Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 NSS Cryptographic Module version rhel7.20190606 FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy Document Version 1.3 Last Update: 2021-03-23 © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy Table of Contents 1. Cryptographic Module Specification...................................................................................................................3 1.1. Description of the Module...........................................................................................................................3 1.2. Description of the Approved Modes............................................................................................................3 1.3. Cryptographic Boundary.............................................................................................................................7 1.3.1. Hardware Block Diagram....................................................................................................................8 1.3.2. Software Block Diagram.....................................................................................................................9 2. Cryptographic Module Ports and Interfaces......................................................................................................10 2.1. PKCS #11.................................................................................................................................................10 2.2. Inhibition of Data Output...........................................................................................................................10 2.3. Disconnecting the Output Data Path from the Key Processes..................................................................11 3. Roles, Services and Authentication..................................................................................................................12 3.1. Roles........................................................................................................................................................ 12 3.2. Role Assumption.......................................................................................................................................12 3.3. Strength of Authentication Mechanism.....................................................................................................12 3.4. Multiple Concurrent Operators..................................................................................................................13 3.5. Services.................................................................................................................................................... 13 3.5.1. Calling Convention of API Functions.................................................................................................13 3.5.2. API Functions....................................................................................................................................13 4. Physical Security..............................................................................................................................................22 5. Operational Environment..................................................................................................................................23 5.1 Applicability................................................................................................................................................23 5.2 Policy......................................................................................................................................................... 23 6. Cryptographic Key Management......................................................................................................................24 6.1. Random Number Generation....................................................................................................................26 6.2. Key/CSP Storage......................................................................................................................................26 6.3. Key/CSP Zeroization.................................................................................................................................26 7. Electromagnetic Interference/Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMI/EMC).........................................................28 7.1 Statement of compliance...........................................................................................................................28 8. Self-Tests.......................................................................................................................................................... 29 8.1. Power-Up Tests........................................................................................................................................29 8.2. Conditional Tests......................................................................................................................................29 9. Guidance.......................................................................................................................................................... 31 9.1. Crypto Officer Guidance...........................................................................................................................31 9.1.1. Access to Audit Data.........................................................................................................................31 9.2. User Guidance.......................................................................................................................................... 32 9.2.1. TLS Operations.................................................................................................................................33 9.2.2. RSA and DSA Keys..........................................................................................................................33 9.2.3. Triple-DES Keys...............................................................................................................................33 9.2.4. Key derivation using SP800-132 PBKDF..........................................................................................33 9.3. Handling Self-Test Errors..........................................................................................................................33 10. Mitigation of Other Attacks..............................................................................................................................35 11. Glossary and Abbreviations............................................................................................................................36 12. References..................................................................................................................................................... 37 © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 2 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy 1. Cryptographic Module Specification This document is the non-proprietary security policy for the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 NSS Cryptographic Module, and was prepared as part of the requirements for conformance to Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) 140-2, Security Level 1. 1.1. Description of the Module The Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 NSS Cryptographic Module version rhel7.20190606 (hereafter referred to as the “Module”) is a software library supporting FIPS 140-2 approved cryptographic algorithms. For the purposes of the FIPS 140-2 validation, its embodiment type is defined as multi- chip standalone. The Module is an open-source, general-purpose cryptographic library, with an API based on the industry standard PKCS #11 version 2.20. It combines a vertical stack of Linux components intended to limit the external interface each separate component may provide. The Module is FIPS 140-2 validated at overall Security Level 1 with levels for individual sections shown in the table below: Security Component FIPS 140-2 Security Level Cryptographic Module Specification 1 Cryptographic Module Ports and Interfaces 1 Roles, Services and Authentication 2 Finite State Model 1 Physical Security N/A Operational Environment 1 Cryptographic Key Management 1 EMI/EMC 1 Self-Tests 1 Design Assurance 2 Mitigation of Other Attacks 1 Table 1: Security Level of the Module The Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 NSS Cryptographic Module has been tested on the following platforms: Hardware Platform Processor Operating System Tested With AES-NI Without AES-NI Dell PowerEdge R630 Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5 Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Yes Yes Table 2: Tested Platforms 1.2. Description of the Approved Modes The Module supports two modes of operation: FIPS Approved mode and non-Approved mode. © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 3 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy When the Module is powered on, the power-up self-tests are executed automatically without any operator intervention. If the power-up self-tests complete successfully, the Module will be in FIPS Approved mode. The table below lists the Approved algorithms in FIPS Approved mode: Usage Approved Algorithm Keys/CSPs CAVS Certificate Encryption and decryption AES encryption and decryption with ECB and CBC AES 128, 192 and 256 bits keys. Certs. #C1387, #C1388, #C1420, #C1421 AES encryption with CTR Three-key Triple-DES encryption and decryption with ECB, CBC and CTR modes Three-key Triple-DES 168 bits keys Certs. #C1387, #C1420 Signature generation and verification DSA signature generation L=3072, N=256 (with SHA- 224, SHA-256 L=2048, N=256 (with SHA- 224, SHA-256 L=2048, N=224 (with SHA- 224, SHA-256 Certs. #C1387, #C1420 DSA signature verification L=3072, N=256 (with SHA- 1, SHA-224, SHA-256, SHA- 384, SHA-512) L=2048, N=256 (with SHA- 1, SHA-224, SHA-256, SHA- 384, SHA-512) L=2048, N=224 (with SHA- 1, SHA-224, SHA-256, SHA- 384, SHA-512) L=1024, N=160 (with SHA- 1, SHA-224, SHA-256, SHA- 384, SHA-512) ECDSA signature generation ECDSA keys based on P- 256, P-384 and P-521 curves (with SHA-224, SHA- 256, SHA-384, SHA-512) Certs. #C1387, #C1420 ECDSA signature verification ECDSA keys based on P- 256, P-384 and P-521 curves (with SHA-1, SHA- 224, SHA-256, SHA-384, SHA-512) Certs. #C1387, #C1420 © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 4 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy Usage Approved Algorithm Keys/CSPs CAVS Certificate RSA PKCS#1 v1.5 signature generation RSA 2048 and 3072 bits keys (with SHA-224, SHA- 256, SHA-384, SHA-512) Certs. #C1387, #C1420 RSA PKCS#1 v1.5 signature verification RSA 1024, 2048 and 3072 bits keys (with SHA-1, SHA- 224, SHA-256, SHA-384, SHA-512) Message digest SHA-1, SHA-224, SHA-256, SHA-384 and SHA-512 N/A Certs. #C1387, #C1420 HMAC with SHA-1, SHA-224, SHA-256, SHA-384 and SHA- 512 At least 112 bits HMAC keys Certs. #C1387, #C1420 Random number generation NIST SP800-90A Hash_DRBG with SHA-256 Entropy input string, seed, V and C values Certs. #C1387, #C1420 Key management RSA key pair generation RSA 2048 and 3072 bits keys Certs. #C1387, #C1420 DSA key pair generation DSA 2048 and 3072 bits keys Certs. #C1387, #C1420 ECDSA key pair generation and public key verification ECDSA keys based on P- 256, P-384 and P-521 curves Certs. #C1387, #C1420 NIST SP800-135 key derivation in TLS v1.0, TLS v1.1 and TLS v1.2 TLS pre-master secret and master secret CVL Certs. #C1387, #C1420 KAS FCC Shared Secret Computation DH 2048-bit key with SHA- 224 and SHA-256 CVL Certs. #C1387, #C1420 KAS ECC ECDH key based on P-256, P-384 and P-521 Key derivation SP800-132 PBKDF PBKDF password PBKDF derived key (Vendor Affirmed) Key generation SP800-133 Cryptographic Key Generation (CKG) AES key Triple-DES key HMAC key RSA key pair DSA key pair ECDSA key pair ECDH key pair DH key pair (vendor affirmed) Table 3: Approved Algorithms in FIPS Approved mode © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 5 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy Note: The TLS protocol has not been reviewed or tested by the CAVP and CMVP. The PBKDF is vendor affirmed because it does not have a Known Answer Test defined. It is CAVP tested and has Cert. #A132. Note: There are algorithms, modes, and keys that have been CAVP tested but not used by the module in FIPS apprpved mode. Only the algorithms, modes/methods, and key lengths/curves/moduli shown in tables 3 and 4 are used by the module in FIPS approved mode. Table 4 lists the non-Approved but allowed algorithms in FIPS Approved mode: Usage non-Approved but allowed Algorithm Keys/CSPs Note Key Management RSA key wrapping (encrypt, decrypt) RSA keys (>= 2048 up to 15360 bits or more) Not compliant with NIST SP 800-56B, but allowed in FIPS mode according to IG D.9 Diffie-Hellman key agreement (CVL Certs. #C1387, #C1420) Diffie-Hellman public and private components with size between 2048 bits and 15360 bits Not validated by CAVP, but allowed in FIPS mode according to IG D.8 EC Diffie-Hellman key agreement (CVL Certs. #C1387, #C1420) EC Diffie-Hellman public and private components based on P-256, P-384 and P-521 curves Not validated by CAVP, but allowed in FIPS mode according to IG D.8 Random number generation NDRNG N/A getrandom() is used to seed the module’s SP 800- 90A DRBG Table 4: non-Approved but Allowed Algorithms in FIPS Approved mode Notes: 1. RSA (key wrapping; key establishment methodology provides between 112 and 256 bits of encryption strength; non-compliant less than 112 bits of encryption strength) 2. Diffie-Hellman (key agreement; key establishment methodology provides between 112 and 256 bits of encryption strength; non-compliant less than 112 bits of encryption strength) 3. EC Diffie-Hellman (key agreement; key establishment methodology provides between 128 and 256 bits of encryption strength) Caveat: The module generates keys whose strengths are modified by available entropy. Table 5 lists the non-Approved algorithms, which invocation will result the Module operating in non- Approved mode implicitly. Usage non-Approved Algorithm Encryption and AES KW, KWP, CTS and GCM/GMAC1 (Certs. #C1387, #C1388, #C1420, #C1421). 1 GCM is not in compliant with IG A.5. © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 6 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy Usage non-Approved Algorithm decryption Camellia Chacha20/Poly 1305 AEAD DES RC2 RC4 RC5 SEED Two-key Triple-DES encryption and decryption Signature generation and verification DSA signature generation with key size not equal to 2048 or 3072 bits DSA signature generation using SHA-1, SHA-384 and SHA-512 DSA signature verification with key size not equal to 1024, 2048 or 3072 bits RSA signature generation with key size not equal to 2048 or 3072 bits RSA signature generation using SHA-1 RSA signature verification with key size not equal to 1024, 2048 or 3072 bits RSASSA-PSS signature generation and verification Key Derivation PBKDF (non-compliant with SP800-132) Message digest MD2 MD5 Key management DSA domain parameter generation (not validated by CAVP); DSA domain parameter verification with key size not equal to 1024, 2048 or 3072 bits; DSA key pair generation with key size not equal to 2048 and 3072 bits RSA key pair generation for key sizes not listed in Table 3 AES/Triple-DES non-SP 800-38F compliant key wrapping Diffie-Hellman key agreement with key size less than 2048 bits RSA key wrapping (encrypt, decrypt) with key size less than 2048 bits J-PAKE key agreement Key derivation SP800-135 key derivation (IKE v1 and v2) Table 5: non-Approved Algorithms 1.3. Cryptographic Boundary The Module's physical boundary is the surface of the case of the platform (depicted in Figure 1). The Module's logical cryptographic boundary consists of the shared library files and their integrity check signature files, which are delivered through Red Hat Package Manager (RPM) as listed below: • nss-softokn RPM file with version 3.44.0-5.el7, which contains the following files: ◦ /usr/lib64/libnssdbm3.chk (64 bits) ◦ /usr/lib64/libnssdbm3.so (64 bits) ◦ /usr/lib64/libsoftokn3.chk (64 bits) © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 7 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy ◦ /usr/lib64/libsoftokn3.so (64 bits) ◦ /usr/lib/libnssdbm3.chk (32 bits) ◦ /usr/lib/libnssdbm3.so (32 bits) ◦ /usr/lib/libsoftokn3.chk (32 bits) ◦ /usr/lib/libsoftokn3.so (32 bits) • nss-softokn-freebl RPM with version 3.44.0-5.el7, which contains the following files: ◦ /lib64/libfreeblpriv3.chk (64 bits) ◦ /lib64/libfreeblpriv3.so (64 bits) ◦ /lib/libfreeblpriv3.chk (32 bits) ◦ /lib/libfreeblpriv3.so (32 bits) 1.3.1. Hardware Block Diagram Figure 1: Hardware Block Diagram © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 8 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy 1.3.2. Software Block Diagram The NSS cryptographic module implements the PKCS #11 (Cryptoki) API. The API itself defines the logical cryptographic boundary, thus all implementation is inside the boundary. The diagram below shows the relationship of the layers. Figure 2: Software Block Diagram © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 9 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy 2. Cryptographic Module Ports and Interfaces As a software-only module, the Module does not have physical ports. For the purpose of FIPS 140-2 validation, the physical ports of the Module are interpreted to be the physical ports of the hardware platform on which it runs. The logical interface is a C-language Application Program Interface (API) following the PKCS #11 specification, the database files in kernel file system, the environment variables and configuration file. Table 6 Summarizes the four logical interfaces. FIPS 140-2 Interface Logical Interface Data Input API input parameters and database files in kernel file system Data Output API output parameters and database files in kernel file system Control Input API function calls, environment variables and configuration file (/proc/sys/crypto/fips_enabled) Status Output API return codes and status parameters Table 6: Ports and Interfaces The Module uses different function arguments for input and output to distinguish between data input, control input, data output, and status output, to disconnect the logical paths followed by data/control entering the module and data/status exiting the module. The Module doesn't use the same buffer for input and output. After the Module is done with an input buffer that holds security- related information, it always zeroizes the buffer so that if the memory is later reused as an output buffer, no sensitive information can be inadvertently leaked. 2.1. PKCS #11 The logical interfaces of the Module consist of the PKCS #11 (Cryptoki) API. The API itself defines the Module's logical boundary, i.e. all access to the Module is through this API. The functions in the PKCS #11 API are listed in Table 7. 2.2. Inhibition of Data Output All data output via the data output interface is inhibited when the NSS cryptographic module is performing self-tests or in the Error state. • During self-tests: All data output via the data output interface is inhibited while self-tests are executed. • In Error state: The Boolean state variable sftk_fatalError tracks whether the NSS cryptographic module is in the Error state. Most PKCS #11 functions, including all the functions that output data via the data output interface, check the sftk_fatalError state variable and, if it is true, return the CKR_DEVICE_ERROR error code immediately. Only the functions that shut down and restart the module, reinitialize the module, or output status information can be invoked in the Error state. These functions are FC_GetFunctionList, FC_Initialize, FC_Finalize, FC_GetInfo, FC_GetSlotList, FC_GetSlotInfo, FC_GetTokenInfo, FC_InitToken, FC_CloseSession, FC_CloseAllSessions, and FC_WaitForSlotEvent. © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 10 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy 2.3. Disconnecting the Output Data Path from the Key Processes During key generation and key zeroization, the Module may perform audit logging, but the audit records do not contain sensitive information. The Module does not return the function output arguments until the key generation or key zeroization is finished. Therefore, the logical paths used by output data exiting the module are logically disconnected from the processes/threads performing key generation and key zeroization. © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 11 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy 3. Roles, Services and Authentication This section defines the roles, services, and authentication mechanisms and methods with respect to the applicable FIPS 140-2 requirements. 3.1. Roles The Module implements a Crypto Officer (CO) role and a User role: • The CO role is supported for the installation and initialization of the module. Also, the CO role can access other general-purpose services (such as message digest and random number generation services) and status services of the Module. The CO does not have access to any service that utilizes the secret or private keys of the Module. The CO must control the access to the Module both before and after installation, including management of physical access to the computer, executing the Module code as well as management of the security facilities provided by the operating system. • The User role has access to all cryptographically secure services which use the secret or private keys of the Module. It is also responsible for the retrieval, updating and deletion of keys from the private key database. 3.2. Role Assumption The CO role is implicitly assumed by an operator while installing the Module by following the instructions in Section 9.1 and while performing other CO services on the Module. The Module implements a password-based authentication for the User role (role-based authentication). To perform any security services under the User role, an operator must log into the Module and complete an authentication procedure using the password information unique to the User role operator. The password is passed to the Module via the API function as an input argument and won't be displayed. The return value of the function is the only feedback mechanism, which does not provide any information that could be used to guess or determine the User's password. The password is initialized by the CO role as part of module initialization and can be changed by the User role operator. If a User-role service is called before the operator is authenticated, it returns the CKR_USER_NOT_LOGGED_IN error code. The operator must call the FC_Login function to provide the required authentication. Once a password has been established for the Module, the user is allowed to use the security services if and only if the user is successfully authenticated to the Module. Password establishment and authentication are required for the operation of the Module. When the Module is powered off, the result of previous authentication will be cleared and the user needs to be re-authenticated. 3.3. Strength of Authentication Mechanism The Module imposes the following requirements on the password. These requirements are enforced by the module on password initialization or change. • The password must be at least seven characters long. • The password must consist of characters from three or more character classes. We define five character classes: digits (0-9), ASCII lowercase letters (a-z), ASCII uppercase letters (A- Z), ASCII non-alphanumeric characters (space and other ASCII special characters such as '$', '!'), and non-ASCII characters (Latin characters such as 'é', 'ß'; Greek characters such as 'Ω', 'θ'; other non-ASCII special characters such as '¿'). If an ASCII uppercase letter is the © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 12 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy first character of the password, the uppercase letter is not counted toward its character class. Similarly, if a digit is the last character of the password, the digit is not counted toward its character class. To estimate the maximum probability that a random guess of the password will succeed, we assume that: • The characters of the password are independent with each other. • The password contains the smallest combination of the character classes, which is five digits, one ASCII lowercase letter and one ASCII uppercase letter. The probability to guess every character successfully is (1/10)^5 * (1/26) * (1/26) = 1/67,600,000. Since the password can contain seven characters from any three or more of the aforementioned five character classes, the probability that a random guess of the password will succeed is less than or equals to 1/67,600,000, which is smaller than the required threshold 1/1,000,000. After each failed authentication attempt, the NSS cryptographic module inserts a one-second delay before returning to the caller, allowing at most 60 authentication attempts during a one-minute period. Therefore, the probability of a successful random guess of the password during a one- minute period is less than or equals to 60 * 1/67,600,000 = 0.089 * (1/100,000), which is smaller than the required threshold 1/100,000. 3.4. Multiple Concurrent Operators The Module doesn't allow concurrent operators. • On a multi-user operating system, this is enforced by making the NSS certificate and private key databases readable and writable by the owner of the files only. Note: FIPS 140-2 Implementation Guidance Section 6.1 clarifies the use of a cryptographic module on a server. When a cryptographic module is implemented in a server environment, the server application is the user of the cryptographic module. The server application makes the calls to the cryptographic module. Therefore, the server application is the single user of the cryptographic module, even when the server application is serving multiple clients. 3.5. Services 3.5.1. Calling Convention of API Functions The Module has a set of API functions denoted by FC_xxx. All the API functions are listed in Table 7. Among the module's API functions, only FC_GetFunctionList is exported and therefore callable by its name. All the other API functions must be called via the function pointers returned by FC_GetFunctionList. It returns a CK_FUNCTION_LIST structure containing function pointers named C_xxx such as C_Initialize and C_Finalize. The C_xxx function pointers in the CK_FUNCTION_LIST structure returned by FC_GetFunctionList point to the FC_xxx functions. The following convention is used to describe API function calls. Here FC_Initialize is used as examples: • When “call FC_Initialize” is mentioned, the technical equivalent of “call the FC_Initialize function via the C_Initialize function pointer in the CK_FUNCTION_LIST structure returned by FC_GetFunctionList” is implied. 3.5.2. API Functions The Module supports Crypto-Officer services which require no operator authentication, and User © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 13 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy services which require operator authentication. Crypto-Officer services do not require access to the secret and private keys and other CSPs associated with the user. The message digesting services are available to Crypto-Officer only when CSPs are not accessed. User services which access CSPs (e.g., FC_GenerateKey, FC_GenerateKeyPair) require operator authentication. Table 7 lists all the services available in FIPS Approved mode with the role type, API function, description, Keys/CSPs and access type. Access types R, W and Z stand for Read, Write, and Zeroize, respectively. Role types U and CO correspond to User role and Crypto Officer role, respectively. Please refer to Table 3and Table 4 for the Approved or allowed cryptographic algorithms supported by the Module. Note: The message digesting functions (except FC_DigestKey) that do not use any keys of the Module can be accessed by the Crypto-Officer role and do not require authentication to the Module. The FC_DigestKey API function computes the message digest (hash) of the value of a secret key, so it is available only to the User role. Service Role Function Description Keys/CSPs Access Get the function list CO FC_GetFunctionList Return a pointer to the list of function pointers for the operational mode none - Module initialization CO FC_InitToken Initialize or re-initialize a token User password and all keys Z CO FC_InitPIN Initialize the user's password, i.e., set the user's initial password User password W General Purpose CO FC_Initialize Initialize the module library none - CO FC_Finalize Finalize (shut down) the module library All keys Z CO FC_GetInfo Obtain general information about the module library none - Slot and token management CO FC_GetSlotList Obtain a list of slots in the system none - CO FC_GetSlotInfo Obtain information about a particular slot none - CO FC_GetTokenInfo Obtain information about the token (This function provides the Show Status service) none - CO FC_GetMechanismList Obtain a list of mechanisms (cryptographic algorithms) supported by a token none - CO FC_GetMechanismInfo Obtain information none - © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 14 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy Service Role Function Description Keys/CSPs Access about a particular mechanism U FC_SetPIN Change the user's password User password RW Session management CO FC_OpenSession Open a connection (session) between an application and a particular token none - CO FC_CloseSession Close a session All keys for the session Z CO FC_CloseAllSessions Close all sessions with a token All keys Z CO FC_GetSessionInfo Obtain information about the session (This function provides the Show Status service) none - CO FC_GetOperationState Save the state of the cryptographic operations in a session (This function is only implemented for message digest operations) none - CO FC_SetOperationState Restore the state of the cryptographic operations in a session (This function is only implemented for message digest operations) none - U FC_Login Log into a token User password R U FC_Logout Log out from a token none - Object management U FC_CreateObject Create a new object key W U FC_CopyObject Create a copy of an object Original key R New key W U FC_DestroyObject Destroy an object key Z U FC_GetObjectSize Obtain the size of an object in bytes key R U FC_GetAttributeValue Obtain an attribute value of an object key R U FC_SetAttributeValue Modify an attribute value of an object key W © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 15 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy Service Role Function Description Keys/CSPs Access U FC_FindObjectsInit Initialize an object search operation none - U FC_FindObjects Continue an object search operation Keys matching the search criteria R U FC_FindObjectsFinal Finish an object search operation none - Encryption and decryption U FC_EncryptInit Initialize an encryption operation AES/Triple-DES key R U FC_Encrypt Encrypt single-part data AES/Triple-DES key R U FC_EncryptUpdate Continue a multiple-part encryption operation AES/Triple-DES key R U FC_EncryptFinal Finish a multiple-part encryption operation AES/Triple-DES key R U FC_DecryptInit Initialize a decryption operation AES/Triple-DES key R U FC_Decrypt Decrypt single-part encrypted data AES/Triple-DES key R U FC_DecryptUpdate Continue a multiple-part decryption operation AES/Triple-DES key R U FC_DecryptFinal Finish a multiple-part decryption operation AES/Triple-DES key R Message digest CO FC_DigestInit Initialize a message- digesting operation none - CO FC_Digest Digest single-part data none - CO FC_DigestUpdate Continue a multiple-part digesting operation none - U FC_DigestKey Continue a multiple-part message-digesting operation by digesting the value of a secret key as part of the data already digested HMAC key R CO FC_DigestFinal Finish a multiple-part digesting operation none - Signature generation and verification U FC_SignInit Initialize a signature operation DSA/ECDSA/RSA private key, HMAC key R U FC_Sign Sign single-part data DSA/ECDSA/RSA private key, HMAC key R © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 16 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy Service Role Function Description Keys/CSPs Access U FC_SignUpdate Continue a multiple-part signature operation DSA/ECDSA/RSA private key, HMAC key R U FC_SignFinal Finish a multiple-part signature operation DSA/ECDSA/RSA private key, HMAC key R U FC_SignRecoverInit Initialize a signature operation, where the data can be recovered from the signature DSA/ECDSA/RSA private key R U FC_SignRecover Sign single-part data, where the data can be recovered from the signature DSA/ECDSA/RSA private key R U FC_VerifyInit Initialize a verification operation DSA/ECDSA/RSA public key, HMAC key R U FC_Verify Verify a signature on single-part data DSA/ECDSA/RSA public key, HMAC key R U FC_VerifyUpdate Continue a multiple-part verification operation DSA/ECDSA/RSA public key, HMAC key R U FC_VerifyFinal Finish a multiple-part verification operation DSA/ECDSA/RSA public key, HMAC key R U FC_VerifyRecoverInit Initialize a verification operation, where the data is recovered from the signature DSA/ECDSA/RSA public key R U FC_VerifyRecover Verify a signature on single-part data, where the data is recovered from the signature DSA/ECDSA/RSA public key R Dual-function cryptographic operations U FC_DigestEncryptUpda te Continue a multiple-part digesting and encryption operation AES/Triple-DES key R U FC_DecryptDigestUpda te Continue a multiple-part decryption and digesting operation AES/Triple-DES key R U FC_SignEncryptUpdate Continue a multiple-part signing and encryption operation DSA/ECDSA/RSA private key, HMAC key R AES/Triple-DES R © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 17 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy Service Role Function Description Keys/CSPs Access key U FC_DecryptVerifyUpda te Continue a multiple-part decryption and verify operation DSA/ECDSA/RSA public key, HMAC key R AES/Triple-DES key R Key management U FC_GenerateKey Generate a secret key (Also used by TLS to generate a pre-master secret) AES/Triple- DES/HMAC key, TLS pre-master secret W U FC_GenerateKeyPair Generate a public/private key pair (This function performs the pair-wise consistency tests) DSA/ECDSA key pair, Diffie- Hellman/EC Diffie-Hellman public and private components W U FC_WrapKey Wrap (encrypt) a key using the following mechanism: RSA encryption Wrapping key R Key to be wrapped R U FC_UnwrapKey Unwrap (decrypt) a key using the following mechanism: RSA decryptionon Unwrapping key R Unwrapped key W U FC_DeriveKey Derive a key from TLS master secret which is derived from TLS pre- master secret TLS pre-master secret R TLS master secret RW Derived key W Random number generation CO FC_SeedRandom Mix in additional seed material to the random number generator Entropy input string, seed, DRBG V and C values RW CO FC_GenerateRandom Generate random data (This function performs the continuous random number generator test) Random data, DRBG V and C values RW Parallel function management CO FC_GetFunctionStatus A legacy function, which simply returns the value 0x00000051 (function not parallel) none - CO FC_CancelFunction A legacy function, which simply returns the value none - © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 18 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy Service Role Function Description Keys/CSPs Access 0x00000051 (function not parallel) Self tests CO N/A The self tests are performed automatically when loading the module DSA 2048-bit public key for module integrity test R Show Status U N/A Via exit codes N/A N/A Zeroization U FC_DestroyObject All CSPs are automatically zeroized when freeing the cipher handle All secret or private keys and password Z CO FC_InitToken FC_Finalize FC_CloseSession FC_CloseAllSessions Table 7: Services details in FIPS Approved mode Note: 1. 'Original key' and 'New key' are the secret keys or public/private key pairs. 2. 'Wrapping key' corresponds to the secret key or public key used to wrap another key 3. 'Key to be wrapped' is the key that is wrapped by the 'wrapping key' 4. 'Unwrapping key' corresponds to the secret key or private key used to unwrap another key 5. 'Unwrapped key' is the plaintext key that has not been wrapped by a 'wrapping key' 6. 'Derived key' is the key obtained by a key derivation function which takes the 'TLS master secret' as input Table 7(A) lists all the services available in non-Approved mode with API function and the non- Approved algorithm that the function may invoke. Please note that the functions are the same as the ones listed in Table 7, but the underneath non-Approved algorithms are invoked. Please also refer to Table 5 for the non-Approved algorithms. If any service invokes the non-Approved algorithms, then the module will enter non-Approved mode implicitly. Service Function non-Approved Algorithm invoked Encryption and decryption FC_EncryptInit AES KW, KWP, CTS and GCM mode, Camellia, DES, RC2, RC4, RC5, SEED, Two-key Triple-DES FC_Encrypt FC_EncryptUpdate FC_EncryptFinal FC_DecryptInit AES CTS, GCM mode, Camellia, DES, RC2, RC4, RC5, SEED, Two-key Triple-DES FC_Decrypt FC_DecryptUpdate FC_DecryptFinal Message digest FC_DigestInit MD2, MD5 FC_Digest FC_DigestUpdate © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 19 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy Service Function non-Approved Algorithm invoked AES-GMAC FC_DigestKey FC_DigestFinal Signature generation and verification FC_SignInit DSA signature generation with non-compliant key size listed in Table 5, RSA signature generation with non-compliant key size listed in Table 5, RSASSA-PSS signature generation FC_Sign FC_SignUpdate FC_SignFinal FC_SignRecoverInit FC_SignRecover FC_VerifyInit DSA signature verification with non-compliant key size listed in Table 5, RSA signature verification with non-compliant key size listed in Table 5, RSASSA-PSS signature verification FC_Verify FC_VerifyUpdate FC_VerifyFinal FC_VerifyRecoverInit FC_VerifyRecover Dual-function cryptographic operations FC_DigestEncryptUpdate MD2, MD5, AES CTS mode, Camellia, DES, RC2, RC4, RC5, SEED, Two-key Triple-DES FC_DecryptDigestUpdate AES CTS mode, Camellia, DES, RC2, RC4, RC5, SEED, MD2, MD5, Two-key Triple-DES FC_SignEncryptUpdate DSA signature generation with non-compliant key size listed in Table 5, RSA signature generation with non-compliant key size listed in Table 5, AES CTS mode, Camellia, DES, RC2, RC4, RC5, SEED, Two-key Triple-DES FC_DecryptVerifyUpdate AES CTS mode, Camellia, DES, Two-key Triple- DES, RC2, RC4, RC5, SEED, DSA signature verification with non-compliant key size listed in Table 5, RSA signature verification with non-compliant key size listed in Table 5 Key management FC_GenerateKeyPair ECDSA key pair generation, DSA domain parameter generation, DSA domain parameter verification with non-compliant key size listed in Table 5, DSA key pair generation with non-compliant key size listed in Table 5, RSA key pair generation with non-compliant key size listed in Table 5 FC_WrapKey AES key wrapping (encrypt) based on NIST SP800-38F, Triple-DES key wrapping (encrypt) using Two-key Triple-DES, RSA key wrapping (encrypt) with non-compliant key size listed in Table 5 © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 20 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy Service Function non-Approved Algorithm invoked FC_UnwrapKey AES key wrapping (decrypt) based on NIST SP800-38F, Triple-DES key wrapping (decrypt) using Two-key Triple-DES, RSA key wrapping (decrypt) with non-compliant key size listed in Table 5 FC_DeriveKey Diffie-Hellman key agreement with non- compliant key size listed in Table 5, J-PAKE key agreement, PBKDF1 Table 7(A): Services details in non-Approved mode © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 21 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy 4. Physical Security The Module comprises of software only and thus does not claim any physical security. © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 22 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy 5. Operational Environment 5.1 Applicability The module operates in a modifiable operational environment per FIPS 140-2 level 1 specifications. The module runs on a commercially available general-purpose operating system executing on the hardware specified in section 2.2. The Red Hat Enterprise Linux operating system is used as the basis of other products which include but are not limited to: • Red Hat Enterprise Linux Atomic Host • Red Hat Virtualization (RHV) • Red Hat OpenStack Platform • OpenShift Container Platform • Red Hat Gluster Storage • Red Hat Ceph Storage • Red Hat CloudForms • Red Hat Satellite. Compliance is maintained for these products whenever the binary is found unchanged. 5.2 Policy The operating system is restricted to a single operator (concurrent operators are explicitly excluded). The application that request cryptographic services is the single user of the module, even when the application is serving multiple clients. In FIPS Approved mode, the ptrace(2) system call, the debugger (gdb(1)), and strace(1) shall be not used. © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 23 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy 6. Cryptographic Key Management The following table provides a summary of the Keys/CSPs in the Module: Keys/CSPs Generation Storage Entry/Output Zeroization AES 128, 192 and 256 bits keys Use of NIST SP800-90A DRBG Application memory or key database Encrypted through key wrapping using FC_UnwrapKey for input and FC_WrapKey for output Automatically zeroized when freeing the cipher handle Triple-DES 168 bits keys Use of NIST SP800-90A DRBG Application memory or key database Encrypted through key wrapping using FC_UnwrapKey for input and FC_WrapKey for output Automatically zeroized when freeing the cipher handle DSA 2048 and 3072 bits private keys Use of NIST SP800-90A DRBG as a seed for the 186-4 DSA key generation mechanism Application memory or key database Encrypted through key wrapping using FC_UnwrapKey for input and FC_WrapKey for output Automatically zeroized when freeing the cipher handle ECDSA private keys based on P-256, P- 384 and P-521 curves Use of NIST SP800-90A DRBG as a seed for the 186-4 ECDSA key generation mechanism Application memory or key database Encrypted through key wrapping using FC_UnwrapKey for input and FC_WrapKey for output Automatically zeroized when freeing the cipher handle RSA 2048 and 3072 bits private keys Use of NIST SP800-90A DRBG as a seed for the 186-4 RSA key generation mechanism Application memory or key database Encrypted through key wrapping using FC_UnwrapKey for input and FC_WrapKey for output Automatically zeroized when freeing the cipher handle HMAC keys with at least 112 bits Use of NIST SP800-90A DRBG Application memory or key data base Encrypted through key wrapping using Automatically zeroized when freeing the cipher © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 24 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy FC_UnwrapKey for input and FC_WrapKey for output handle DRBG entropy input string and seed Obtained from getrandom() Application memory N/A Automatically zeroized when freeing DRBG handle DRBG V and C values Derived from the entropy input string as defined in NIST SP800-90A Application memory N/A Automatically zeroized when freeing DRBG handle TLS pre-master secret Use of NIST SP800-90A DRBG in Diffie-Hellman or EC Diffie- Hellman key agreement scheme Application memory Encrypted for output using FC_WrapKey Automatically zeroized when freeing the cipher handle TLS master secret Derived from TLS pre-master secret by using key derivation Application memory Encrypted for output using FC_WrapKey Automatically zeroized when freeing the cipher handle Diffie-Hellman private components with size between 2048 bits and 15360 bits Use of NIST SP800-90A DRBG as a seed for the 186-4 DSA key generation mechanism Application memory N/A Automatically zeroized when freeing the cipher handle EC Diffie-Hellman private components based on P-256, P- 384 and P-521 curves Use of NIST SP800-90A DRBG as a seed for the 186-4 EC Diffie- Hellman key agreement scheme (same as ECDSA) Application memory N/A Automatically zeroized when freeing the cipher handle PBKDF password N/A Application memory API input parameter Automatically zeroized when freeing the cipher handle PBKDF derived key Derived using SP800-132 PBKDF mechanisms Application memory Encrypted for output using FC_WrapKey Automatically zeroized when freeing the cipher handle User Passwords N/A (supplied by the calling Application memory or API input parameter Automatically zeroized when the © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 25 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy application) key database in salted form module is re- initialized or overwritten when the user changes its password Table 8: Keys/CSPs Note: The getrandom() is an NDRNG located within the module's physical boundary but outside the logical boundary. 6.1. Random Number Generation The Module employs a NIST SP800-90 Hash_DRBG with SHA-256 as random number generator. The random number generator is seeded by obtaining random data from the operating system via getrandom(). The NDRNG provides 128 bits of entropy to seed module’s DRBG. Reseeding is performed by pulling more data from getrandom(). A product using the Module should periodically reseed the module's random number generator with unpredictable noise by calling FC_SeedRandom. After 2⁴⁸ calls to the random number generator the Module reseeds automatically. The Module performs the DRBG health testing as specified in section 11.3 of NIST SP800-90A. The Key Generation methods implemented in the module for Approved services in FIPS mode is compliant with [SP800-133]. For generating RSA, DSA and ECDSA keys the module implements asymmetric key generation services compliant with [FIPS186-4]. A seed (i.e. the random value) used in asymmetric key generation is directly obtained from the [SP800-90A] DRBG. The public and private key pairs used in the Diffie-Hellman and EC Diffie-Hellman KAS are generated internally by the module using the same DSA and ECDSA key generation compliant with [FIPS186-4] which is compliant with [SP800-56A]. The module generates symmetric key through the FC_GenerateKey() function using the random numbers from the SP 800-90A DRBG. Caveat: The module generates cryptographic keys whose strengths are modified by available entropy. 6.2. Key/CSP Storage The Module employs the cryptographic keys and CSPs in the FIPS Approved mode of operation as listed in Table 8. The module does not perform persistent storage for any keys or CSPs. Note that the private key database (provided with the files key3.db/key4.db) mentioned in Table 8 is within the Module's physical boundary but outside its logical boundary. 6.3. Key/CSP Zeroization The application that uses the Module is responsible for appropriate zeroization of the key material. The Module provides zeroization methods to clear the memory region previously occupied by a plaintext secret key, private key or password. A plaintext secret or private key gets zeroized when it is passed to a FC_DestroyObject call. All plaintext secret and private keys must be zeroized when the Module is shut down (with a FC_Finalize call), reinitialized (with a FC_InitToken call), © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 26 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy or when the session is closed (with a FC_CloseSession or FC_CloseAllSessions call). All zeroization is to be performed by storing the value 0 into every byte of the memory region that is previously occupied by a plaintext secret key, private key or password. Zeroization is performed in a time that is not sufficient to compromise plaintext secret or private keys and password. © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 27 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy 7. Electromagnetic Interference/Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMI/EMC) MARKETING NAME.......................... PowerEdge R630 REGULATORY MODEL..................... E26S REGULATORY TYPE......................... E26S001 EFFECTIVE DATE............................. September 03, 2014 EMC EMISSIONS CLASS.................. Class A 7.1 Statement of compliance This product has been determined to be compliant with the applicable standards, regulations, and directives for the countries where the product is marketed. The product is a xed with regulatory marking and text as necessary for the country/agency. Generally, Information Technology Equipment (ITE) product compliance is based on IEC and CISPR standards and their national equivalent such as Product Safety, IEC 60950-1 and European Norm EN 60950-1 or EMC, CISPR 22/CISPR 24 and EN 55022/55024. Dell products have been verified to comply with the EU RoHS Directive 2011/65/EU. Dell products do not contain any of the restricted substances in concentrations and applications not permitted by the RoHS Directive. © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 28 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy 8. Self-Tests FIPS 140-2 requires that the Module perform self-tests to ensure the integrity of the Module and the correctness of the cryptographic functionality at start up. In addition, some functions require conditional tests. All of these tests are listed and described in this section. 8.1. Power-Up Tests All the power-up self-tests are performed automatically without requiring any operator intervention. During the power-up self-tests, no cryptographic operation is available and all input or output is inhibited. Once the power-up self-tests are completed successfully, the Module enters operational mode and cryptographic operations are available. If any of the power-up self-tests fail, the Module enters the Error state. In Error state, all output is inhibited and no cryptographic operation is allowed. The Module returns the error code CKR_DEVICE_ERROR to the calling application to indicate the Error state. The Module needs to be reinitialized in order to recover from the Error state. The following table provides the lists of Known-Answer Test (KAT) and Integrity Test as the power- up self-tests: Algorithm Test AES KATs for ECB and CBC modes: encryption and decryption are tested separately Triple-DES KATs for ECB and CBC modes: encryption and decryption are tested separately DSA KAT: signature generation and verification are tested separately ECDSA KAT: signature generation and verification are tested separately RSA KAT: encryption and decryption are tested separately KAT: signature generation and verification are tested separately SHA-1, SHA-224, SHA-256, SHA-384 and SHA-512 KAT HMAC-SHA-1, HMAC-SHA-224, HMAC-SHA-256, HMAC-SHA- 384 and HMAC-SHA-512 KAT NIST SP800-90A Hash_DRBG KAT Health tests Module integrity DSA signature verification with 2048 bits key and SHA-256 Table 9: Module Self-Tests The power-up self tests can be performed on demand by reinitializing the Module. 8.2. Conditional Tests The following table provides the lists of Pairwise Consistency Test (PCT) as the conditional self- tests. If any of the conditional test fails, the Module enters the Error state. It returns the error code CKR_DEVICE_ERROR to the calling application to indicate the Error state. The Module needs to be reinitialized in order to recover from the Error state. © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 29 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy Algorithm Test DSA PCT for DSA key generation ECDSA PCT for ECDSA key generation RSA PCT for RSA key generation Table 10: Module Conditional Tests © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 30 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy 9. Guidance 9.1. Crypto Officer Guidance The version of the RPMs containing the FIPS validated Module is stated in section 1.3. The RPM packages forming the Module can be installed by standard tools recommended for the installation of RPM packages on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux system (for example, yum, rpm, and the RHN remote management tool). All RPM packages are signed with the Red Hat build key, which is an RSA 2048 bit key using SHA-256 signatures. The signature is automatically verified upon installation of the RPM package. If the signature cannot be validated, the RPM tool rejects the installation of the package. In such a case, the Crypto Officer is requested to obtain a new copy of the module's RPMs from Red Hat. In addition, to support the Module, the NSPR library must be installed that is offered by the underlying operating system. Only the cipher types listed in section 1.2 are allowed to be used. To configure the system to bring the module into the operational mode, perform the following: 1. Install the module rpm files # yum install nss-softokn # yum install nss-softokn-freebl 2. Install the dracut-fips package: # yum install dracut-fips 3. Recreate the INITRAMFS image: # dracut -f After regenerating the initramfs, the Crypto Officer has to append the following string to the kernel command line by changing the setting in the boot loader: fips=1 If /boot or /boot/efi resides on a separate partition, the kernel parameter boot= must be supplied. The partition can be identified with the command "df /boot" or "df /boot/efi" respectively. For example: $ df /boot Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on /dev/sda1 233191 30454 190296 14% /boot The partition of /boot is located on /dev/sda1 in this example. Therefore, the following string needs to be appended to the kernel command line: "boot=/dev/sda1" Reboot to apply these settings. If an application that uses the Module for its cryptography is put into a chroot environment, the Crypto Officer must ensure one of the above methods is available to the Module from within the chroot environment to ensure entry into FIPS Approved mode. Failure to do so will not allow the © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 31 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy application to properly enter FIPS Approved mode. 9.1.1. Access to Audit Data The Module may use the Unix syslog function and the audit mechanism provided by the operating system to audit events. Auditing is turned off by default. Auditing capability must be turned on as part of the initialization procedures by setting the environment variable NSS_ENABLE_AUDIT to 1. The Crypto-Officer must also configure the operating system's audit mechanism. The Module uses the syslog function to audit events, so the audit data are stored in the system log. Only the root user can modify the system log. On some platforms, only the root user can read the system log; on other platforms, all users can read the system log. The system log is usually under the /var/log directory. The exact location of the system log is specified in the /etc/syslog.conf file. The Module uses the default user facility and the info, warning, and err severity levels for its log messages. The Module can also be configured to use the audit mechanism provided by the operating system to audit events. The audit data would then be stored in the system audit log. Only the root user can read or modify the system audit log. To turn on this capability it is necessary to create a symbolic link from the library file /usr/lib/libaudit.so.0 to /usr/lib/libaudit.so.1.0.0 (on 32-bit platforms) and /usr/lib64/libaudit.so.0 to /usr/lib64/libaudit.so.1.0.0 (on 64-bit platforms). 9.2. User Guidance The Module must be operated in FIPS Approved mode to ensure that FIPS 140-2 validated cryptographic algorithms and security functions are used. The following module initialization steps must be followed by the Crypto-Officer before starting to use the NSS module: • Set the environment variable NSS_ENABLE_AUDIT to 1 before using the Module with an application. • Use the application to get the function pointer list using the API “FC_GetFunctionList”. • Use the API FC_Initialize to initialize the module and ensure that it returns CKR_OK. A return code other than CKR_OK means the Module is not initialized correctly, and in that case, the module must be reset and initialized again. • For the first login, provide a NULL password and login using the function pointer C_Login, which will in-turn call FC_Login API of the Module. This is required to set the initial NSS User password. • Now, set the initial NSS User role password using the function pointer C_InitPIN. This will call the module's API FC_InitPIN API. Then, logout using the function pointer C_Logout, which will call the module's API FC_Logout. • The NSS User role can now be assumed on the Module by logging in using the User password. And the Crypto-Officer role can be implicitly assumed by performing the Crypto- Officer services as listed in Section 3.1. The Module can be configured to use different private key database formats: key3.db or key4.db. “key3.db” format is based on the Berkeley DataBase engine and should not be used by more than one process concurrently. “key4.db” format is based on SQL DataBase engine and can be used concurrently by multiple processes. Both databases are considered outside the Module's logical boundary and all data stored in these databases is considered stored in plaintext. The interface code of the Module that accesses data stored in the database is considered part of the cryptographic boundary. Secret and private keys, plaintext passwords and other security-relevant data items are © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 32 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy maintained under the control of the cryptographic module. Secret and private keys must be passed to the calling application in encrypted (wrapped) form with FC_WrapKey and entered from calling application in encrypted form with FC_UnwrapKey. The key transport methods allowed for this purpose in FIPS Approved mode are AES, Triple-DES and RSA key wrapping using the corresponding Approved modes and key sizes. Note: If the secret and private keys passed to the calling application are encrypted using a symmetric key algorithm, the encryption key may be derived from a password. In such a case, they should be considered to be in plaintext form in the FIPS Approved mode. Automated key transport methods must use FC_WrapKey and FC_UnwrapKey to output or input secret and private keys from or to the module. All cryptographic keys used in the FIPS Approved mode of operation must be generated in the FIPS Approved mode or imported while running in the FIPS Approved mode. 9.2.1. TLS Operations The Module does not implement the TLS protocol. The Module implements the cryptographic operations, including TLS-specific key generation and derivation operations, which can be used to implement the TLS protocol. 9.2.2. RSA and DSA Keys The Module allows the use of 1024 bits RSA and DSA keys for legacy purposes including signature generation, which is disallowed to be used in FIPS Approved mode as per NIST SP800-131A. Therefore, the cryptographic operations with the non-approved key sizes will result the module operating in non-Approved mode implicitly. 9.2.3. Triple-DES Keys According to IG A.13, the same Triple-DES key shall not be used to encrypt more than 216 64-bit blocks of data. 9.2.4. Key derivation using SP800-132 PBKDF The module provides password-based key derivation (PBKDF), compliant with SP800-132. The module supports option 1a from section 5.4 of [SP800-132], in which the Master Key (MK) or a segment of it is used directly as the Data Protection Key (DPK). In accordance to [SP800-132] and IG D.6, the following requirements shall be met. • Derived keys shall only be used in storage applications. The Master Key (MK) shall not be used for other purposes. The length of the MK or DPK shall be of 112 bits or more. • A portion of the salt, with a length of at least 128 bits, shall be generated randomly using the SP800-90A DRBG, • The iteration count shall be selected as large as possible, as long as the time required to generate the key using the entered password is acceptable for the users. The minimum value shall be 1000. • Passwords or passphrases, used as an input for the PBKDF, shall not be used as cryptographic keys. • The length of the password or passphrase shall be of at least 20 characters, and shall consist of lower-case, upper-case and numeric characters. The probability of guessing the value is estimated to be 1/6220 = 10-36 , which is less than 2-112 . The calling application shall also observe the rest of the requirements and recommendations specified in [SP800-132]. © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 33 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy 9.3. Handling Self-Test Errors When the Module enters the Error state, it needs to be reinitialized to resume normal operation. Reinitialization is accomplished by restarting the module. © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 34 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy 10. Mitigation of Other Attacks The Module is designed to mitigate the following attacks. Attack Mitigation Mechanism Specific Limit Timing attacks on RSA RSA blinding Timing attack on RSA was first demonstrated by Paul Kocher in 1996 [15], who contributed the mitigation code to our module. Most recently Boneh and Brumley [16] showed that RSA blinding is an effective defense against timing attacks on RSA. None Cache-timing attacks on the modular exponentiation operation used in RSA and DSA Cache invariant modular exponentiation This is a variant of a modular exponentiation implementation that Colin Percival [17] showed to defend against cache-timing attacks This mechanism requires intimate knowledge of the cache line sizes of the processor. The mechanism may be ineffective when the module is running on a processor whose cache line sizes are unknown. Arithmetic errors in RSA signatures Double-checking RSA signatures Arithmetic errors in RSA signatures might leak the private key. Ferguson and Schneier [18] recommend that every RSA signature generation should verify the signature just generated. None © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 35 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy 11. Glossary and Abbreviations AES Advanced Encryption Specification AES-NI Intel Advanced Encryption Standard New Instructions CAVP Cryptographic Algorithm Validation Program CBC Cypher Block Chaining CSP Critical Security Parameter CTR Counter Block Chaining CVL Component Validation List DES Data Encryption Standard DRBG Deterministic Random Bit Generator DSA Digital Signature Algorithm ECB Electronic Code Book ECDSA Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm GCM Galois/Counter Mode HMAC Hash Message Authentication Code MAC Message Authentication Code NIST National Institute of Science and Technology O/S Operating System PKCS Public-Key Cryptography Standards RSA Rivest, Shamir, Addleman SHA Secure Hash Algorithm TLS Transport layer Security © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 36 of 37 Red Hat Enterprise Linux NSS Cryptographic Module FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy 12. References [1] FIPS 140-2 Standard, http://csrc.nist.gov/groups/STM/cmvp/standards.html [2] FIPS 140-2 Implementation Guidance, http://csrc.nist.gov/groups/STM/cmvp/standards.html [3] FIPS 140-2 Derived Test Requirements, http://csrc.nist.gov/groups/STM/cmvp/standards.html [4] FIPS 197 Advanced Encryption Standard, http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/PubsFIPS.html [5] FIPS 180-4 Secure Hash Standard, http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/PubsFIPS.html [6] FIPS 198-1 The Keyed-Hash Message Authentication Code (HMAC), http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/PubsFIPS.html [7] FIPS 186-4 Digital Signature Standard (DSS), http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/PubsFIPS.html [8] NIST SP 800-38A, Recommendation for Block Cipher Modes of Operation: Methods and Techniques, http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/PubsFIPS.html [9] NIST SP 800-38D, Recommendation for Block Cipher Modes of Operation: Galois/Counter Mode (GCM) and GMAC, http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/PubsFIPS.html [10] NIST SP 800-38F, Recommendation for Block Cipher Modes of Operation: Methods for Key Wrapping, http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/PubsFIPS.html [11] NIST SP 800-56A Revision 3, Recommendation for Pair-Wise Key Establishment Schemes using Discrete Logarithm Cryptography (Revised), http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/PubsFIPS.html [12] NIST SP 800-67 Revision 2, Recommendation for the Triple Data Encryption Algorithm (TDEA) Block Cipher, http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/PubsFIPS.html [13] NIST SP 800-90A Revision 1, Recommendation for Random Number Generation Using Deterministic Random Bit Generators, http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/PubsFIPS.html [14] RSA Laboratories, “PKCS #11 v2.20: Cryptographic Token Interface Standard”, 2004. [15] P. Kocher, "Timing Attacks on Implementations of Diffie-Hellman, RSA, DSS, and Other Systems", CRYPTO '96, Lecture Notes In Computer Science, Vol. 1109, pp. 104-113, Springer- Verlag, 1996. http://www.cryptography.com/timingattack/ [16] D. Boneh and D. Brumley, "Remote Timing Attacks are Practical", http://crypto.stanford.edu/~dabo/abstracts/ssl-timing.html [17] C. Percival, "Cache Missing for Fun and Profit", http://www.daemonology.net/papers/htt.pdf [18] N. Ferguson and B. Schneier, Practical Cryptography, Sec. 16.1.4 "Checking RSA Signatures", p. 286, Wiley Publishing, Inc., 2003. © 3/23/21 Red Hat(R), Inc./atsec information security. This document can be reproduced and distributed only whole and intact, including this copyright notice. 37 of 37