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BS EN IEC 62351-4:2018:2019 Edition

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Power systems management and associated information exchange. Data and communications security – Profiles including MMS and derivatives

Published By Publication Date Number of Pages
BSI 2019 116
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IEC 62351:2018(E) specifies security requirements both at the transport layer and at the application layer. While IEC TS 62351-4:2007 primarily provided some limited support at the application layer for authentication during handshake for the Manufacturing Message Specification (MMS) based applications, this document provides support for extended integrity and authentication both for the handshake phase and for the data transfer phase. It provides for shared key management and data transfer encryption at the application layer and it provides security end-to-end (E2E) with zero or more intermediate entities. While IEC TS 62351-4:2007 only provides support for systems based on the MMS, i.e. systems using an Open Systems Interworking (OSI) protocol stack, this document provides support for application protocols using other protocol stacks, e.g. an Internet protocol suite. This support is extended to protect application protocols using XML encoding. This extended security at the application layer is referred to as E2E-security. In addition to E2E security, this part of IEC 62351 also provides mapping to environmental protocols carrying the security related information. Only OSI and XMPP environments are currently considered

PDF Catalog

PDF Pages PDF Title
2 undefined
5 Annex ZA(normative)Normative references to international publicationswith their corresponding European publications
7 CONTENTS
13 FOREWORD
15 1 Scope
1.1 General
16 1.2 Code components
2 Normative references
17 3 Terms, definitions and abbreviated terms
3.1 General
18 3.2 Terms and definitions
21 3.3 Abbreviated terms
22 4 Security issues addressed by this part of IEC 62351
4.1 Communications reference models
23 4.2 Security for application and transport profiles
Figures
Figure 1 – Application and transport profiles (informative)
24 4.3 Compatibility and native modes
4.4 Security threats countered
4.4.1 General
Tables
Table 1 – Relationship between security andsecurity measure combinations
25 4.4.2 Threats countered in compatibility mode
4.4.3 Threats countered in native mode
4.5 Attack methods countered
4.5.1 General
4.5.2 Attacks countered in compatibility mode
4.5.3 Attacks countered in native mode
26 4.6 Logging
5 Specific requirements
5.1 Specific requirements for ICCP/IEC 60870-6-x communication stack
27 5.2 Specific requirements for IEC 61850
6 Transport Security
6.1 General
6.2 Application of transport layer security (TLS)
6.2.1 General
28 6.2.2 The TLS cipher suite concept
6.2.3 TLS session resumption
6.2.4 TLS session renegotiation
6.2.5 Supported number of trust anchors
6.2.6 Public-key certificate size
6.2.7 Evaluation period for revocation state of public-key certificates
29 6.2.8 Public-key certificate validation
6.2.9 Security events handling
6.3 T-security in an OSI operational environment
6.3.1 General
6.3.2 TCP ports
Figure 2 – T-profiles without and with TLS protection
30 6.3.3 Disabling of TLS
6.3.4 TLS cipher suites support
Table 2 – Commented recommended cipher suites from IEC TS 62351-4:2007
31 6.4 T-security in an XMPP operational environment
7 Application layer security overview (informative)
7.1 General
Table 3 – Cipher suites combinations in the context of this document
32 7.2 Description techniques
7.2.1 General
7.2.2 ASN.1 as an XML schema definition
33 7.2.3 W3C XML Schema Definition (W3C XSD)
7.2.4 XML namespace
8 Use of cryptographic algorithms
8.1 General
8.2 Basic cryptographic definitions
34 8.3 Public-key algorithms
35 8.4 Hash algorithms
8.5 Signature algorithms
8.6 Symmetric encryption algorithms used for encryption only
36 8.7 Authenticated encryption algorithms
8.8 Integrity check value algorithms
37 9 Object identifier allocation (normative)
10 General OSI upper layer requirements (normative)
10.1 Overview
38 10.2 General on OSI upper layer requirements
10.3 Session protocol requirements
Figure 3 – Association establishment
39 10.4 Presentation protocol requirements
10.4.1 Context list
10.4.2 Abstract syntaxes
10.4.3 Presentation user data
40 10.4.4 ASN.1 encoding requirements
Figure 4 – Inclusion of User-data in SESSION DATA TRANFER SPDU
41 10.5 Association control service element (ACSE) protocol requirements
10.5.1 General
10.5.2 Protocol version
10.5.3 Titles
10.5.4 Use of ASN.1 EXTERNAL data type
42 11 A-security-profile (normative)
11.1 OSI requirements specific to A-security profile
11.1.1 General
11.1.2 Additional session protocol requirements
11.1.3 Additional presentation protocol requirement
11.1.4 Additional ACSE requirements
44 11.2 MMS Authentication value
11.2.1 General
11.2.2 MMS-Authentication value data type
45 11.2.3 Handling of the association request (AARQ-apdu)
11.2.4 Handling of the association result (AARE-apdu)
46 12 End-to-end application security model
12.1 Introduction and general architecture
Figure 5 – E2E security building blocks
Figure 6 – Relationship between environment, E2E-security and protected protocol
47 12.2 Abstract syntax specifications
12.2.1 General
Figure 7 – Relationships between APDUs
Figure 8 – The scope of E2E-security specification
48 13 End-to-end application security (normative)
13.1 Association management
13.1.1 General concept
13.1.2 UTC time specification
13.1.3 Handshake request
49 13.1.4 Handshake accept
50 13.1.5 Association reject by the protected protocol
13.1.6 Association reject due to security issues
51 13.1.7 Handshake security abort
13.1.8 Data transfer security abort
13.1.9 Abort by protected protocol
52 13.1.10 Association release request
13.1.11 Association release response
13.2 Data transfer phase
13.2.1 General
53 13.2.2 Clear data transfer
13.2.3 Encrypted data transfer
54 13.3 ClearToken data types
13.3.1 The ClearToken1 data type
58 13.3.2 The ClearToken2 data type
59 13.3.3 The ClearToken3 data type
60 13.4 Authentication and integrity specifications
13.4.1 The Signature data type
13.4.2 The authenticator data type
61 14 E2E security error handling (normative)
14.1 General
14.2 Specification of diagnostics
14.2.1 Handshake diagnostics
62 14.2.2 The data transfer diagnostics
63 14.3 Checking of E2E-security handshake request and accept
14.3.1 General
14.3.2 Signature checking
64 14.3.3 Protected protocol identity checking
14.3.4 ClearToken1 checking
65 14.4 Checking of security protocol control information during data transfer
14.4.1 General
14.4.2 Authenticator checking
14.4.3 Checks of the ClearToken2 value
66 15 E2E security used in an OSI operational environment
15.1 General
15.2 Additional upper layer requirements
15.2.1 Additional presentation layer requirements
15.2.2 Additional ACSE requirements
67 15.3 Association management in an OSI operational environment
15.3.1 General
15.3.2 Mapping to ACSE association request
15.3.3 Mapping to ACSE association response
Table 4 – Mapping of SecPDUs to ACSE APDUs
68 15.3.4 Mapping to ACSE abort
69 15.3.5 Mapping to ACSE release request
15.3.6 Mapping to ACSE release response
15.4 Data transfer in OSI operational environment
15.4.1 General
15.4.2 Mapping of the clear data transfer SecPDU
70 15.4.3 Mapping of the encrypted data transfer SecPDU
15.5 OSI upper layer routing
Figure 9 – Upper layer routing
71 15.6 OSI operational environment checking
15.6.1 General checking
15.6.2 Environment mapping checking
72 15.6.3 OSI operational environment diagnostics
16 E2E security used in in an XMPP operational environment
16.1 General on wrapping to an XMPP operational environment
73 16.2 Mapping of SecPDUs to iq stanzas
Table 5 – Mapping of SecPDUs to XMPP stanzas
74 16.3 Mapping of SecPDUs to message stanzas
16.4 XMPP stanza error handling
75 16.5 XML namespaces
16.6 Encoding of EnvPDUs within XMPP stanzas
76 16.7 Multiple associations
16.8 Release collision consideration
17 Conformance to this document
17.1 General
17.2 Notation
17.3 Conformance to operational environment
77 17.4 Conformance to modes of operation
17.5 Conformance to compatibility mode
Table 6 – Conformance to operational environment
Table 7 – Conformance to modes of operation
Table 8 – Conformance to compatibility mode
78 17.6 Conformance to native mode
Table 9 – Conformance to TLS cipher suites in compatibility mode
Table 10 – Conformance to native mode
Table 11 – Conformance to mode of encryption
79 Table 12 – Conformance to TLS cipher suites in native mode
Table 13 – Conformance to cryptographic algorithms for E2E-security
80 Annex A (normative)Formal ASN.1 specification for the A-security-profile
81 Annex B (normative)Formal ASN.1 specification for the End-to-End security
87 Annex C (normative)Formal W3C XSD specification for the end-to-end security
94 Annex D (normative)ASN.1 module for OSI operational environment
D.1 Scope of annex
D.2 ASN.1 module
96 Annex E (normative)ASN.1 modules and W3C XSDs for an XMPP operational environment
E.1 Scope of Annex
E.2 ASN.1 modules for the XMPP operational environment
E.2.1 ASN.1 module for the urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas XML namespace
E.2.2 ASN.1 module for the http://www.iec.ch/62351/2018/ENV_4 XML namespace
98 E.3 W3C XSDs for the XMPP operational environment
E.3.1 W3C XSD for the urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas XML namespace
99 E.3.2 W3C XSD for the http://www.iec.ch/62351/2018/ENV_4 XML namespace
101 Annex F (normative)Template for virtual API specifications
F.1 General
Figure F.1 – Virtual API concept
102 F.2 ASN.1 virtual API specification
F.3 W3C XSD virtual API specification
103 Annex G (normative)End-entity public-key certificate specification
G.1 Scope of annex
G.2 General requirement
G.3 Length considerations
G.4 Basic Structure requirement and recommendations
G.4.1 Version component
G.4.2 Serial number component
G.4.3 Issuer signature algorithm component
104 G.4.4 Issuer component
G.4.5 Validity component
G.4.6 Subject component
G.4.7 Subject public key Information component
105 G.4.8 Issuer unique ID and subject unique ID components
G.5 Extensions
G.5.1 General
G.5.2 Key usage extension
G.5.3 Revocation checking
106 G.5.4 IEC user role information extension
G.6 Specific requirements for operational environments
G.6.1 General
G.6.2 OSI operational environment
G.6.3 XMPP operational environment
107 Annex H (normative)Lower layer requirements for the OSI operational environment
H.1 Scope of annex
H.2 Transport protocol class 0
H.2.1 Enforcement of maximum lengths
H.2.2 Response to Class 0 unsupported TPDUs
H.2.3 Transport selectors
Table H.1 – TP class 0 maximum sizes
108 H.3 IETF RFC 1006
H.3.1 General
H.3.2 Version number
H.3.3 Length
H.3.4 Keep-alive
109 Annex I (informative)ASN.1 definition of ACSE
113 Bibliography
BS EN IEC 62351-4:2018
$227.44