RHEL now certified at EAL4+
RHEL is now
certified at EAL4+,
when configured appropriately on IBM's mainframe, System x, System p5
and eServer boxes, according to the protection profiles LSPP
(labeling), RBACPP (role based access control) and CAPP (audit).
EAL4+
is as far as you can go with an off the shelf OS. Beyond this, you need
semiformal security design and pretty much a new OS. LSPP is the
current equivalent of the old "orange book" B1
TCSEC rating.
This
certification means that Linux is now officially considered appropriate
for use as a "trusted" operating system, although with SELinux, it is
far more flexible and capable than any of the existing MLS-oriented
solutions. While the evaluation is specific to RHEL5 and IBM hardware,
everything
is freely available in source form, and also freely available as an
installable distro via Fedora, Centos and derivatives thereof.
A
lot of people thought it would be outright impossible to get an open
source OS certified at this level. Not only were they wrong, but we've
done it in a way which makes it part of the mainline kernel, upstream
userland, and integrated into standard distributions. It is not some
out-dated, incompatible and outrageously expensive fork of the OS, as
has historically been the case with trusted OSes. "Military-strength"
security is just now just another feature you get as standard in Linux,
and it receives the same testing and community benefits as the rest of
the OS.
Those who accuse Linux of lacking innovation might do
well to look at this, and also see how others are now adopting these
innovations.
News coverage:
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Infoworld-
Yahoo