FIPS 140-2



         


[Top]

FIPS 140-2

Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) Publication 140-2 - (2001)


The Cryptographic Module Validation Program was established by the US National Institute of Standards and Technology and the Communications Security Establishment () of the Government of Canada in July 1995.

Security programs overseen by NIST and CSE focus on working with government and industry to establish more secure systems and networks by developing, managing and promoting security assessment tools, techniques, services, and supporting programs for testing, evaluation and validation; and addresses such areas as: development and maintenance of security metrics, security evaluation criteria and evaluation methodologies, tests and test methods; security-specific criteria for laboratory accreditation; guidance on the use of evaluated and tested products; research to address assurance methods and system-wide security and assessment methodologies; security protocol validation activities; and appropriate coordination with assessment-related activities of voluntary industry standards bodies and other assessment regimes.

The FIPS 140-2 standard is an Information Technology (IT) security accrediation program for cryptographic modules produced by private sector vendors who seek to have their products certified for use in government departments and regulated industrys (such as financial and health-care institutions) that collect, store, transfer, share and disseminate "sensitive, but not classfied" information.

All of the tests under the CMVP are handled by third-party laboratories that are accredited as Cryptographic Module Testing ()laboratories by the National Voluntary Laboratory Accreditation Program (). Vendors interested in validation testing may select any of the nine accredited labs.

NVLAP accredited Cryptographic Modules Testing laboratories perform validation testing of cryptographic modules. Cryptographic modules are tested against requirements found in FIPS PUB 140-2, Security Requirements for Cryptographic Modules. Security requirements cover 11 areas related to the design and implementation of a cryptographic module Within most areas, a cryptographic module receives a security level rating (1-4, from lowest to highest), depending on what requirements are met. For other areas that do not provide for different levels of security, a cryptographic module receives a rating that reflects fulfillment of all of the requirements for that area.

An overall rating is issued for the cryptographic module, which indicates (1) the minimum of the independent ratings received in the areas with levels, and (2) fulfillment of all the requirements in the other areas. On a vendor's validation certificate, individual ratings are listed, as well as the overall rating.

NIST maintains for all of its cryptographic standards testing programs (past and present). All of these lists are updated as new modules/implementations receive validation certificates from NIST and CSE. Items on the FIPS 140-1 and FIPS 140-2 validation list reference validated algorithm implementations that appear on the algorithm validation lists.

Other NIST publications can be viewed .





  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License