A structured naming
scheme to describe information technology systems
An IT system is often
heterogeneous, with many machines, operating systems and software from various
providers/editors and with multiple versions.
This makes the handling of security advisories and the patch management rather
tedious and complicated. Therefore, the idea to automate this process by
developing tools that automatically determine which IT entity is affected by a
given security advisory is gaining ground.
However, the
development of such tools is hampered by the fact that the description of an IT
system is usually made in natural language (a language which is by definition not
formal).
For example, the Microsoft Internet Explorer browser in version 7 may be
designated by the following literal expressions:
- Microsoft Internet Explorer 7
- Internet Explorer 7
- IE 7
- Microsoft Internet Explorer version 7
- .........
If we consider
together the difficulty to name formally IT elements and the difficulty to
handle a very large number of combinations of software and platforms, it
appears that automatic management of security advisories becomes impossible.
It might be interesting to use a formal language to clearly distinguish a piece
of software or hardware, and create links between different elements to
describe a whole platform (such as IE 7 on Windows XP SP3).
The CPE initiative
The CPE (Common
Platform Enumeration) initiative meets this need by defining a dictionary
containing the names of the basic elements of IT systems, a syntax for
combining these names to describe complex platforms and a method for checking
(or matching) a name against a platform.
Beyond the technical
side, this initiative is based on the definition of roles and responsibilities:
- Moderator: This is an impartial entity, which
ensures and coordinates the development of the CPE standard for the entire
community through public discussions (meetings or mailing lists). It is
also responsible for the website of the CPE initiative.
- Developers: They are responsible for the
implementation of the standard improvements (maintenance of the
dictionary, changing specifications) in accordance with the guidelines
provided by the moderator entity.
- Contributors: They contribute to the
development of the standard by proposing new names, new tools or various
modifications.
- Users: They are the IT platforms managers,
editors of patch management solutions, editors of security advisories...
people who use the dictionary and the CPE syntax to describe CPE platforms
and to assess the links between different IT entities.
CPE names
They are used to
identify and specify basic IT elements (application, operating system,
hardware).
They are represented
by a URI with the following syntax:
cpe:/(part): (vendor): (product): (version): (update): (edition):
(language)
where
- part = "h" (hardware),
"o" (operating system) or "a" (application).
- vendor = highest organization-specific
label of the organization's DNS name
For example Cisco (cisco.com), Mozilla (mozilla.org), Oxford (oxford.ac.uk).
- The 5 remaining components represent the
product, version, update, edition and language. They are optional.
A list of allowed abbreviations (IE, jre pro ...) is published on the CPE
initiative website.
Examples of CPE names:
- cpe:/a:zonelabs:zonealarm_internet_security_suite:7.0
- cpe:/o:microsoft:windows_2000::sp4:pro
- cpe:/a:mozilla:firefox:2.0.0.6::osx:zh-tw
- cpe:/h:cisco:router:3825
These names are listed
in a dictionary defined with the XML meta-language. Besides the definitions of
product names, this dictionary can also be used to establish a link between a
product and an OVAL request (see the "Matching" section).
The CPE language
It is used to link
basic elements together in such a way to describe whole complex IT platforms (a
given application runs on a given OS and on a specific architecture).
It mainly consists of Boolean expressions allowing to evaluate if an element or
a set of elements belongs to a platform.
This language consists of elements/tags defined with the XML meta-language.
These tags are the following ones:
- <cpe:platform-specification> is the
root element of a CPE document, which can contain one or more platforms descriptions.
- <cpe:platform> is the element which
describes a platform or a type of platform.
- <cpe:title> and <cpe:remark>
are optional elements used to describe a platform. They can provide
information in natural language on the described platform.
- <cpe:logical-test> contains a list
of items (described with <cpe:fact-ref> tags or with other
<cpe:logical-test> tags) and an indication of the logical operator
(OR or AND) which links these elements.
- <cpe:fact-ref> the basic tag that references
a CPE name.
For example, the
description of Microsoft Office 2003 or 2007 on Microsoft Windows XP should be
written as follows:
<? xml version = "1.0" encoding = "UTF-8"? "
<cpe:platform-specification
xmlns:cpe="http://cpe.mitre.org/language/2.0">
<cpe:platform id="789">
<cpe:title> Microsoft
Windows XP with Office 2003 or 2007 </ CPE: title>
<cpe:logical-test
operator="AND" negate="FALSE">
<cpe:fact-ref name="cpe:/o:microsoft:windows_xp" />
<cpe:logical-test operator="OR" negate="FALSE">
<cpe:fact-ref name="cpe:/a:microsoft:office:2003" />
<cpe:fact-ref name="cpe:/a:microsoft:office:2007" />
</
CPE: logical-test>
</ CPE: logical-test>
</ CPE: platform>
</ CPE: platform-specification>
Matching
The formal description
of IT elements and platforms should enable to establish or assess correlations
between one (or several) element(s) and one (or several) platform(s), typically
in the patch management context, in order to check if an IT system is affected
by a vulnerability for which a list of potentially impacted products/platforms
has been provided by the advisory editor.
The CPE initiative allows matching a platform against a list of potentially
affected systems:
- Either through links between CPE names and
OVAL requests (Open Vulnerability Assessment Language),
- Or, when a CPE name has no associated OVAL request, via algorithms
provided in the CPE specifications.
Conclusion
Thanks to its vocabulary, its syntax and its methods, the CPE initiative seems to
have a very promising future in particular for automating tasks related to the
processing of security advisories ant the patch management.
For more
information: