated from the Providers to the authorized Consumers.</t>

<t>The Controller, acting as a management control plane, helps define how to
manage an overall SACM
system that allows for Consumers to obtain the desired Posture Assessment
Information without the need
to distinctly know and establish one (Consumer) to many (Provider) connections.
Similarly, a Provider
may not need to distinctly know and establish one (Provider) to many (Consumer)
connections; e.g. the
Controller enables the means to allow a SACM system to support many to many
connections. Note that the
Controller also allows for the direct discovery and connection between a
Consumer and Provider.</t>

<t>As a SACM component, the Controller may be instantiated within a system or
device acting as a
Provider or a Consumer (or both), or as its own distinct Controller entity.
In a rich SACM environment,
it is feasible to instantiate a Controller that provides both the management
(and control) functions for
SACM as well as providing the data plane services for the actual data,
e.g. Posture Assessment Information flow. Note that Controllers may be implemented
to only provide control plane functions (broker), or both control plane functions and data plane services (proxy or repository).</t>

</section>
</section>
</section>
<section anchor="interfaces" title="Interfaces between Consumers, Providers, and Controllers">

<t>A SACM interface is a transport carrying operations (e.g. publication via a RESTful API).  As shown in <xref target="simple-architectural-model"/>, communication can proceed with
the following interfaces and expected functions and behaviors:</t>

<t><list style="hanging" hangIndent="1">
  <t hangText='A:'>
  interface “A” shown in <xref target="simple-architectural-model"/>   handles the management and control functions that are needed to establish,
at minimum,
a secure communication between Consumers and Providers. The interface must
also handle
the functions to allow for the discovery and registration of the Providers
as well as
the ways in which Posture Assessment Information can be provided (or requested).</t>
  <t hangText='B:'>
  interface “B” shown in <xref target="simple-architectural-model"/>   enables Providers to share their Posture Assessment Information spontaneously;
similarly, it enables Consumers to request information without having to
know the
identities (or reachability) of all the Providers that can fulfill Consumers’
requests.</t>
  <t hangText='C:'>
  interface “C” shown in <xref target="simple-architectural-model"/>   illustrates the ability and desire for Consumers and Providers to be able
to
communicate directly when a Provider is sharing Posture Assessment Information
directly to a Consumer. The interface allows for the different data models
and
protocols to be used between a Consumer and a Provider with the expectation
that the
appropriate authentication and authorization mechanisms have been employed
to
establish a secure communication link between the Consumer and the Provider.
Typically, it is expected that the secure link establishment occurs as a
management or
control function through the abstracted Controller role (e.g. the Controller
could be
a broker or could be embedded in a Consumer or a Provider).</t>
</list></t>

<t>A variety of protocols, such as SNMP, NETCONF, NEA protocols <xref target="RFC5209"/>, and other similar interfaces,
may be used for collection of data from the target endpoints by the Posture
Information Provider.
Those interfaces are outside the scope of SACM.</t>

</section>

<section anchor="functions" title="Component Functions">

<t>SACM components are composed of a variety of functions, which may be instantiated on a single endpoint or on separate standalone endpoints providing various roles. An endpoint MUST implement one or more of these functions to be considered a SACM component. A SACM solution offers a set of functions across a set of SACM components.</t>

<t>The functions described here are the minimum set that is mandatory to implement in a SACM solution. A SACM solution MAY implement additional functions.</t>

<section anchor="control-plane-functions" title="Control Plane Functions">

<t>Control plane functions represent various services offered by the Controller
to the Providers
and Consumers to facilitate sharing of information. Control plane functions include, but are not limited to:</t>

<t><list style="hanging" hangIndent="1">
  <t hangText='Authentication:'>
  The authentication of Consumers and Providers
independent of the actual information-sharing communication channel. While authentication between peers (e.g. a Consumer and a Provider) can be achieved directly through peer to peer authentication (using TLS for instance), there are use cases where:

      <list style="symbols">
        <t>Consumers may request information independent of knowing the identities of
the
Providers.</t>
        <t>Providers may want to share the information without prior solicitation.</t>
      </list>
  </t>
</list></t>

<t>To address the above use cases, the architecture must account for an abstraction where a Controller may be
defined
to effect the authentication of the Consumers and Providers independent of
the
actual information-sharing communication channel. Consumers and Providers that consume or publish information without requiring knowledge of the Providers and Consumers respectively would function in a SACM system where the Controller is a distinct entity.  As a distinct SACM component, the Controller would authenticate Providers and Consumers.</t>


<t><list style="hanging" hangIndent="1">
  <t hangText='Authorization:'>
  The restriction of Posture Assessment Information sharing
between the Consumers and Providers. At minimum, a management function must
define
      the necessary policies to control what Providers can publish and Consumers to accept. The Controller is the authority for the type of Posture Information that a Provider can publish and a Consumer can accept.  If a Controller is a Broker, then it may only grant authorization to the capabilities requested by the Provider or Consumer.  When acting as a Proxy, as part of its authorization, the Controller may further obscure or block information being shared by a Provider as it distributes it to a Consumer.  Similarly, a Repository may block information as recieved by the Provider and pass to the Consumer and to its storage the resulting authorized information. A Provider may also enforce its own authorization based upon its connection to a Controller; though, in the case where an application includes both the Provider and Controller roles, it can choose to implement all authorization on the Controller.  Similarly, a Consumer may enforce its own authorization of what data it can receive based on the Controller (or Provider) it is communicaticating with; in the case where an application includes both the Consumer and Controller roles, it can choose to implement all the authorization on the Controller.</t>
  <t><list style="hanging" hangIndent="1">
  <t hangText='Identity Management:'>
  Since Identity Management for authentication and
authorization policies is best performed via a centralized component, the
Controller
      also facilitates this function. </t>
      <t>The Controller needs to be able to identify the endpoints participating as
      SACM components
      and the roles that they play.  Similar to how access control may be effected
      via Authentication,
      Authorization, and Accounting Systems (e.g. AAA services), the same principle
      is defined; as
      AAA services depend on Identity Management services, the Controller will
      need a similar function
      and interface to Identity Management services. Note that implementations of this function is abstractly centralized, but to address scalability and the need to manage different resources (e.g. users, processes and devices) a distributed system that is centrally coordinated may be used.</t>
  </list></t>
</list></t>


<t><list style="hanging" hangIndent="1">
  <t hangText='Registration/Discovery:'>
  A SACM ecosystem needs to provide the ability for devices to discover Providers, Consumers, Controllers and their respective capabilities.  For a Consumer to be able to obtain the information of interest must either configure itself to know what Providers to communicate with directly (and their known capabilities, such as the supported data model and information provided) or can dynamically discover the information that is available. Similarly, Providers may need to either be configured to know who to publish the information to, or can dynamically discover its Consumers.</t>
  <t> In the case where there is a Controller, the capabilities of the Controller must also be advertised so that Providers and Consumers may know how the data is being handled as well (e.g. if acting as a Broker or Repository).  The Controller also provides the function of registering the Providers and Consumers; the registration function enables the Controller to also affect the authorization afforded to the Provider or Consumer.</t>
  
 </list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="data-plane-functions" title="Data Plane Functions">
    <t>There are three basic functions to facilitate data flow: </t>
    <t><list style="hanging" hangIndent="1">
        <t hangText="Subscription:">
            A Consumer that wants to recieve information from a specific Provider or from the Controller advertising the availability of specific information (that may come from more than one Provider) will effectively subscribe to recieve the information spontaneously and continuously as new
        information as subscribed to becomes available.</t>
        <t hangText="Publication">
            A Provider being registered through the Controller to provide specific information, may publish the information either directly to the Consumers or to the Controller that is acting as the broker or respository. </t>
        <t hangText="Query/Response">
            A Consumer may contact the Provider directly and request the information through a query operation; and in response, the Provider would send the information directly to the Consumer.</t>
        </list></t>
</section>
</section>
<section anchor="capabilities" title="Component Capabilities">
  <t>TODO: add a discussion of "capability" as being able to talk a specific data model, data operations, or SACM transport</t>
  <t>TODO: data plane capabilities / control plane capabilities can be discovered via querying the controller</t>
</section>
<section anchor="example" title="Example Illustration of Functions and Workflow">

<t>TODO: once the group reaches consensus on content for the previous sections,
revise all this text based upon the agreed-upon architecture</t>

<figure title="Communications Model" anchor="communications-model"><artwork><![CDATA[
                   +-------------------------------+
                  | +-------------------------------+
                  | |                               |
                  +-|        Controller (Cr)        |
                    +-------------------------------+
                       //   /            \   \\
                      //   /              \   \\
                   A //   /                \   \\ A
                    //   /                  \   \\
                   //   /  B             B   \   \\
                  //   /                      \   \\
 +------------------------+           +------------------------+
 | +----------------------+     A     | +------------------------+
 | |                      |===========| |                        |
 | |    Consumer (C)      |-----------| |      Provider (P)      |
 +-|                      |     C     +-|                        |
    +---------------------+             +------------------------+

]]></artwork></figure>

<t>SACM’s focus is on the automation of collection, verification and update
of system security configurations pertaining to endpoint assessment.  In
order to carry out these tasks, the architectural components shown in <xref target="simple-architectural-model"/> can be further refined as:</t>

<t><list style="hanging" hangIndent="1">
  <t hangText='Providers:'>
  a Provider may be dedicated to perform either the collection, aggregation
or evaluation of one or more posture attributes whose results can be conveyed
to a Consumer. In this example form of the
SACM architecture model, these are shown as Collection, Evaluation, and Results
Providers. Note that there may be posture attributes or posture assessment
information that articulates Guidance information which may or may not be
present in the architecture.</t>
  <t hangText='Consumers:'>
  a Consumer may request or receive one or more posture attributes or posture
assessment information from a Provider for
their own use.  In this example form of the SACM architecture model, these
are shown as Collection, Evaluation, and Results Consumers.  Note that there
may be posture attributes or posture assessment information articulating
Guidance information which may or may not be present in the architecture
to be provided or consumed.</t>
  <t hangText='Data Stores:'>
  a Data Store is both a Provider and a Consumer,  storing one or more posture
attributes or assessments for endpoints.  It should be understood that these
repositories interface directly to a Provider or Consumer (and Guidance)
but the interfaces used to interact between them is outside the scope of
SACM (e.g. no interface arrows are shown in the architecture).</t>
</list></t>

<t><xref target="example-flow"/> illustrates an example flow for how Posture Assessment Information may flow.</t>

<figure title="Example Posture Information Flow" anchor="example-flow"><artwork><![CDATA[
                                +-------------+
                                 |Evaluation   |
                +-------------+  |Guidance     +--+
                |Endpoint     |  |Function     |  |
        +-------+             |  +-------------+  |
        |       |             |                   |
        |       +-------+-----+             +-----v-------+
        | Collection    |                   |Evaluation   |
      +-> Function   +--+--------+          |Function     |
      | |            |Collection |    +-----------+   +----------+
      | +------------+Provider   |    |           |---|          |
      |              |           |    |Collection |   |Evaluation|
      |              |           |    |Consumer   |   |Provider  |
      |              +----+------+    +----^------+   +---+------+
     ++---------+         |                |              |
     |Collection|   +-----v------+     +---+--------+     |
     |Guidance  |   |            |     |Collection  |     |
     |Function  |   |Collection  |     |Provider    |     |
     |          |   |Consumer    |-----|            |     |
     +----------+   +------------+     +------------+     |
                               | Collection |             |
                               | Data Store |             |
                               +------------+             |
                                                          |
         +--------------+           +---------------+     |
         |Evaluation    |           |Evaluation     |     |
         |Results       |           |Consumer       <-----+
         |Provider      |-----------|               |
         +-----+--------+           +---------------+
               |     |Results Reporting|
               |     |Function         |
               |     +------------^----+
               |                  |
         +-----v--------+    +----+------+
         |Evaluation    |    |Reporting  |
         |Results       |    |Guidance   |
         |Consumer      |    |Data Store |
         +---+----------+    +-----------+ +-------------+
             |                             | Results     |
             +-----------------------------> Data Store  |
                                           |             |
                                           +-------------+



]]></artwork></figure>

<t>TODO - add example of / more content around interactions with endpoint, possible
communications patterns</t>

</section>
<section anchor="Acknowledgements" title="Acknowledgements">

<t>The authors would like to thank Jim Bieda, Henk Birkholz, Jessica Fitzgerald-McKay,
Trevor Freeman, Adam Montville, and David Waltermire for participating in
architecture design discussions, reviewing, and contributing to this draft.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="IANA" title="IANA Considerations">

<t>This memo includes no request to IANA.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="Security" title="Security Considerations">

<t>The SACM architecture defines three main components that interface with each
other both for management and control (in the control plane) and for the
sharing of Posture Assessment Information.  Considerations for transitivity
of trust between a Provider and Consumer can be made if there is a well understood
trust between the Provider and the Controller and between the Consumer and
Controller.  The trust must include strong mutual authentication, at minimum,
between the Provider and Controller and between the Consumer and Controller.</t>

<t>To address potential Man-in-the-Middle (MitM) attacks, it is also strongly
recommended that the communications be secured to include replay protection
and message integrity (e.g. transport integrity and if required, data integrity).
Similarly, to avoid potential message disclosure (e.g. where privacy may
be needed), confidentiality should also be provided.</t>

<t>As the Controller provides the security functions for the SACM system, the
Controller should provide strong authorizations based on either or both business
and regulatory policies to ensure that only authorized Consumers and obtaining
Posture Assessment Information from authorized Providers. It is presumed
that once authenticated and authorized, the Provider, Controller or Consumer
is deemed trustworthy; though note that it is possible that the modules or
devices hosting the SACM components may be compromised as well (e.g. due
to malware or tampering); however, addressing that level of trustworthiness
is out of scope for SACM.</t>

<t>As the data models defined through the interfaces are transport agnostic,
the Posture Assessment Information data in the interfaces may leverage the
transport security properties as the interfaces are transported between the
Provider, Consumer and Controller.  However, there may be other devices,
modules or components in the path between the Provider, Consumer and Controller
that may observe the interfaces flowing through them.</t>

</section>


  </middle>

  <back>

    <references title='Normative References'>





<reference  anchor='RFC2119' target='http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119'>
<front>
<title>Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels</title>
<author initials='S.' surname='Bradner' fullname='S. Bradner'><organization /></author>
<date year='1997' month='March' />
<abstract><t>In many standards track documents several words are used to signify the requirements in the specification.  These words are often capitalized. This document defines these words as they should be interpreted in IETF documents.  This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.</t></abstract>
</front>
<seriesInfo name='BCP' value='14'/>
<seriesInfo name='RFC' value='2119'/>
<seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC2119'/>
</reference>



<reference anchor='I-D.ietf-sacm-use-cases'>
<front>
<title>Endpoint Security Posture Assessment - Enterprise Use Cases</title>

<author initials='D' surname='Waltermire' fullname='David Waltermire'>
    <organization />
</author>

<author initials='D' surname='Harrington' fullname='David Harrington'>
    <organization />
</author>

<date month='July' day='1' year='2015' />

<abstract><t>This memo documents a sampling of use cases for securely aggregating configuration and operational data and evaluating that data to determine an organization's security posture.  From these operational use cases, we can derive common functional capabilities and requirements to guide development of vendor-neutral, interoperable standards for aggregating and evaluating data relevant to security posture.</t></abstract>

</front>

<seriesInfo name='Internet-Draft' value='draft-ietf-sacm-use-cases-10' />
<format type='TXT'
        target='http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-sacm-use-cases-10.txt' />
</reference>



<reference anchor='I-D.ietf-sacm-requirements'>
<front>
<title>Secure Automation and Continuous Monitoring (SACM) Requirements</title>

<author initials='N' surname='Cam-Winget' fullname='Nancy Cam-Winget'>
    <organization />
</author>

<author initials='L' surname='Lorenzin' fullname='Lisa Lorenzin'>
    <organization />
</author>

<date month='July' day='21' year='2015' />

<abstract><t>This document defines the scope and set of requirements for the Secure Automation and Continuous Monitoring (SACM) architecture, data model and transport protocols.  The requirements and scope are based on the agreed upon use cases.</t></abstract>

</front>

<seriesInfo name='Internet-Draft' value='draft-ietf-sacm-requirements-08' />
<format type='TXT'
        target='http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-sacm-requirements-08.txt' />
</reference>



<reference anchor='I-D.ietf-sacm-terminology'>
<front>
<title>Secure Automation and Continuous Monitoring (SACM) Terminology</title>

<author initials='H' surname='Birkholz' fullname='Henk Birkholz'>
    <organization />
</author>

<date month='July' day='6' year='2015' />

<abstract><t>This memo documents terminology used in the documents produced by SACM (Security Automation and Continuous Monitoring).</t></abstract>

</front>

<seriesInfo name='Internet-Draft' value='draft-ietf-sacm-terminology-07' />
<format type='TXT'
        target='http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-sacm-terminology-07.txt' />
</reference>




    </references>

    <references title='Informative References'>





<reference  anchor='RFC5209' target='http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5209'>
<front>
<title>Network Endpoint Assessment (NEA): Overview and Requirements</title>
<author initials='P.' surname='Sangster' fullname='P. Sangster'><organization /></author>
<author initials='H.' surname='Khosravi' fullname='H. Khosravi'><organization /></author>
<author initials='M.' surname='Mani' fullname='M. Mani'><organization /></author>
<author initials='K.' surname='Narayan' fullname='K. Narayan'><organization /></author>
<author initials='J.' surname='Tardo' fullname='J. Tardo'><organization /></author>
<date year='2008' month='June' />
<abstract><t>This document defines the problem statement, scope, and protocol requirements between the components of the NEA (Network Endpoint Assessment) reference model.  NEA provides owners of networks (e.g., an enterprise offering remote access) a mechanism to evaluate the posture of a system.  This may take place during the request for network access and/or subsequently at any time while connected to the network.  The learned posture information can then be applied to a variety of compliance-oriented decisions.  The posture information is frequently useful for detecting systems that are lacking or have out-of-date security protection mechanisms such as: anti-virus and host-based firewall software.  In order to provide context for the requirements, a reference model and terminology are introduced.  This memo provides information for the Internet community.</t></abstract>
</front>
<seriesInfo name='RFC' value='5209'/>
<seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC5209'/>
</reference>



<reference  anchor='RFC3444' target='http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3444'>
<front>
<title>On the Difference between Information Models and Data Models</title>
<author initials='A.' surname='Pras' fullname='A. Pras'><organization /></author>
<author initials='J.' surname='Schoenwaelder' fullname='J. Schoenwaelder'><organization /></author>
<date year='2003' month='January' />
<abstract><t>There has been ongoing confusion about the differences between Information Models and Data Models for defining managed objects in network management.  This document explains the differences between these terms by analyzing how existing network management model specifications (from the IETF and other bodies such as the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) or the Distributed Management Task Force (DMTF)) fit into the universe of Information Models and Data Models. This memo documents the main results of the 8th workshop of the Network Management Research Group (NMRG) of the Internet Research Task Force (IRTF) hosted by the University of Texas at Austin.  This memo provides information for the Internet community.</t></abstract>
</front>
<seriesInfo name='RFC' value='3444'/>
<seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC3444'/>
</reference>




    </references>



  </back>
</rfc>

