Archived/Security vulnerability process (draft)

From Xen

This is a draft of modifications to the security vulnerability response process. The current form can be found here.

A description of the changes (and revisions) is here:

Last update: 2013 April 8 (v4).

Expand eligibility for the pre-disclosure list

As discussed on the xen-devel mailing list, expand eligibility of the pre-disclosure list to include any public hosting provider, as well as software project:

  • Change "Large hosting providers" to "Public hosting providers"
  • Remove "widely-deployed" from vendors and distributors
  • Add rules of thumb for what constitutes "genuine"
  • Add an itemized list of information to be included in the application,

to make expectations clear and (hopefully) applications more streamlined.

The first will allow hosting providers of any size to join.

The second will allow software projects and vendors of any size to join.

The third and fourth will help describe exactly what criteria will be used to determine eligibility for 1 and 2.

Additionally, this proposal adds the following requirements:

  • Applicants and current members must use an e-mail alias, not an individual's

e-mail

  • Applicants and current members must submit a statement saying that they have

read, understand, and will abide by this process document.

v4:

  • Make it clear that the organization is committing to respecting the

secrecy, as well as committing to the secrecy of all members who are exposed to the information during the pre-disclosure period.

v3:

  • Organizations already on the list also must conform to requirements for

a security alias and a statement saying they're read and will abide by the policy.

v2:

  • Include "genuine" software providers, and a rule of thumb for "genuine"
  • Include evidence for software providers
  • Allow "a key signed with a key in the PGP strong set" as evidence
  • Require applicants to state they have read and understand policy

and will abide by it

  • Minor suggested clarifications
  • Added version message at bottom
  • Made security aliases a requirement

Xen.org Security Problem Response Process

Introduction

Computer systems have bugs. Currently recognised best practice for bugs with security implications is to notify significant downstream users in private; leave a reasonable interval for downstreams to respond and prepare updated software packages; then make public disclosure.

We want to encourage people to report bugs they find to us. Therefore we will treat with respect the requests of discoverers, or other vendors, who report problems to us.

Scope of this process

This process primarily covers the <a href="http://www.xen.org/products/xenhyp.html">Xen Hypervisor Project</a>. Vulnerabilties reported against other Xen.org projects will be handled on a best effort basis by the relevant Project Lead together with the security team.

Specific process

  1. We request that anyone who discovers a vulnerability in xen.org software reports this by email to security (at) xen (dot) org.

    (This also covers the situation where an existing published changeset is retrospectively found to be a security fix)

  2. Immediately, and in parallel:

    1. Those of us on the xen.org team who are aware of the problem will notify security@xen if disclosure wasn't made there already.

    2. If the vulnerability is not already public, security@xen will negotiate with discoverer regarding embargo date and disclosure schedule. See below for detailed discussion.

  3. Furthermore, also in parallel:
    1. security@xen will check whether the discoverer, or other people already aware of the problem, have allocated a CVE number. If not, we will acquire a CVE candidate number ourselves, and make sure that everyone who is aware of the problem is also aware of the CVE number.

    2. If we think other software systems (for example, competing hypervisor systems) are likely to be affected by the same vulnerability, we will try to make those other projects aware of the problem and include them in the advisory preparation process.

    3. (This may rely on the other project(s) having documented and responsive security contact points)

    4. We will prepare or check patch(es) which fix the vulnerability. This would ideally include all relevant backports. Patches will be tightly targeted on fixing the specific security vulnerability in the smallest, simplest and most reliable way. Where necessary domain specific experts within the community will be brought in to help with patch preparation.

    5. We will determine which systems/configurations/versions are vulnerable, and what the impact of the vulnerability is. Depending on the nature of the vulnerability this may involve sharing information about the vulnerability (in confidence, if the issue is embargoed) with hardware vendors and/or other software projects.

    6. We will write a Xen advisory including information from (b)-(f)

  4. Advisory pre-release:

    This occurs only if the advisory is embargoed (ie, the problem is not already public):

    As soon as our advisory is available, we will send it, including patches, to members of the Xen security pre-disclosure list. For more information about this list, see below.

    At this stage the advisory will be clearly marked with the embargo date.

  5. Advisory public release:

    At the embargo date we will publish the advisory, and push bugfix changesets to public revision control trees.

    Public advisories will be posted to xen-devel, xen-users and xen-annnounce and will be added to the <a href="http://wiki.xen.org/wiki/Security_Announcements">Security Announcements wiki page</a>.

    Copies will also be sent to the pre-disclosure list.

  6. Updates

    If new information or better patches become available, or we discover mistakes, we may issue an amended (revision 2 or later) public advisory. This will also be sent to the pre-disclosure list.

  7. Post embargo transparency:

    During an embargo period the Xen.org security response team may be required to make potentially controverial decisions in private, since they cannot confer with the community without breaking the embargo. The security team will attempt to make such decisions following the guidance of this document and where necessary their own best judgement. Following the embargo period any such decisions will be disclosed to the community in the interests of transparency and to help provide guidance should a similar decision be required in the future.

Embargo and disclosure schedule

If a vulnerability is not already public, we would like to notify significant distributors and operators of Xen so that they can prepare patched software in advance. This will help minimise the degree to which there are Xen users who are vulnerable but can't get patches.

As discussed, we will negotiate with discoverers about disclosure schedule. Our usual starting point for that negotiation, unless there are reasons to diverge from this, would be:

  1. One working week between notification arriving at security@xen and the issue of our own advisory to our predisclosure list. We will use this time to gather information and prepare our advisory, including required patches.

  2. Two working weeks between issue of our advisory to our predisclosure list and publication.

When a discoverer reports a problem to us and requests longer delays than we would consider ideal, we will honour such a request if reasonable. If a discoverer wants an accelerated disclosure compared to what we would prefer, we naturally do not have the power to insist that a discoverer waits for us to be ready and will honour the date specified by the discoverer.

Naturally, if a vulnerability is being exploited in the wild we will make immediately public release of the advisory and patch(es) and expect others to do likewise.

Pre-disclosure list

Xen.org operates a pre-disclosure list. This list contains the email addresses (ideally, role addresses) of the security response teams for significant Xen operators and distributors.

This includes:

  • Public hosting providers;
  • Large-scale organisational users of Xen;
  • Vendors of Xen-based systems;
  • Distributors of operating systems with Xen support.

This includes both corporations and community institutions.

Here "provider", "vendor", and "distributor" is meant to include anyone who is making a genuine service, available to the public, whether for a fee or gratis. For projects providing a service for a fee, the rule of thumb of "genuine" is that you are offering services which people are purchasing. For gratis projects, the rule of thumb for "genuine" is measured in terms of the amount of time committed to providing the service. For instance, a software project which has 2-3 active developers, each of whom spend 3-4 hours per week doing development, is very likely to be accepted; whereas a project with a single developer who spends a few hours a month will most likey be rejected.

For organizational users, a rule of thumb is that "large-scale" means an installed base of 300,000 or more Xen guests. Other well-established organisations with a mature security response process will be considered on a case-by-case basis.

The list of entities on the pre-disclosure list is public. (Just the list of projects and organisations, not the actual email addresses.)

If there is an embargo, the pre-disclosure list will receive copies of the advisory and patches, with a clearly marked embargo date, as soon as they are available. The pre-disclosure list will also receive copies of public advisories when they are first issued or updated.

Organizations on the pre-disclosure list are expected to maintain the confidentiality of the vulnerability up to the embargo date which security@xen have agreed with the discoverer, and are committing to ensuring that any members/employees of that organisation who come into contact with confidential information will do so as well.

Specifically, prior to the embargo date, pre-disclosure list members should not make available, even to their own customers and partners:

  • the Xen.org advisory
  • their own advisory
  • the impact, scope, set of vulnerable systems or the nature of the vulnerability
  • revision control commits which are a fix for the problem
  • patched software (even in binary form) without prior consultation with security@xen and/or the discoverer.

List members are allowed to make available to their users only the following:

  • The existance of an issue
  • The assigned XSA and CVE numbers
  • The planned disclosure date

Organisations who meet the criteria should contact security@xen if they wish to receive pre-disclosure of advisories. Please include in the e-mail:

  • The name of your organization
  • A brief description of why you fit the criteria, along with evidence to support the claim
  • A security alias e-mail address (no personal addresses -- see below)
  • A link to a web page with your security policy statement
  • A statement to the effect that you have read this policy and agree to abide by the terms for inclusion in the list, specifically the requirements to regarding confidentiality during an embargo period

Evidence that will be considered may include the following:

  • If you are a public hosting provider, a link to a web page with your public rates
  • If you are a software provider, a link to a web page where your software can be downloaded or purchased
  • If you are an open-source project, a link to a mailing list archive and/or a version control repository demonstrating active development
  • A public key signed with a key which is in the PGP "strong set"

Organizations already on the list who do not have a security alias or have not sent a statement that they have read this policy and will abide by it will be asked to do so.

Organisations should not request subscription via the mailing list web interface, any such subscription requests will be rejected and ignored.

A role address (such as security@example.com) should be used for each organisation, rather than one or more individual's direct email address. This helps to ensure that changes of personnel do not end up effectively dropping an organisation from the list.


Organizations on the pre-disclosure list:

This is a list of organisations on the pre-disclosure list (not email addresses or internal business groups).

  • Amazon
  • Citrix
  • Debian
  • Intel
  • Linode
  • Novell
  • Oracle
  • Rackspace
  • Redhat
  • SuSE
  • Ubuntu
  • Xen.org security response team
  • Xen 3.4 stable tree maintainer

Change History

  • v1.4 Apr 2013: Predisclosure list criteria changes
  • v1.3 Aug 2012: Various minor updates
  • v1.2 Apr 2012: Added pre-disclosure list
  • v1.1 Feb 2012: Added link to Security Announcements wiki page
  • v1.0 Dec 2011: Intial document published after review