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Network Working Group                                         R. DanyliwRequest for Comments: 5070                                          CERTCategory: Standards Track                                      J. Meijer                                                                 UNINETT                                                            Y. Demchenko                                                 University of Amsterdam                                                           December 2007The Incident Object Description Exchange FormatStatus of This Memo   This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the   Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet   Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state   and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Abstract   The Incident Object Description Exchange Format (IODEF) defines a   data representation that provides a framework for sharing information   commonly exchanged by Computer Security Incident Response Teams   (CSIRTs) about computer security incidents.  This document describes   the information model for the IODEF and provides an associated data   model specified with XML Schema.Table of Contents1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41.1.  Terminology  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51.2.  Notations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51.3.  About the IODEF Data Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51.4.  About the IODEF Implementation . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62.  IODEF Data Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62.1.  Integers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62.2.  Real Numbers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72.3.  Characters and Strings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72.4.  Multilingual Strings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72.5.  Bytes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72.6.  Hexadecimal Bytes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72.7.  Enumerated Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .82.8.  Date-Time Strings  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 20072.9.  Timezone String  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .82.10. Port Lists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .82.11. Postal Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92.12. Person or Organization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92.13. Telephone and Fax Numbers  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92.14. Email String . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92.15. Uniform Resource Locator strings . . . . . . . . . . . . .93.  The IODEF Data Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .93.1.  IODEF-Document Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .103.2.  Incident Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .103.3.  IncidentID Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .143.4.  AlternativeID Class  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .143.5.  RelatedActivity Class  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .153.6.  AdditionalData Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .163.7.  Contact Class  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .183.7.1.  RegistryHandle Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .213.7.2.  PostalAddress Class  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .223.7.3.  Email Class  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .223.7.4.  Telephone and Fax Classes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .233.8.  Time Classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .233.8.1.  StartTime  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .243.8.2.  EndTime  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .243.8.3.  DetectTime . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .243.8.4.  ReportTime . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .243.8.5.  DateTime . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .243.9.  Method Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .243.9.1.  Reference Class  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .253.10. Assessment Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .253.10.1. Impact Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .273.10.2. TimeImpact Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .293.10.3. MonetaryImpact Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .303.10.4. Confidence Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .313.11. History Class  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .323.11.1. HistoryItem Class  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .333.12. EventData Class  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .343.12.1. Relating the Incident and EventData Classes  . . . . .363.12.2. Cardinality of EventData . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .373.13. Expectation Class  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .373.14. Flow Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .403.15. System Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .403.16. Node Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .423.16.1. Counter Class  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .433.16.2. Address Class  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .453.16.3. NodeRole Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .463.17. Service Class  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .483.17.1. Application Class  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .503.18. OperatingSystem Class  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .513.19. Record Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 20073.19.1. RecordData Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .513.19.2. RecordPattern Class  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .533.19.3. RecordItem Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .544.  Processing Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .544.1.  Encoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .544.2.  IODEF Namespace  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .554.3.  Validation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .555.  Extending the IODEF  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .565.1.  Extending the Enumerated Values of Attributes  . . . . . .565.2.  Extending Classes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .576.  Internationalization Issues  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .597.  Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .607.1.  Worm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .607.2.  Reconnaissance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .617.3.  Bot-Net Reporting  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .637.4.  Watch List . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .658.  The IODEF Schema . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .669.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8710. IANA Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8811. Acknowledgments  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8812. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8912.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8912.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .90Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 20071.  Introduction   Organizations require help from other parties to mitigate malicious   activity targeting their network and to gain insight into potential   threats.  This coordination might entail working with an ISP to   filter attack traffic, contacting a remote site to take down a bot-   network, or sharing watch-lists of known malicious IP addresses in a   consortium.   The Incident Object Description Exchange Format (IODEF) is a format   for representing computer security information commonly exchanged   between Computer Security Incident Response Teams (CSIRTs).  It   provides an XML representation for conveying incident information   across administrative domains between parties that have an   operational responsibility of remediation or a watch-and-warning over   a defined constituency.  The data model encodes information about   hosts, networks, and the services running on these systems; attack   methodology and associated forensic evidence; impact of the activity;   and limited approaches for documenting workflow.   The overriding purpose of the IODEF is to enhance the operational   capabilities of CSIRTs.  Community adoption of the IODEF provides an   improved ability to resolve incidents and convey situational   awareness by simplifying collaboration and data sharing.  This   structured format provided by the IODEF allows for:   o  increased automation in processing of incident data, since the      resources of security analysts to parse free-form textual      documents will be reduced;   o  decreased effort in normalizing similar data (even when highly      structured) from different sources; and   o  a common format on which to build interoperable tools for incident      handling and subsequent analysis, specifically when data comes      from multiple constituencies.   Coordinating with other CSIRTs is not strictly a technical problem.   There are numerous procedural, trust, and legal considerations that   might prevent an organization from sharing information.  The IODEF   does not attempt to address them.  However, operational   implementations of the IODEF will need to consider this broader   context.   Sections3 and8 specify the IODEF data model with text and an XML   schema.  The types used by the data model are covered inSection 2.   Processing considerations, the handling of extensions, and   internationalization issues related to the data model are covered inDanyliw, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   Sections4,5, and6, respectively.  Examples are listed inSection7.Section 1 provides the background for the IODEF, andSection 9   documents the security considerations.1.1.  Terminology   The key words "MUST," "MUST NOT," "REQUIRED," "SHALL," "SHALL NOT,"   "SHOULD," "SHOULD NOT," "RECOMMENDED," "MAY," and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described inRFC2119 [6].   Definitions for some of the common computer security-related   terminology used in this document can be found in Section 2 of [16].1.2.  Notations   The normative IODEF data model is specified with the text inSection3 and the XML schema inSection 8.  To help in the understanding of   the data elements,Section 3 also depicts the underlying information   model using Unified Modeling Language (UML).  This abstract   presentation of the IODEF is not normative.   For clarity in this document, the term "XML document" will be used   when referring generically to any instance of an XML document.  The   term "IODEF document" will be used to refer to specific elements and   attributes of the IODEF schema.  The terms "class" and "element" will   be used interchangeably to reference either the corresponding data   element in the information or data models, respectively.1.3.  About the IODEF Data Model   The IODEF data model is a data representation that provides a   framework for sharing information commonly exchanged by CSIRTs about   computer security incidents.  A number of considerations were made in   the design of the data model.   o  The data model serves as a transport format.  Therefore, its      specific representation is not the optimal representation for on-      disk storage, long-term archiving, or in-memory processing.   o  As there is no precise widely agreed upon definition for an      incident, the data model does not attempt to dictate one through      its implementation.  Rather, a broad understanding is assumed in      the IODEF that is flexible enough to encompass most operators.   o  Describing an incident for all definitions would require an      extremely complex data model.  Therefore, the IODEF only intends      to be a framework to convey commonly exchanged incident      information.  It ensures that there are ample mechanisms forDanyliw, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007      extensibility to support organization-specific information, and      techniques to reference information kept outside of the explicit      data model.   o  The domain of security analysis is not fully standardized and must      rely on free-form textual descriptions.  The IODEF attempts to      strike a balance between supporting this free-form content, while      still allowing automated processing of incident information.   o  The IODEF is only one of several security relevant data      representations being standardized.  Attempts were made to ensure      they were complimentary.  The data model of the Intrusion      Detection Message Exchange Format [17] influenced the design of      the IODEF.   Further discussion of the desirable properties for the IODEF can be   found in the Requirements for the Format for Incident Information   Exchange (FINE) [16].1.4.  About the IODEF Implementation   The IODEF implementation is specified as an Extensible Markup   Language (XML) [1] Schema [2] inSection 8.   Implementing the IODEF in XML provides numerous advantages.  Its   extensibility makes it ideal for specifying a data encoding framework   that supports various character encodings.  Likewise, the abundance   of related technologies (e.g., XSL, XPath, XML-Signature) makes for   simplified manipulation.  However, XML is fundamentally a text   representation, which makes it inherently inefficient when binary   data must be embedded or large volumes of data must be exchanged.2.  IODEF Data Types   The various data elements of the IODEF data model are typed.  This   section discusses these data types.  When possible, native Schema   data types were adopted, but for more complicated formats, regular   expressions (seeAppendix F of [3]) or external standards were used.2.1.  Integers   An integer is represented by the INTEGER data type.  Integer data   MUST be encoded in Base 10.   The INTEGER data type is implemented as an "xs:integer" [3] in the   schema.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 20072.2.  Real Numbers   Real (floating-point) attributes are represented by the REAL data   type.  Real data MUST be encoded in Base 10.   The REAL data type is implemented as an "xs:float" [3] in the schema.2.3.  Characters and Strings   A single character is represented by the CHARACTER data type.  A   character string is represented by the STRING data type.  Special   characters must be encoded using entity references.  SeeSection 4.1.   The CHARACTER and STRING data types are implement as an "xs:string"   [3] in the schema.2.4.  Multilingual Strings   STRING data that represents multi-character attributes in a language   different than the default encoding of the document is of the   ML_STRING data type.   The ML_STRING data type is implemented as an "iodef:MLStringType" in   the schema.2.5.  Bytes   A binary octet is represented by the BYTE data type.  A sequence of   binary octets is represented by the BYTE[] data type.  These octets   are encoded using base64.   The BYTE data type is implemented as an "xs:base64Binary" [3] in the   schema.2.6.  Hexadecimal Bytes   A binary octet is represented by the HEXBIN (and HEXBIN[]) data type.   This octet is encoded as a character tuple consisting of two   hexadecimal digits.   The HEXBIN data type is implemented as an "xs:hexBinary" [3] in the   schema.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 20072.7.  Enumerated Types   Enumerated types are represented by the ENUM data type, and consist   of an ordered list of acceptable values.  Each value has a   representative keyword.  Within the IODEF schema, the enumerated type   keywords are used as attribute values.   The ENUM data type is implemented as a series of "xs:NMTOKEN" in the   schema.2.8.  Date-Time Strings   Date-time strings are represented by the DATETIME data type.  Each   date-time string identifies a particular instant in time; ranges are   not supported.   Date-time strings are formatted according to a subset of ISO 8601:   2000 [13] documented inRFC 3339 [12].   The DATETIME data type is implemented as an "xs:dateTime" [3] in the   schema.2.9.  Timezone String   A timezone offset from UTC is represented by the TIMEZONE data type.   It is formatted according to the following regular expression:   "Z|[\+\-](0[0-9]|1[0-4]):[0-5][0-9]".   The TIMEZONE data type is implemented as an "xs:string" with a   regular expression constraint in the schema.  This regular expression   is identical to the timezone representation implemented in an "xs:   dateTime".2.10.  Port Lists   A list of network ports are represented by the PORTLIST data type.  A   PORTLIST consists of a comma-separated list of numbers and ranges   (N-M means ports N through M, inclusive).  It is formatted according   to the following regular expression: "\d+(\-\d+)?(,\d+(\-\d+)?)*".   For example, "2,5-15,30,32,40-50,55-60".   The PORTLIST data type is implemented as an "xs:string" with a   regular expression constraint in the schema.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 20072.11.  Postal Address   A postal address is represented by the POSTAL data type.  This data   type is an ML_STRING whose format is documented inSection 2.23 of   RFC 4519 [10].  It defines a postal address as a free-form multi-line   string separated by the "$" character.   The POSTAL data type is implemented as an "xs:string" in the schema.2.12.  Person or Organization   The name of an individual or organization is represented by the NAME   data type.  This data type is an ML_STRING whose format is documented   inSection 2.3 of RFC 4519 [10].   The NAME data type is implemented as an "xs:string" in the schema.2.13.  Telephone and Fax Numbers   A telephone or fax number is represented by the PHONE data type.  The   format of the PHONE data type is documented in Section 2.35 ofRFC4519 [10].   The PHONE data type is implemented as an "xs:string" in the schema.2.14.  Email String   An email address is represented by the EMAIL data type.  The format   of the EMAIL data type is documented inSection 3.4.1RFC 2822 [11]   The EMAIL data type is implemented as an "xs:string" in the schema.2.15.  Uniform Resource Locator strings   A uniform resource locator (URL) is represented by the URL data type.   The format of the URL data type is documented inRFC 2396 [8].   The URL data type is implemented as an "xs:anyURI" in the schema.3.  The IODEF Data Model   In this section, the individual components of the IODEF data model   will be discussed in detail.  For each class, the semantics will be   described and the relationship with other classes will be depicted   with UML.  When necessary, specific comments will be made about   corresponding definition in the schema inSection 8Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 20073.1.  IODEF-Document Class   The IODEF-Document class is the top level class in the IODEF data   model.  All IODEF documents are an instance of this class.   +-----------------+   | IODEF-Document  |   +-----------------+   | STRING version  |<>--{1..*}--[ Incident     ]   | ENUM lang       |   | STRING formatid |   +-----------------+                      Figure 1: IODEF-Document Class   The aggregate class that constitute IODEF-Document is:   Incident      One or more.  The information related to a single incident.   The IODEF-Document class has three attributes:   version      Required.  STRING.  The IODEF specification version number to      which this IODEF document conforms.  The value of this attribute      MUST be "1.00"   lang      Required.  ENUM.  A valid language code perRFC 4646 [7]      constrained by the definition of "xs:language".  The      interpretation of this code is described inSection 6.   formatid      Optional.  STRING.  A free-form string to convey processing      instructions to the recipient of the document.  Its semantics must      be negotiated out-of-band.3.2.  Incident Class   Every incident is represented by an instance of the Incident class.   This class provides a standardized representation for commonly   exchanged incident data.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   +--------------------+   | Incident           |   +--------------------+   | ENUM purpose       |<>----------[ IncidentID      ]   | STRING ext-purpose |<>--{0..1}--[ AlternativeID   ]   | ENUM lang          |<>--{0..1}--[ RelatedActivity ]   | ENUM restriction   |<>--{0..1}--[ DetectTime      ]   |                    |<>--{0..1}--[ StartTime       ]   |                    |<>--{0..1}--[ EndTime         ]   |                    |<>----------[ ReportTime      ]   |                    |<>--{0..*}--[ Description     ]   |                    |<>--{1..*}--[ Assessment      ]   |                    |<>--{0..*}--[ Method          ]   |                    |<>--{1..*}--[ Contact         ]   |                    |<>--{0..*}--[ EventData       ]   |                    |<>--{0..1}--[ History         ]   |                    |<>--{0..*}--[ AdditionalData  ]   +--------------------+                       Figure 2: The Incident Class   The aggregate classes that constitute Incident are:   IncidentID      One. An incident tracking number assigned to this incident by the      CSIRT that generated the IODEF document.   AlternativeID      Zero or one.  The incident tracking numbers used by other CSIRTs      to refer to the incident described in the document.   RelatedActivity      Zero or one.  The incident tracking numbers of related incidents.   DetectTime      Zero or one.  The time the incident was first detected.   StartTime      Zero or one.  The time the incident started.   EndTime      Zero or one.  The time the incident ended.   ReportTime      One. The time the incident was reported.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   Description      Zero or more.  ML_STRING.  A free-form textual description of the      incident.   Assessment      One or more.  A characterization of the impact of the incident.   Method      Zero or more.  The techniques used by the intruder in the      incident.   Contact      One or more.  Contact information for the parties involved in the      incident.   EventData      Zero or more.  Description of the events comprising the incident.   History      Zero or one.  A log of significant events or actions that occurred      during the course of handling the incident.   AdditionalData      Zero or more.  Mechanism by which to extend the data model.   The Incident class has four attributes:   purpose      Required.  ENUM.  The purpose attribute represents the reason why      the IODEF document was created.  It is closely related to the      Expectation class (Section 3.13).  This attribute is defined as an      enumerated list:      1.  traceback.  The document was sent for trace-back purposes.      2.  mitigation.  The document was sent to request aid in          mitigating the described activity.      3.  reporting.  The document was sent to comply with reporting          requirements.      4.  other.  The document was sent for purposes specified in the          Expectation class.      5.  ext-value.  An escape value used to extend this attribute.          SeeSection 5.1.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   ext-purpose      Optional.  STRING.  A means by which to extend the purpose      attribute.  SeeSection 5.1.   lang      Optional.  ENUM.  A valid language code perRFC 4646 [7]      constrained by the definition of "xs:language".  The      interpretation of this code is described inSection 6.   restriction      Optional.  ENUM.  This attribute indicates the disclosure      guidelines to which the sender expects the recipient to adhere for      the information represented in this class and its children.  This      guideline provides no security since there are no specified      technical means to ensure that the recipient of the document      handles the information as the sender requested.      The value of this attribute is logically inherited by the children      of this class.  That is to say, the disclosure rules applied to      this class, also apply to its children.      It is possible to set a granular disclosure policy, since all of      the high-level classes (i.e., children of the Incident class) have      a restriction attribute.  Therefore, a child can override the      guidelines of a parent class, be it to restrict or relax the      disclosure rules (e.g., a child has a weaker policy than an      ancestor; or an ancestor has a weak policy, and the children      selectively apply more rigid controls).  The implicit value of the      restriction attribute for a class that did not specify one can be      found in the closest ancestor that did specify a value.      This attribute is defined as an enumerated value with a default      value of "private".  Note that the default value of the      restriction attribute is only defined in the context of the      Incident class.  In other classes where this attribute is used, no      default is specified.      1.  public.  There are no restrictions placed in the information.      2.  need-to-know.  The information may be shared with other          parties that are involved in the incident as determined by the          recipient of this document (e.g., multiple victim sites can be          informed of each other).      3.  private.  The information may not be shared.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007      4.  default.  The information can be shared according to an          information disclosure policy pre-arranged by the          communicating parties.3.3.  IncidentID Class   The IncidentID class represents an incident tracking number that is   unique in the context of the CSIRT and identifies the activity   characterized in an IODEF Document.  This identifier would serve as   an index into the CSIRT incident handling system.  The combination of   the name attribute and the string in the element content MUST be a   globally unique identifier describing the activity.  Documents   generated by a given CSIRT MUST NOT reuse the same value unless they   are referencing the same incident.   +------------------+   | IncidentID       |   +------------------+   | STRING           |   |                  |   | STRING name      |   | STRING instance  |   | ENUM restriction |   +------------------+                      Figure 3: The IncidentID Class   The IncidentID class has three attributes:   name      Required.  STRING.  An identifier describing the CSIRT that      created the document.  In order to have a globally unique CSIRT      name, the fully qualified domain name associated with the CSIRT      MUST be used.   instance      Optional.  STRING.  An identifier referencing a subset of the      named incident.   restriction      Optional.  ENUM.  This attribute has been defined inSection 3.2.3.4.  AlternativeID Class   The AlternativeID class lists the incident tracking numbers used by   CSIRTs, other than the one generating the document, to refer to the   identical activity described the IODEF document.  A tracking number   listed as an AlternativeID references the same incident detected byDanyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   another CSIRT.  The incident tracking numbers of the CSIRT that   generated the IODEF document should never be considered an   AlternativeID.         +------------------+         | AlternativeID    |         +------------------+         | ENUM restriction |<>--{1..*}--[ IncidentID ]         |                  |         +------------------+                     Figure 4: The AlternativeID Class   The aggregate class that constitutes AlternativeID is:   IncidentID      One or more.  The incident tracking number of another CSIRT.   The AlternativeID class has one attribute:   restriction      Optional.  ENUM.  This attribute has been defined inSection 3.2.3.5.  RelatedActivity Class   The RelatedActivity class lists either incident tracking numbers of   incidents or URLs (not both) that refer to activity related to the   one described in the IODEF document.  These references may be to   local incident tracking numbers or to those of other CSIRTs.   The specifics of how a CSIRT comes to believe that two incidents are   related are considered out of scope.         +------------------+         | RelatedActivity  |         +------------------+         | ENUM restriction |<>--{0..*}--[ IncidentID ]         |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ URL        ]         +------------------+                      Figure 5: RelatedActivity ClassDanyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   The aggregate classes that constitutes RelatedActivity are:   IncidentID      One or more.  The incident tracking number of a related incident.   URL      One or more.  URL.  A URL to activity related to this incident.   The RelatedActivity class has one attribute:   restriction      Optional.  ENUM.  This attribute has been defined inSection 3.2.3.6.  AdditionalData Class   The AdditionalData class serves as an extension mechanism for   information not otherwise represented in the data model.  For   relatively simple information, atomic data types (e.g., integers,   strings) are provided with a mechanism to annotate their meaning.   The class can also be used to extend the data model (and the   associated Schema) to support proprietary extensions by encapsulating   entire XML documents conforming to another Schema (e.g., IDMEF).  A   detailed discussion for extending the data model and the schema can   be found inSection 5.   Unlike XML, which is self-describing, atomic data must be documented   to convey its meaning.  This information is described in the   'meaning' attribute.  Since these description are outside the scope   of the specification, some additional coordination may be required to   ensure that a recipient of a document using the AdditionalData   classes can make sense of the custom extensions.   +------------------+   | AdditionalData   |   +------------------+   | ANY              |   |                  |   | ENUM dtype       |   | STRING ext-dtype |   | STRING meaning   |   | STRING formatid  |   | ENUM restriction |   +------------------+                    Figure 6: The AdditionalData ClassDanyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   The AdditionalData class has five attributes:   dtype      Required.  ENUM.  The data type of the element content.  The      permitted values for this attribute are shown below.  The default      value is "string".      1.   boolean.  The element content is of type BOOLEAN.      2.   byte.  The element content is of type BYTE.      3.   character.  The element content is of type CHARACTER.      4.   date-time.  The element content is of type DATETIME.      5.   integer.  The element content is of type INTEGER.      6.   portlist.  The element content is of type PORTLIST.      7.   real.  The element content is of type REAL.      8.   string.  The element content is of type STRING.      9.   file.  The element content is a base64 encoded binary file           encoded as a BYTE[] type.      10.  frame.  The element content is a layer-2 frame encoded as a           HEXBIN type.      11.  packet.  The element content is a layer-3 packet encoded as a           HEXBIN type.      12.  ipv4-packet.  The element content is an IPv4 packet encoded           as a HEXBIN type.      13.  ipv6-packet.  The element content is an IPv6 packet encoded           as a HEXBIN type.      14.  path.  The element content is a file-system path encoded as a           STRING type.      15.  url.  The element content is of type URL.      16.  csv.  The element content is a common separated value (CSV)           list per Section 2 of [20] encoded as a STRING type.      17.  winreg.  The element content is a Windows registry key           encoded as a STRING type.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007      18.  xml.  The element content is XML (seeSection 5).      19.  ext-value.  An escape value used to extend this attribute.           SeeSection 5.1.   ext-dtype      Optional.  STRING.  A means by which to extend the dtype      attribute.  SeeSection 5.1.   meaning      Optional.  STRING.  A free-form description of the element      content.   formatid      Optional.  STRING.  An identifier referencing the format and      semantics of the element content.   restriction      Optional.  ENUM.  This attribute has been defined inSection 3.2.3.7.  Contact Class   The Contact class describes contact information for organizations and   personnel involved in the incident.  This class allows for the naming   of the involved party, specifying contact information for them, and   identifying their role in the incident.   People and organizations are treated interchangeably as contacts; one   can be associated with the other using the recursive definition of   the class (the Contact class is aggregated into the Contact class).   The 'type' attribute disambiguates the type of contact information   being provided.   The inheriting definition of Contact provides a way to relate   information without requiring the explicit use of identifiers in the   classes or duplication of data.  A complete point of contact is   derived by a particular traversal from the root Contact class to the   leaf Contact class.  As such, multiple points of contact might be   specified in a single instance of a Contact class.  Each child   Contact class logically inherits contact information from its   ancestors.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   +------------------+   | Contact          |   +------------------+   | ENUM role        |<>--{0..1}--[ ContactName    ]   | STRING ext-role  |<>--{0..*}--[ Description    ]   | ENUM type        |<>--{0..*}--[ RegistryHandle ]   | STRING ext-type  |<>--{0..1}--[ PostalAddress  ]   | ENUM restriction |<>--{0..*}--[ Email          ]   |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ Telephone      ]   |                  |<>--{0..1}--[ Fax            ]   |                  |<>--{0..1}--[ Timezone       ]   |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ Contact        ]   |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ AdditionalData ]   +------------------+                        Figure 7: The Contact Class   The aggregate classes that constitute the Contact class are:   ContactName      Zero or one.  ML_STRING.  The name of the contact.  The contact      may either be an organization or a person.  The type attribute      disambiguates the semantics.   Description      Zero or many.  ML_STRING.  A free-form description of this      contact.  In the case of a person, this is often the      organizational title of the individual.   RegistryHandle      Zero or many.  A handle name into the registry of the contact.   PostalAddress      Zero or one.  The postal address of the contact.   Email      Zero or many.  The email address of the contact.   Telephone      Zero or many.  The telephone number of the contact.   Fax      Zero or one.  The facsimile telephone number of the contact.   Timezone      Zero or one.  TIMEZONE.  The timezone in which the contact resides      formatted according toSection 2.9.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   Contact      Zero or many.  A Contact instance contained within another Contact      instance inherits the values of the parent(s).  This recursive      definition can be used to group common data pertaining to multiple      points of contact and is especially useful when listing multiple      contacts at the same organization.   AdditionalData      Zero or many.  A mechanism by which to extend the data model.   At least one of the aggregate classes MUST be present in an instance   of the Contact class.  This is not enforced in the IODEF schema as   there is no simple way to accomplish it.   The Contact class has five attributes:   role      Required.  ENUM.  Indicates the role the contact fulfills.  This      attribute is defined as an enumerated list:      1.  creator.  The entity that generate the document.      2.  admin.  An administrative contact for a host or network.      3.  tech.  A technical contact for a host or network.      4.  irt.  The CSIRT involved in handling the incident.      5.  cc.  An entity that is to be kept informed about the handling          of the incident.      6.  ext-value.  An escape value used to extend this attribute.          SeeSection 5.1.   ext-role      Optional.  STRING.  A means by which to extend the role attribute.      SeeSection 5.1.   type      Required.  ENUM.  Indicates the type of contact being described.      This attribute is defined as an enumerated list:      1.  person.  The information for this contact references an          individual.      2.  organization.  The information for this contact references an          organization.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007      3.  ext-value.  An escape value used to extend this attribute.          SeeSection 5.1.   ext-type      Optional.  STRING.  A means by which to extend the type attribute.      SeeSection 5.1.   restriction      Optional.  ENUM.  This attribute is defined inSection 3.2.3.7.1.  RegistryHandle Class   The RegistryHandle class represents a handle into an Internet   registry or community-specific database.  The handle is specified in   the element content and the type attribute specifies the database.   +---------------------+   | RegistryHandle      |   +---------------------+   | STRING              |   |                     |   | ENUM registry       |   | STRING ext-registry |   +---------------------+                    Figure 8: The RegistryHandle Class   The RegistryHandle class has two attributes:   registry      Required.  ENUM.  The database to which the handle belongs.  The      default value is 'local'.  The possible values are:      1.  internic.  Internet Network Information Center      2.  apnic.  Asia Pacific Network Information Center      3.  arin.  American Registry for Internet Numbers      4.  lacnic.  Latin-American and Caribbean IP Address Registry      5.  ripe.  Reseaux IP Europeens      6.  afrinic.  African Internet Numbers Registry      7.  local.  A database local to the CSIRTDanyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007      8.  ext-value.  An escape value used to extend this attribute.          SeeSection 5.1.   ext-registry      Optional.  STRING.  A means by which to extend the registry      attribute.  SeeSection 5.1.3.7.2.  PostalAddress Class   The PostalAddress class specifies a postal address formatted   according to the POSTAL data type (Section 2.11).   +---------------------+   | PostalAddress       |   +---------------------+   | POSTAL              |   |                     |   | ENUM meaning        |   | ENUM lang           |   +---------------------+                     Figure 9: The PostalAddress Class   The PostalAddress class has two attributes:   meaning      Optional.  ENUM.  A free-form description of the element content.   lang      Required.  ENUM.  A valid language code perRFC 4646 [7]      constrained by the definition of "xs:language".  The      interpretation of this code is described inSection 6.3.7.3.  Email Class   The Email class specifies an email address formatted according to   EMAIL data type (Section 2.14).   +--------------+   | Email        |   +--------------+   | EMAIL        |   |              |   | ENUM meaning |   +--------------+                        Figure 10: The Email ClassDanyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   The Email class has one attribute:   meaning      Optional.  ENUM.  A free-form description of the element content.3.7.4.  Telephone and Fax Classes   The Telephone and Fax classes specify a voice or fax telephone number   respectively, and are formatted according to PHONE data type   (Section 2.13).   +--------------------+   | {Telephone | Fax } |   +--------------------+   | PHONE              |   |                    |   | ENUM meaning       |   +--------------------+                 Figure 11: The Telephone and Fax Classes   The Telephone class has one attribute:   meaning      Optional.  ENUM.  A free-form description of the element content      (e.g., hours of coverage for a given number).3.8.  Time Classes   The data model uses five different classes to represent a timestamp.   Their definition is identical, but each has a distinct name to convey   a difference in semantics.   The element content of each class is a timestamp formatted according   to the DATETIME data type (seeSection 2.8).   +----------------------------------+   | {Start| End| Report| Detect}Time |   +----------------------------------+   | DATETIME                         |   +----------------------------------+                        Figure 12: The Time ClassesDanyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 20073.8.1.  StartTime   The StartTime class represents the time the incident began.3.8.2.  EndTime   The EndTime class represents the time the incident ended.3.8.3.  DetectTime   The DetectTime class represents the time the first activity of the   incident was detected.3.8.4.  ReportTime   The ReportTime class represents the time the incident was reported.   This timestamp SHOULD coincide to the time at which the IODEF   document is generated.3.8.5.  DateTime   The DateTime class is a generic representation of a timestamp.  Its   semantics should be inferred from the parent class in which it is   aggregated.3.9.  Method Class   The Method class describes the methodology used by the intruder to   perpetrate the events of the incident.  This class consists of a list   of references describing the attack method and a free form   description of the technique.   +------------------+   | Method           |   +------------------+   | ENUM restriction |<>--{0..*}--[ Reference      ]   |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ Description    ]   |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ AdditionalData ]   +------------------+                        Figure 13: The Method Class   The Method class is composed of three aggregate classes.   Reference      Zero or many.  A reference to a vulnerability, malware sample,      advisory, or analysis of an attack technique.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   Description      Zero or many.  ML_STRING.  A free-form text description of the      methodology used by the intruder.   AdditionalData      Zero or many.  A mechanism by which to extend the data model.   Either an instance of the Reference or Description class MUST be   present.   The Method class has one attribute:   restriction      Optional.  ENUM.  This attribute is defined inSection 3.2.3.9.1.  Reference Class   The Reference class is a reference to a vulnerability, IDS alert,   malware sample, advisory, or attack technique.  A reference consists   of a name, a URL to this reference, and an optional description.   +------------------+   | Reference        |   +------------------+   |                  |<>----------[ ReferenceName ]   |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ URL           ]   |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ Description   ]   +------------------+                      Figure 14: The Reference Class   The aggregate classes that constitute Reference:   ReferenceName      One. ML_STRING.  Name of the reference.   URL      Zero or many.  URL.  A URL associated with the reference.   Description      Zero or many.  ML_STRING.  A free-form text description of this      reference.3.10.  Assessment Class   The Assessment class describes the technical and non-technical   repercussions of the incident on the CSIRT's constituency.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   This class was derived from the IDMEF[17].    +------------------+    | Assessment       |    +------------------+    | ENUM occurrence  |<>--{0..*}--[ Impact         ]    | ENUM restriction |<>--{0..*}--[ TimeImpact     ]    |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ MonetaryImpact ]    |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ Counter        ]    |                  |<>--{0..1}--[ Confidence     ]    |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ AdditionalData ]    +------------------+                        Figure 15: Assessment Class   The aggregate classes that constitute Assessment are:   Impact      Zero or many.  Technical impact of the incident on a network.   TimeImpact      Zero or many.  Impact of the activity measured with respect to      time.   MonetaryImpact      Zero or many.  Impact of the activity measured with respect to      financial loss.   Counter      Zero or more.  A counter with which to summarize the magnitude of      the activity.   Confidence      Zero or one.  An estimate of confidence in the assessment.   AdditionalData      Zero or many.  A mechanism by which to extend the data model.   A least one instance of the possible three impact classes (i.e.,   Impact, TimeImpact, or MonetaryImpact) MUST be present.   The Assessment class has two attributes:   occurrence      Optional.  ENUM.  Specifies whether the assessment is describing      actual or potential outcomes.  The default is "actual" and is      assumed if not specified.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007      1.  actual.  This assessment describes activity that has occurred.      2.  potential.  This assessment describes potential activity that          might occur.   restriction      Optional.  ENUM.  This attribute is defined inSection 3.2.3.10.1.  Impact Class   The Impact class allows for categorizing and describing the technical   impact of the incident on the network of an organization.   This class is based on the IDMEF [17].   +------------------+   | Impact           |   +------------------+   | ML_STRING        |   |                  |   | ENUM lang        |   | ENUM severity    |   | ENUM completion  |   | ENUM type        |   | STRING ext-type  |   +------------------+                          Figure 16: Impact Class   The element content will be a free-form textual description of the   impact.   The Impact class has five attributes:   lang      Required.  ENUM.  A valid language code perRFC 4646 [7]      constrained by the definition of "xs:language".  The      interpretation of this code is described inSection 6.   severity      Optional.  ENUM.  An estimate of the relative severity of the      activity.  The permitted values are shown below.  There is no      default value.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 27]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007      1.  low.  Low severity      2.  medium.  Medium severity      3.  high.  High severity   completion      Optional.  ENUM.  An indication whether the described activity was      successful.  The permitted values are shown below.  There is no      default value.      1.  failed.  The attempted activity was not successful.      2.  succeeded.  The attempted activity succeeded.   type      Required.  ENUM.  Classifies the malicious activity into incident      categories.  The permitted values are shown below.  The default      value is "other".      1.   admin.  Administrative privileges were attempted.      2.   dos.  A denial of service was attempted.      3.   file.  An action that impacts the integrity of a file or           database was attempted.      4.   info-leak.  An attempt was made to exfiltrate information.      5.   misconfiguration.  An attempt was made to exploit a mis-           configuration in a system.      6.   policy.  Activity violating site's policy was attempted.      7.   recon.  Reconnaissance activity was attempted.      8.   social-engineering.  A social engineering attack was           attempted.      9.   user.  User privileges were attempted.      10.  unknown.  The classification of this activity is unknown.      11.  ext-value.  An escape value used to extend this attribute.           SeeSection 5.1.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 28]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   ext-type      Optional.  STRING.  A means by which to extend the type attribute.      SeeSection 5.1.3.10.2.  TimeImpact Class   The TimeImpact class describes the impact of the incident on an   organization as a function of time.  It provides a way to convey down   time and recovery time.         +---------------------+         | TimeImpact          |         +---------------------+         | REAL                |         |                     |         | ENUM severity       |         | ENUM metric         |         | STRING ext-metric   |         | ENUM duration       |         | STRING ext-duration |         +---------------------+                        Figure 17: TimeImpact Class   The element content is a positive, floating point (REAL) number   specifying a unit of time.  The duration and metric attributes will   imply the semantics of the element content.   The TimeImpact class has five attributes:   severity      Optional.  ENUM.  An estimate of the relative severity of the      activity.  The permitted values are shown below.  There is no      default value.      1.  low.  Low severity      2.  medium.  Medium severity      3.  high.  High severity   metric      Required.  ENUM.  Defines the metric in which the time is      expressed.  The permitted values are shown below.  There is no      default value.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 29]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007      1.  labor.  Total staff-time to recovery from the activity (e.g.,          2 employees working 4 hours each would be 8 hours).      2.  elapsed.  Elapsed time from the beginning of the recovery to          its completion (i.e., wall-clock time).      3.  downtime.  Duration of time for which some provided service(s)          was not available.      4.  ext-value.  An escape value used to extend this attribute.          SeeSection 5.1.   ext-metric      Optional.  STRING.  A means by which to extend the metric      attribute.  SeeSection 5.1.   duration      Required.  ENUM.  Defines a unit of time, that when combined with      the metric attribute, fully describes a metric of impact that will      be conveyed in the element content.  The permitted values are      shown below.  The default value is "hour".      1.  second.  The unit of the element content is seconds.      2.  minute.  The unit of the element content is minutes.      3.  hour.  The unit of the element content is hours.      4.  day.  The unit of the element content is days.      5.  month.  The unit of the element content is months.      6.  quarter.  The unit of the element content is quarters.      7.  year.  The unit of the element content is years.      8.  ext-value.  An escape value used to extend this attribute.          SeeSection 5.1.   ext-duration      Optional.  STRING.  A means by which to extend the duration      attribute.  SeeSection 5.1.3.10.3.  MonetaryImpact Class   The MonetaryImpact class describes the financial impact of the   activity on an organization.  For example, this impact may consider   losses due to the cost of the investigation or recovery, diminishedDanyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 30]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   productivity of the staff, or a tarnished reputation that will affect   future opportunities.         +------------------+         | MonetaryImpact   |         +------------------+         | REAL             |         |                  |         | ENUM severity    |         | STRING currency  |         +------------------+                      Figure 18: MonetaryImpact Class   The element content is a positive, floating point number (REAL)   specifying a unit of currency described in the currency attribute.   The MonetaryImpact class has two attributes:   severity      Optional.  ENUM.  An estimate of the relative severity of the      activity.  The permitted values are shown below.  There is no      default value.      1.  low.  Low severity      2.  medium.  Medium severity      3.  high.  High severity   currency      Required.  STRING.  Defines the currency in which the monetary      impact is expressed.  The permitted values are defined in ISO      4217:2001, Codes for the representation of currencies and funds      [14].  There is no default value.3.10.4.  Confidence Class   The Confidence class represents a best estimate of the validity and   accuracy of the described impact (seeSection 3.10) of the incident   activity.  This estimate can be expressed as a category or a numeric   calculation.   This class if based upon the IDMEF [17]).Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 31]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007         +------------------+         | Confidence       |         +------------------+         | REAL             |         |                  |         | ENUM rating      |         +------------------+                        Figure 19: Confidence Class   The element content expresses a numerical assessment in the   confidence of the data when the value of the rating attribute is   "numeric".  Otherwise, this element should be empty.   The Confidence class has one attribute.   rating      Required.  ENUM.  A rating of the analytical validity of the      specified Assessment.  The permitted values are shown below.      There is no default value.      1.  low.  Low confidence in the validity.      2.  medium.  Medium confidence in the validity.      3.  high.  High confidence in the validity.      4.  numeric.  The element content contains a number that conveys          the confidence of the data.  The semantics of this number          outside the scope of this specification.3.11.  History Class   The History class is a log of the significant events or actions   performed by the involved parties during the course of handling the   incident.   The level of detail maintained in this log is left up to the   discretion of those handling the incident.   +------------------+   | History          |   +------------------+   | ENUM restriction |<>--{1..*}--[ HistoryItem ]   |                  |   +------------------+Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 32]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007                       Figure 20: The History Class   The class that constitutes History is:   HistoryItem      One or many.  Entry in the history log of significant events or      actions performed by the involved parties.   The History class has one attribute:   restriction      Optional.  ENUM.  This attribute is defined inSection 3.2.3.11.1.  HistoryItem Class   The HistoryItem class is an entry in the History (Section 3.11) log   that documents a particular action or event that occurred in the   course of handling the incident.  The details of the entry are a   free-form description, but each can be categorized with the type   attribute.   +-------------------+   | HistoryItem       |   +-------------------+   | ENUM restriction  |<>----------[ DateTime       ]   | ENUM action       |<>--{0..1}--[ IncidentId     ]   | STRING ext-action |<>--{0..1}--[ Contact        ]   |                   |<>--{0..*}--[ Description    ]   |                   |<>--{0..*}--[ AdditionalData ]   +-------------------+                       Figure 21: HistoryItem Class   The aggregate classes that constitute HistoryItem are:   DateTime      One. Timestamp of this entry in the history log (e.g., when the      action described in the Description was taken).   IncidentID      Zero or One. In a history log created by multiple parties, the      IncidentID provides a mechanism to specify which CSIRT created a      particular entry and references this organization's incident      tracking number.  When a single organization is maintaining the      log, this class can be ignored.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 33]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   Contact      Zero or One. Provides contact information for the person that      performed the action documented in this class.   Description      Zero or many.  ML_STRING.  A free-form textual description of the      action or event.   AdditionalData      Zero or many.  A mechanism by which to extend the data model.   The HistoryItem class has three attributes:   restriction      Optional.  ENUM.  This attribute has been defined inSection 3.2.   action      Required.  ENUM.  Classifies a performed action or occurrence      documented in this history log entry.  As activity will likely      have been instigated either through a previously conveyed      expectation or internal investigation, this attribute is identical      to the category attribute of the Expectation class.  The      difference is only one of tense.  When an action is in this class,      it has been completed.  SeeSection 3.13.   ext-action      Optional.  STRING.  A means by which to extend the action      attribute.  SeeSection 5.1.3.12.  EventData Class   The EventData class describes a particular event of the incident for   a given set of hosts or networks.  This description includes the   systems from which the activity originated and those targeted, an   assessment of the techniques used by the intruder, the impact of the   activity on the organization, and any forensic evidence discovered.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 34]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   +------------------+   | EventData        |   +------------------+   | ENUM restriction |<>--{0..*}--[ Description    ]   |                  |<>--{0..1}--[ DetectTime     ]   |                  |<>--{0..1}--[ StartTime      ]   |                  |<>--{0..1}--[ EndTime        ]   |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ Contact        ]   |                  |<>--{0..1}--[ Assessment     ]   |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ Method         ]   |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ Flow           ]   |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ Expectation    ]   |                  |<>--{0..1}--[ Record         ]   |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ EventData      ]   |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ AdditionalData ]   +------------------+                      Figure 22: The EventData Class   The aggregate classes that constitute EventData are:   Description      Zero or more.  ML_STRING.  A free-form textual description of the      event.   DetectTime      Zero or one.  The time the event was detected.   StartTime      Zero or one.  The time the event started.   EndTime      Zero or one.  The time the event ended.   Contact      Zero or more.  Contact information for the parties involved in the      event.   Assessment      Zero or one.  The impact of the event on the target and the      actions taken.   Method      Zero or more.  The technique used by the intruder in the event.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 35]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   Flow      Zero or more.  A description of the systems or networks involved.   Expectation      Zero or more.  The expected action to be performed by the      recipient for the described event.   Record      Zero or one.  Supportive data (e.g., log files) that provides      additional information about the event.   EventData      Zero or more.  EventData instances contained within another      EventData instance inherit the values of the parent(s); this      recursive definition can be used to group common data pertaining      to multiple events.  When EventData elements are defined      recursively, only the leaf instances (those EventData instances      not containing other EventData instances) represent actual events.   AdditionalData      Zero or more.  An extension mechanism for data not explicitly      represented in the data model.   At least one of the aggregate classes MUST be present in an instance   of the EventData class.  This is not enforced in the IODEF schema as   there is no simple way to accomplish it.   The EventData class has one attribute:   restriction      Optional.  ENUM.  This attribute is defined inSection 3.2.3.12.1.  Relating the Incident and EventData Classes   There is substantial overlap in the Incident and EventData classes.   Nevertheless, the semantics of these classes are quite different.   The Incident class provides summary information about the entire   incident, while the EventData class provides information about the   individual events comprising the incident.  In the most common case,   the EventData class will provide more specific information for the   general description provided in the Incident class.  However, it may   also be possible that the overall summarized information about the   incident conflicts with some individual information in an EventData   class when there is a substantial composition of various events in   the incident.  In such a case, the interpretation of the more   specific EventData MUST supersede the more generic information   provided in IncidentData.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 36]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 20073.12.2.  Cardinality of EventData   The EventData class can be thought of as a container for the   properties of an event in an incident.  These properties include: the   hosts involved, impact of the incident activity on the hosts,   forensic logs, etc.  With an instance of the EventData class, hosts   (i.e., System class) are grouped around these common properties.   The recursive definition (or instance property inheritance) of the   EventData class (the EventData class is aggregated into the EventData   class) provides a way to related information without requiring the   explicit use of unique attribute identifiers in the classes or   duplicating information.  Instead, the relative depth (nesting) of a   class is used to group (relate) information.   For example, an EventData class might be used to describe two   machines involved in an incident.  This description can be achieved   using multiple instances of the Flow class.  It happens that there is   a common technical contact (i.e., Contact class) for these two   machines, but the impact (i.e., Assessment class) on them is   different.  A depiction of the representation for this situation can   be found in Figure 23.   +------------------+   | EventData        |   +------------------+   |                  |<>----[ Contact    ]   |                  |   |                  |<>----[ EventData  ]<>----[ Flow     ]   |                  |      [            ]<>----[ Assessment ]   |                  |   |                  |<>----[ EventData  ]<>----[ Flow     ]   |                  |      [            ]<>----[ Assessment ]   +------------------+                Figure 23: Recursion in the EventData Class3.13.  Expectation Class   The Expectation class conveys to the recipient of the IODEF document   the actions the sender is requesting.  The scope of the requested   action is limited to purview of the EventData class in which this   class is aggregated.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 37]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   +-------------------+   | Expectation       |   +-------------------+   | ENUM restriction  |<>--{0..*}--[ Description ]   | ENUM severity     |<>--{0..1}--[ StartTime   ]   | ENUM action       |<>--{0..1}--[ EndTime     ]   | STRING ext-action |<>--{0..1}--[ Contact     ]   +-------------------+                     Figure 24: The Expectation Class   The aggregate classes that constitute Expectation are:   Description      Zero or many.  ML_STRING.  A free-form description of the desired      action(s).   StartTime      Zero or one.  The time at which the action should be performed.  A      timestamp that is earlier than the ReportTime specified in the      Incident class denotes that the expectation should be fulfilled as      soon as possible.  The absence of this element leaves the      execution of the expectation to the discretion of the recipient.   EndTime      Zero or one.  The time by which the action should be completed.      If the action is not carried out by this time, it should no longer      be performed.   Contact      Zero or one.  The expected actor for the action.   The Expectations class has four attributes:   restriction      Optional.  ENUM.  This attribute is defined inSection 3.2.   severity      Optional.  ENUM.  Indicates the desired priority of the action.      This attribute is an enumerated list with no default value, and      the semantics of these relative measures are context dependent.      1.  low.  Low priority      2.  medium.  Medium priority      3.  high.  High priorityDanyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 38]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   action      Optional.  ENUM.  Classifies the type of action requested.  This      attribute is an enumerated list with no default value.      1.   nothing.  No action is requested.  Do nothing with the           information.      2.   contact-source-site.  Contact the site(s) identified as the           source of the activity.      3.   contact-target-site.  Contact the site(s) identified as the           target of the activity.      4.   contact-sender.  Contact the originator of the document.      5.   investigate.  Investigate the systems(s) listed in the event.      6.   block-host.  Block traffic from the machine(s) listed as           sources the event.      7.   block-network.  Block traffic from the network(s) lists as           sources in the event.      8.   block-port.  Block the port listed as sources in the event.      9.   rate-limit-host.  Rate-limit the traffic from the machine(s)           listed as sources in the event.      10.  rate-limit-network.  Rate-limit the traffic from the           network(s) lists as sources in the event.      11.  rate-limit-port.  Rate-limit the port(s) listed as sources in           the event.      12.  remediate-other.  Remediate the activity in a way other than           by rate limiting or blocking.      13.  status-triage.  Conveys receipts and the triaging of an           incident.      14.  status-new-info.  Conveys that new information was received           for this incident.      15.  other.  Perform some custom action described in the           Description class.      16.  ext-value.  An escape value used to extend this attribute.           SeeSection 5.1.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 39]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   ext-action      Optional.  STRING.  A means by which to extend the action      attribute.  SeeSection 5.1.3.14.  Flow Class   The Flow class groups related the source and target hosts.   +------------------+   | Flow             |   +------------------+   |                  |<>--{1..*}--[ System   ]   +------------------+                         Figure 25: The Flow Class   The aggregate class that constitutes Flow is:   System      One or More.  A host or network involved in an event.   The Flow System class has no attributes.3.15.  System Class   The System class describes a system or network involved in an event.   The systems or networks represented by this class are categorized   according to the role they played in the incident through the   category attribute.  The value of this category attribute dictates   the semantics of the aggregated classes in the System class.  If the   category attribute has a value of "source", then the aggregated   classes denote the machine and service from which the activity is   originating.  With a category attribute value of "target" or   "intermediary", then the machine or service is the one targeted in   the activity.  A value of "sensor" dictates that this System was part   of an instrumentation to monitor the network.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 40]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   +---------------------+   | System              |   +---------------------+   | ENUM restriction    |<>----------[ Node            ]   | ENUM category       |<>--{0..*}--[ Service         ]   | STRING ext-category |<>--{0..*}--[ OperatingSystem ]   | STRING interface    |<>--{0..*}--[ Counter         ]   | ENUM spoofed        |<>--{0..*}--[ Description     ]   |                     |<>--{0..*}--[ AdditionalData  ]   +---------------------+                        Figure 26: The System Class   The aggregate classes that constitute System are:   Node      One. A host or network involved in the incident.   Service      Zero or more.  A network service running on the system.   OperatingSystem      Zero or one.  The operating system running on the system.   Counter      Zero or more.  A counter with which to summarize properties of      this host or network.   Description      Zero or more.  ML_STRING.  A free-form text description of the      System.   AdditionalData      Zero or many.  A mechanism by which to extend the data model.   The System class has five attributes:   restriction      Optional.  ENUM.  This attribute is defined inSection 3.2.   category      Required.  ENUM.  Classifies the role the host or network played      in the incident.  The possible values are:      1.  source.  The System was the source of the event.      2.  target.  The System was the target of the event.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 41]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007      3.  intermediate.  The System was an intermediary in the event.      4.  sensor.  The System was a sensor monitoring the event.      5.  infrastructure.  The System was an infrastructure node of          IODEF document exchange.      6.  ext-value.  An escape value used to extend this attribute.          SeeSection 5.1.   ext-category      Optional.  STRING.  A means by which to extend the category      attribute.  SeeSection 5.1.   interface      Optional.  STRING.  Specifies the interface on which the event(s)      on this System originated.  If the Node class specifies a network      rather than a host, this attribute has no meaning.   spoofed      Optional.  ENUM.  An indication of confidence in whether this      System was the true target or attacking host.  The permitted      values for this attribute are shown below.  The default value is      "unknown".      1.  unknown.  The accuracy of the category attribute value is          unknown.      2.  yes.  The category attribute value is probably incorrect.  In          the case of a source, the System is likely a decoy; with a          target, the System was likely not the intended victim.      3.  no.  The category attribute value is believed to be correct.3.16.  Node Class   The Node class names a system (e.g., PC, router) or network.   This class was derived from the IDMEF [17].Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 42]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   +---------------+   | Node          |   +---------------+   |               |<>--{0..*}--[ NodeName ]   |               |<>--{0..*}--[ Address  ]   |               |<>--{0..1}--[ Location ]   |               |<>--{0..1}--[ DateTime ]   |               |<>--{0..*}--[ NodeRole ]   |               |<>--{0..*}--[ Counter  ]   +---------------+                         Figure 27: The Node Class   The aggregate classes that constitute Node are:   NodeName      Zero or more.  ML_STRING.  The name of the Node (e.g., fully      qualified domain name).  This information MUST be provided if no      Address information is given.   Address      Zero or more.  The hardware, network, or application address of      the Node.  If a NodeName is not provided, at least one Address      MUST be specified.   Location      Zero or one.  ML_STRING.  A free-from description of the physical      location of the equipment.   DateTime      Zero or one.  A timestamp of when the resolution between the name      and address was performed.  This information SHOULD be provided if      both an Address and NodeName are specified.   NodeRole      Zero or more.  The intended purpose of the Node.   Counter      Zero or more.  A counter with which to summarizes properties of      this host or network.3.16.1.  Counter Class   The Counter class summarize multiple occurrences of some event, or   conveys counts or rates on various features (e.g., packets, sessions,   events).Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 43]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   The value of the counter is the element content with its units   represented in the type attribute.  A rate for a given feature can be   expressed by setting the duration attribute.  The complete semantics   are entirely context dependent based on the class in which the   Counter is aggregated.   +---------------------+   | Counter             |   +---------------------+   | REAL                |   |                     |   | ENUM type           |   | STRING ext-type     |   | STRING meaning      |   | ENUM duration       |   | STRING ext-duration |   +---------------------+                       Figure 28: The Counter Class   The Counter class has three attribute:   type      Required.  ENUM.  Specifies the units of the element content.      1.   byte.  Count of bytes.      2.   packet.  Count of packets.      3.   flow.  Count of flow (e.g., NetFlow records).      4.   session.  Count of sessions.      5.   alert.  Count of notifications generated by another system           (e.g., IDS or SIM).      6.   message.  Count of messages (e.g., mail messages).      7.   event.  Count of events.      8.   host.  Count of hosts.      9.   site.  Count of site.      10.  organization.  Count of organizations.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 44]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007      11.  ext-value.  An escape value used to extend this attribute.           SeeSection 5.1.   ext-type      Optional.  STRING.  A means by which to extend the type attribute.      SeeSection 5.1.   duration      Optional.  ENUM.  If present, the Counter class represents a rate      rather than a count over the entire event.  In that case, this      attribute specifies the denominator of the rate (where the type      attribute specified the nominator).  The possible values of this      attribute are defined inSection 3.10.2   ext-duration      Optional.  STRING.  A means by which to extend the duration      attribute.  SeeSection 5.1.3.16.2.  Address Class   The Address class represents a hardware (layer-2), network (layer-3),   or application (layer-7) address.   This class was derived from the IDMEF [17].   +---------------------+   | Address             |   +---------------------+   | ENUM category       |   | STRING ext-category |   | STRING vlan-name    |   | INTEGER vlan-num    |   +---------------------+                       Figure 29: The Address Class   The Address class has four attributes:   category      Required.  ENUM.  The type of address represented.  The permitted      values for this attribute are shown below.  The default value is      "ipv4-addr".      1.   asn.  Autonomous System Number      2.   atm.  Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) addressDanyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 45]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007      3.   e-mail.  Electronic mail address (RFC 822)      4.   ipv4-addr.  IPv4 host address in dotted-decimal notation           (a.b.c.d)      5.   ipv4-net.  IPv4 network address in dotted-decimal notation,           slash, significant bits (a.b.c.d/nn)      6.   ipv4-net-mask.  IPv4 network address in dotted-decimal           notation, slash, network mask in dotted-decimal notation           (a.b.c.d/w.x.y.z)      7.   ipv6-addr.  IPv6 host address      8.   ipv6-net.  IPv6 network address, slash, significant bits      9.   ipv6-net-mask.  IPv6 network address, slash, network mask      10.  mac.  Media Access Control (MAC) address      11.  ext-value.  An escape value used to extend this attribute.           SeeSection 5.1.   ext-category      Optional.  STRING.  A means by which to extend the category      attribute.  SeeSection 5.1.   vlan-name      Optional.  STRING.  The name of the Virtual LAN to which the      address belongs.   vlan-num      Optional.  STRING.  The number of the Virtual LAN to which the      address belongs.3.16.3.  NodeRole Class   The NodeRole class describes the intended function performed by a   particular host.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 46]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007         +---------------------+         | NodeRole            |         +---------------------+         | ENUM category       |         | STRING ext-category |         | ENUM lang           |         +---------------------+                       Figure 30: The NodeRole Class   The NodeRole class has three attributes:   category      Required.  ENUM.  Functionality provided by a node.      1.   client.  Client computer      2.   server-internal.  Server with internal services      3.   server-public.  Server with public services      4.   www.  WWW server      5.   mail.  Mail server      6.   messaging.  Messaging server (e.g., NNTP, IRC, IM)      7.   streaming.  Streaming-media server      8.   voice.  Voice server (e.g., SIP, H.323)      9.   file.  File server (e.g., SMB, CVS, AFS)      10.  ftp.  FTP server      11.  p2p.  Peer-to-peer node      12.  name.  Name server (e.g., DNS, WINS)      13.  directory.  Directory server (e.g., LDAP, finger, whois)      14.  credential.  Credential server (e.g., domain controller,           Kerberos)      15.  print.  Print server      16.  application.  Application serverDanyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 47]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007      17.  database.  Database server      18.  infra.  Infrastructure server (e.g., router, firewall, DHCP)      19.  log.  Logserver (e.g., syslog)      20.  ext-value.  An escape value used to extend this attribute.           SeeSection 5.1.   ext-category      Optional.  STRING.  A means by which to extend the category      attribute.  SeeSection 5.1.   lang      Required.  ENUM.  A valid language code perRFC 4646 [7]      constrained by the definition of "xs:language".  The      interpretation of this code is described inSection 6.3.17.  Service Class   The Service class describes a network service of a host or network.   The service is identified by specific port or list of ports, along   with the application listening on that port.   When Service occurs as an aggregate class of a System that is a   source, then this service is the one from which activity of interest   is originating.  Conversely, when Service occurs as an aggregate   class of a System that is a target, then that service is the one to   which activity of interest is directed.   This class was derived from the IDMEF [17].   +---------------------+   | Service             |   +---------------------+   | INTEGER ip_protocol |<>--{0..1}--[ Port        ]   |                     |<>--{0..1}--[ Portlist    ]   |                     |<>--{0..1}--[ ProtoCode   ]   |                     |<>--{0..1}--[ ProtoType   ]   |                     |<>--{0..1}--[ ProtoFlags  ]   |                     |<>--{0..1}--[ Application ]   +---------------------+                       Figure 31: The Service Class   The aggregate classes that constitute Service are:Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 48]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   Port      Zero or one.  INTEGER.  A port number.   Portlist      Zero or one.  PORTLIST.  A list of port numbers formatted      according toSection 2.10.   ProtoCode      Zero or one.  INTEGER.  A layer-4 protocol-specific code field      (e.g., ICMP code field).   ProtoType      Zero or one.  INTEGER.  A layer-4 protocol specific type field      (e.g., ICMP type field).   ProtoFlags      Zero or one.  INTEGER.  A layer-4 protocol specific flag field      (e.g., TCP flag field).   Application      Zero or more.  The application bound to the specified Port or      Portlist.   Either a Port or Portlist class MUST be specified for a given   instance of a Service class.   For a given source, System@type="source", a corresponding target,   System@type="target", maybe defined, or vice versa.  When a Portlist   class is defined in the Service class of both the source and target   in a given instance of the Flow class, there MUST be symmetry in the   enumeration of the ports.  Thus, if n-ports are listed for a source,   n-ports should be listed for the target.  Likewise, the ports should   be listed in an identical sequence such that the n-th port in the   source corresponds to the n-th port of the target.  This symmetry in   listing and sequencing of ports applies whether there are 1-to-1,   1-to-many, or many-to-many sources-to-targets.  In the 1-to-many or   many-to-many, the exact order in which the System classes are   enumerated in the Flow class is significant.   The Service class has one attribute:   ip_protocol      Required.  INTEGER.  The IANA protocol number.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 49]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 20073.17.1.  Application Class   The Application class describes an application running on a System   providing a Service.   +--------------------+   | Application        |   +--------------------+   | STRING swid        |<>--{0..1}--[ URL        ]   | STRING configid    |   | STRING vendor      |   | STRING family      |   | STRING name        |   | STRING version     |   | STRING patch       |   +--------------------+                     Figure 32: The Application Class   The aggregate class that constitutes Application is:   URL      Zero or one.  URL.  A URL describing the application.   The Application class has seven attributes:   swid      Optional.  STRING.  An identifier that can be used to reference      this software.   configid      Optional.  STRING.  An identifier that can be used to reference a      particular configuration of this software.   vendor      Optional.  STRING.  Vendor name of the software.   family      Optional.  STRING.  Family of the software.   name      Optional.  STRING.  Name of the software.   version      Optional.  STRING.  Version of the software.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 50]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   patch      Optional.  STRING.  Patch or service pack level of the software.3.18.  OperatingSystem Class   The OperatingSystem class describes the operating system running on a   System.  The definition is identical to the Application class   (Section 3.17.1).3.19.  Record Class   The Record class is a container class for log and audit data that   provides supportive information about the incident.  The source of   this data will often be the output of monitoring tools.  These logs   should substantiate the activity described in the document.   +------------------+   | Record           |   +------------------+   | ENUM restriction |<>--{1..*}--[ RecordData ]   +------------------+                          Figure 33: Record Class   The aggregate class that constitutes Record is:   RecordData      One or more.  Log or audit data generated by a particular type of      sensor.  Separate instances of the RecordData class SHOULD be used      for each sensor type.   The Record class has one attribute:   restriction      Optional.  ENUM.  This attribute has been defined inSection 3.2.3.19.1.  RecordData Class   The RecordData class groups log or audit data from a given sensor   (e.g., IDS, firewall log) and provides a way to annotate the output.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 51]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   +------------------+   | RecordData       |   +------------------+   | ENUM restriction |<>--{0..1}--[ DateTime        ]   |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ Description     ]   |                  |<>--{0..1}--[ Application     ]   |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ RecordPattern   ]   |                  |<>--{1..*}--[ RecordItem      ]   |                  |<>--{0..*}--[ AdditionalData  ]   +------------------+                      Figure 34: The RecordData Class   The aggregate classes that constitutes RecordData is:   DateTime      Zero or one.  Timestamp of the RecordItem data.   Description      Zero or more.  ML_STRING.  Free-form textual description of the      provided RecordItem data.  At minimum, this description should      convey the significance of the provided RecordItem data.   Application      Zero or one.  Information about the sensor used to generate the      RecordItem data.   RecordPattern      Zero or more.  A search string to precisely find the relevant data      in a RecordItem.   RecordItem      One or more.  Log, audit, or forensic data.   AdditionalData      Zero or one.  An extension mechanism for data not explicitly      represented in the data model.   The RecordData class has one attribute:   restriction      Optional.  ENUM.  This attribute has been defined inSection 3.2.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 52]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 20073.19.2.  RecordPattern Class   The RecordPattern class describes where in the content of the   RecordItem relevant information can be found.  It provides a way to   reference subsets of information, identified by a pattern, in a large   log file, audit trail, or forensic data.   +-----------------------+   | RecordPattern         |   +-----------------------+   | STRING                |   |                       |   | ENUM type             |   | STRING ext-type       |   | INTEGER offset        |   | ENUM offsetunit       |   | STRING ext-offsetunit |   | INTEGER instance      |   +-----------------------+                    Figure 35: The RecordPattern Class   The specific pattern to search with in the RecordItem is defined in   the body of the element.  It is further annotated by four attributes:   type      Required.  ENUM.  Describes the type of pattern being specified in      the element content.  The default is "regex".      1.  regex. regular expression, perAppendix F of [3].      2.  binary.  Binhex encoded binary pattern, per the HEXBIN data          type.      3.  xpath.  XML Path (XPath) [5]      4.  ext-value.  An escape value used to extend this attribute.          SeeSection 5.1.   ext-type      Optional.  STRING.  A means by which to extend the type attribute.      SeeSection 5.1.   offset      Optional.  INTEGER.  Amount of units (determined by the offsetunit      attribute) to seek into the RecordItem data before matching the      pattern.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 53]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   offsetunit      Optional.  ENUM.  Describes the units of the offset attribute.      The default is "line".      1.  line.  Offset is a count of lines.      2.  binary.  Offset is a count of bytes.      3.  ext-value.  An escape value used to extend this attribute.          SeeSection 5.1.   ext-offsetunit      Optional.  STRING.  A means by which to extend the offsetunit      attribute.  SeeSection 5.1.   instance      Optional.  INTEGER.  Number of types to apply the specified      pattern.3.19.3.  RecordItem Class   The RecordItem class provides a way to incorporate relevant logs,   audit trails, or forensic data to support the conclusions made during   the course of analyzing the incident.  The class supports both the   direct encapsulation of the data, as well as, provides primitives to   reference data stored elsewhere.   This class is identical to AdditionalData class (Section 3.6).4.  Processing Considerations   This section defines additional requirements on creating and parsing   IODEF documents.4.1.  Encoding   Every IODEF document MUST begin with an XML declaration, and MUST   specify the XML version used.  If UTF-8 encoding is not used, the   character encoding MUST also be explicitly specified.  The IODEF   conforms to all XML data encoding conventions and constraints.   The XML declaration with no character encoding will read as follows:   <?xml version="1.0" ?>   When a character encoding is specified, the XML declaration will read   like the following:Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 54]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   <?xml version="1.0" encoding="charset" ?>   Where "charset" is the name of the character encoding as registered   with the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA), see [9].   The following characters have special meaning in XML and MUST be   escaped with their entity reference equivalent: "&", "<", ">", "\""   (double quotation mark), and "'" (apostrophe).  These entity   references are "&amp;", "&lt;", "&gt;", "&quot;", and "&apos;"   respectively.4.2.  IODEF Namespace   The IODEF schema declares a namespace of   "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iodef-1.0" and registers it per [4].  Each   IODEF document SHOULD include a valid reference to the IODEF schema   using the "xsi:schemaLocation" attribute.  An example of such a   declaration would look as follows:   <IODEF-Document      version="1.00" lang="en-US"      xmlns:iodef="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iodef-1.0"      xsi:schemaLocation="urn:ietf:params:xmls:schema:iodef-1.0">4.3.  Validation   The IODEF documents MUST be well-formed XML and SHOULD be validated   against the schema described inSection 8.  However, mere conformance   to the schema is not sufficient for a semantically valid IODEF   document.  There is additional specification in the text ofSection 3   that cannot be readily encoded in the schema and it must also be   considered by an IODEF parser.  The following is a list of   discrepancies in what is more strictly specified in the normative   text (Section 3), but not enforced in the IODEF schema:   o  The elements or attributes that are defined as POSTAL, NAME,      PHONE, and EMAIL data-types are implemented as "xs:string", but      more rigid formatting requirements are specified in the text.   o  The IODEF-Document@lang and MLStringType@lang attributes are      declared as an "xs:language" that constrains values with a regular      expression.  However, the value of this attribute still needs to      be validated against the list of possible enumerated values is      defined in [7].   o  The MonetaryImpact@currency attribute is declared as an "xs:      string", but the list of valid values as defined in [14].Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 55]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   o  All of the aggregated classes Contact and EventData are optional      in the schema, but at least one of these aggregated classes MUST      be present.   o  There are multiple conventions that can be used to categorize a      system using the NodeRole class or to specify software with the      Application and OperatingSystem classes.  IODEF parsers MUST      accept incident reports that do not use these fields in accordance      with local conventions.   o  The Confidence@rating attribute determines whether the element      content of Confidence should be empty.   o  The Address@type attribute determines the format of the element      content.   o  The attributes AdditionalData@dtype and RecordItem@dtype derived      from iodef:ExtensionType determine the semantics and formatting of      the element content.   o  Symmetry in the enumerated ports of a Portlist class is required      between sources and targets.  SeeSection 3.17.5.  Extending the IODEF   In order to support the changing activity of CSIRTS, the IODEF data   model will need to evolve along with them.  This section discusses   how new data elements that have no current representation in the data   model can be incorporated into the IODEF.  These techniques are   designed so that adding new data will not require a change to the   IODEF schema.  With proven value, well documented extensions can be   incorporated into future versions of the specification.  However,   this approach also supports private extensions relevant only to a   closed consortium.5.1.  Extending the Enumerated Values of Attributes   The data model supports a means by which to add new enumerated values   to an attribute.  For each attribute that supports this extension   technique, there is a corresponding attribute in the same element   whose name is identical, less a prefix of "ext-".  This special   attribute is referred to as the extension attribute, and the   attribute being extended is referred to as an extensible attribute.   For example, an extensible attribute named "foo" will have a   corresponding extension attribute named "ext-foo".  An element may   have many extensible, and therefore many extension, attributes.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 56]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   In addition to a corresponding extension attribute, each extensible   attribute has "ext-value" as one its possible values.  This   particular value serves as an escape sequence and has no valid   meaning.   In order to add a new enumerated value to an extensible attribute,   the value of this attribute MUST be set to "ext-value", and the new   desired value MUST be set in the corresponding extension attribute.   For example, an extended instance of the type attribute of the Impact   class would look as follows:    <Impact type="ext-value" ext-type="new-attack-type">   A given extension attribute MUST NOT be set unless the corresponding   extensible attribute has been set to "ext-value".5.2.  Extending Classes   The classes of the data model can be extended only through the use of   the AdditionalData and RecordItem classes.  These container classes,   collectively referred to as the extensible classes, are implemented   with the iodef:ExtensionType data type in the schema.  They provide   the ability to have new atomic or XML-encoded data elements in all of   the top-level classes of the Incident class and a few of the more   complicated subordinate classes.  As there are multiple instances of   the extensible classes in the data model, there is discretion on   where to add a new data element.  It is RECOMMENDED that the   extension be placed in the most closely related class to the new   information.   Extensions using the atomic data types (i.e., all values of the dtype   attributes other than "xml") MUST:   1.  Set the element content of extensible class to the desired value,       and   2.  Set the dtype attribute to correspond to the data type of the       element content.   The following guidelines exist for extensions using XML:   1.  The element content of the extensible class MUST be set to the       desired value and the dtype attribute MUST be set to "xml".   2.  The extension schema MUST declare a separate namespace.  It is       RECOMMENDED that these extensions have the prefix "iodef-".Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 57]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   3.  It is RECOMMENDED that extension schemas follow the naming       convention of the IODEF data model.  The names of all elements       are capitalized.  For composed names, a capital letter is used       for each word.  Attribute names are lower case.   4.  When a parser encounters an IODEF document with an extension it       does not understand, this extension MUST be ignored (and not       processed), but the remainder of the document MUST be processed.       Parsers will be able to identify these extensions for which they       have no processing logic through the namespace declaration.       Parsers that encounter an unrecognized element in a namespace       that they do support SHOULD reject the document as a syntax       error.   5.  Implementations SHOULD NOT download schemas at runtime due to the       security implications, and extensions MUST NOT be required to       provide a resolvable location of their schema.   The following schema and XML document excerpt provide a template for   an extension schema and its use in the IODEF document.   This example schema defines a namespace of "iodef-extension1" and a   single element named "newdata".     <xs:schema        targetNamespace="iodef-extension1.xsd"        xmlns:iodef-extension1="iodef-extension1.xsd"        xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">        attributeFormDefault="unqualified"        elementFormDefault="qualified">      <xs:import           namespace="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iodef-1.0"           schemaLocation=" urn:ietf:params:xml:schema:iodef-1.0"/>        <xs:element name="newdata" type="xs:string" />     </xs:schema>   The following XML excerpt demonstrates the use of the above schema as   an extension to the IODEF.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 58]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007      <IODEF-Document           version="1.00" lang="en-US"           xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iodef-1.0"           xmlns:iodef=" urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iodef-1.0"           xmlns:iodef-extension1="iodef-extension1.xsd"           xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"           xsi:schemaLocation="iodef-extension1.xsd">          <Incident purpose="reporting">          ...          <AdditionalData dtype="xml" meaning="xml">            <iodef-extension1:newdata>               Field that could not be represented elsewhere            </iodef-extension1:newdata>          </AdditionalData>          </Incident>      </IODEF-Document>6.  Internationalization Issues   Internationalization and localization is of specific concern to the   IODEF, since it is only through collaboration, often across language   barriers, that certain incidents be resolved.  The IODEF supports   this goal by depending on XML constructs, and through explicit design   choices in the data model.   Since IODEF is implemented as an XML Schema, it implicitly supports   all the different character encodings, such as UTF-8 and UTF-16,   possible with XML.  Additionally, each IODEF document MUST specify   the language in which their contents are encoded.  The language can   be specified with the attribute "xml:lang" (per Section 2.12 of [1])   in the top-level element (i.e., IODEF-Document@lang) and letting all   other elements inherit that definition.  All IODEF classes with a   free-form text definition (i.e., all those defined of type iodef:   MLStringType) can also specify a language different from the rest of   the document.  The valid language codes for the "xml:lang" attribute   are described inRFC 4646 [7].   The data model supports multiple translations of free-form text.  In   the places where free-text is used for descriptive purposes, the   given class always has a one-to-many cardinality to its parent (e.g.,   Description class).  The intent is to allow the identical text to be   encoded in different instances of the same class, but each being in a   different language.  This approach allows an IODEF document author to   send recipients speaking different languages an identical document.   The IODEF parser SHOULD extract the appropriate language relevant to   the recipient.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 59]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   While the intent of the data model is to provide internationalization   and localization, the intent is not to do so at the detriment of   interoperability.  While the IODEF does support different languages,   the data model also relies heavily on standardized enumerated   attributes that can crudely approximate the contents of the document.   With this approach, a CSIRT should be able to make some sense of an   IODEF document it receives even if the text based data elements are   written in a language unfamiliar to the analyst.7.  Examples   This section provides examples of an incident encoded in the IODEF.   These examples do not necessarily represent the only way to encode a   particular incident.7.1.  Worm   An example of a CSIRT reporting an instance of the Code Red worm.<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><!-- This example demonstrates a report for a very     old worm (Code Red) --><IODEF-Document version="1.00" lang="en"  xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iodef-1.0"  xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"  xsi:schemaLocation="urn:ietf:params:xml:schema:iodef-1.0">  <Incident purpose="reporting">    <IncidentID name="csirt.example.com">189493</IncidentID>    <ReportTime>2001-09-13T23:19:24+00:00</ReportTime>    <Description>Host sending out Code Red probes</Description>    <!-- An administrative privilege was attempted, but failed -->    <Assessment>      <Impact completion="failed" type="admin"/>    </Assessment>    <Contact role="creator" type="organization">      <ContactName>Example.com CSIRT</ContactName>      <RegistryHandle registry="arin">example-com</RegistryHandle>      <Email>contact@csirt.example.com</Email>    </Contact>    <EventData>      <Flow>        <System category="source">          <Node>            <Address category="ipv4-addr">192.0.2.200</Address>            <Counter type="event">57</Counter>          </Node>        </System>        <System category="target">Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 60]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007          <Node>            <Address category="ipv4-net">192.0.2.16/28</Address>          </Node>          <Service ip_protocol="6">            <Port>80</Port>          </Service>        </System>      </Flow>      <Expectation action="block-host" />      <!-- <RecordItem> has an excerpt from a log -->      <Record>        <RecordData>          <DateTime>2001-09-13T18:11:21+02:00</DateTime>          <Description>Web-server logs</Description>          <RecordItem dtype="string">          192.0.2.1 - - [13/Sep/2001:18:11:21 +0200] "GET /default.ida?          XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX          XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX          XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX          XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX          </RecordItem>            <!-- Additional logs -->          <RecordItem dtype="url">             http://mylogs.example.com/logs/httpd_access</RecordItem>        </RecordData>      </Record>    </EventData>    <History>      <!-- Contact was previously made with the source network owner -->      <HistoryItem action="contact-source-site">        <DateTime>2001-09-14T08:19:01+00:00</DateTime>        <Description>Notification sent to                     constituency-contact@192.0.2.200</Description>      </HistoryItem>    </History>  </Incident></IODEF-Document>7.2.  Reconnaissance   An example of a CSIRT reporting a scanning activity.   <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>   <!-- This example describes reconnaissance activity: one-to-one and        one-to-many scanning -->Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 61]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   <IODEF-Document version="1.00" lang="en"     xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iodef-1.0"     xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"     xsi:schemaLocation="urn:ietf:params:xml:schema:iodef-1.0">     <Incident purpose="reporting">       <IncidentID name="csirt.example.com">59334</IncidentID>       <ReportTime>2006-08-02T05:54:02-05:00</ReportTime>       <Assessment>         <Impact type="recon" completion="succeeded" />       </Assessment>       <Method>         <!-- Reference to the scanning tool "nmap" -->         <Reference>           <ReferenceName>nmap</ReferenceName>           <URL>http://nmap.toolsite.example.com</URL>         </Reference>       </Method>       <!-- Organizational contact and that for staff in that            organization -->       <Contact role="creator" type="organization">         <ContactName>CSIRT for example.com</ContactName>         <Email>contact@csirt.example.com</Email>         <Telephone>+1 412 555 12345</Telephone>         <!-- Since this <Contact> is nested, Joe Smith is part of the             CSIRT for example.com -->         <Contact role="tech" type="person" restriction="need-to-know">           <ContactName>Joe Smith</ContactName>           <Email>smith@csirt.example.com</Email>         </Contact>       </Contact>       <EventData>         <!-- Scanning activity as follows:           192.0.2.1:60524 >> 192.0.2.3:137                  192.0.2.1:60526 >> 192.0.2.3:138                  192.0.2.1:60527 >> 192.0.2.3:139                  192.0.2.1:60531 >> 192.0.2.3:445         -->         <Flow>           <System category="source">             <Node>               <Address category="ipv4-addr">192.0.2.200</Address>             </Node>             <Service ip_protocol="6">               <Portlist>60524,60526,60527,60531</Portlist>             </Service>           </System>           <System category="target">             <Node>Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 62]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007               <Address category="ipv4-addr">192.0.2.201</Address>             </Node>             <Service ip_protocol="6">               <Portlist>137-139,445</Portlist>             </Service>           </System>         </Flow>         <!-- Scanning activity as follows:               192.0.2.2 >> 192.0.2.3/28:445 -->         <Flow>           <System category="source">             <Node>               <Address category="ipv4-addr">192.0.2.240</Address>             </Node>           </System>           <System category="target">             <Node>               <Address category="ipv4-net">192.0.2.64/28</Address>             </Node>             <Service ip_protocol="6">               <Port>445</Port>             </Service>           </System>         </Flow>       </EventData>     </Incident>   </IODEF-Document>7.3.  Bot-Net Reporting   An example of a CSIRT reporting a bot-network. <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?> <!-- This example describes a compromise and subsequent installation      of bots --> <IODEF-Document version="1.00" lang="en"   xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iodef-1.0"   xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"   xsi:schemaLocation="urn:ietf:params:xml:schema:iodef-1.0">   <Incident purpose="mitigation">     <IncidentID name="csirt.example.com">908711</IncidentID>     <ReportTime>2006-06-08T05:44:53-05:00</ReportTime>     <Description>Large bot-net</Description>     <Assessment>       <Impact type="dos" severity="high" completion="succeeded" />Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 63]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007     </Assessment>     <Method>       <!-- References a given piece of malware, "GT Bot" -->       <Reference>         <ReferenceName>GT Bot</ReferenceName>       </Reference>       <!-- References the vulnerability used to compromise the            machines -->       <Reference>         <ReferenceName>CA-2003-22</ReferenceName>         <URL>http://www.cert.org/advisories/CA-2003-22.html</URL>         <Description>Root compromise via this IE vulnerability to                      install the GT Bot</Description>       </Reference>     </Method>     <!-- A member of the CSIRT that is coordinating this          incident -->     <Contact type="person" role="irt">       <ContactName>Joe Smith</ContactName>       <Email>jsmith@csirt.example.com</Email>     </Contact>     <EventData>       <Description>These hosts are compromised and acting as bots                    communicating with irc.example.com.</Description>       <Flow>         <!-- bot running on 192.0.2.1 and sending DoS traffic at              10,000 bytes/second -->         <System category="source">           <Node>             <Address category="ipv4-addr">192.0.2.1</Address>           </Node>           <Counter type="byte" duration="second">10000</Counter>           <Description>bot</Description>         </System>         <!-- a second bot on 192.0.2.3 -->         <System category="source">           <Node>             <Address category="ipv4-addr">192.0.2.3</Address>           </Node>           <Counter type="byte" duration="second">250000</Counter>           <Description>bot</Description>         </System>         <!-- Command-and-control IRC server for these bots-->         <System category="intermediate">           <Node>             <NodeName>irc.example.com</NodeName>             <Address category="ipv4-addr">192.0.2.20</Address>             <DateTime>2006-06-08T01:01:03-05:00</DateTime>Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 64]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007           </Node>           <Description>IRC server on #give-me-cmd channel</Description>         </System>       </Flow>       <!-- Request to take these machines offline -->       <Expectation action="investigate">         <Description>Confirm the source and take machines off-line and                      remediate</Description>       </Expectation>     </EventData>   </Incident> </IODEF-Document>7.4.  Watch List   An example of a CSIRT conveying a watch-list.<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?><!-- This example demonstrates a trivial IP watch-list --><!-- @formatid is set to "watch-list-043" to demonstrate how additional     semantics about this document could be conveyed assuming both     parties understood it--><IODEF-Document version="1.00" lang="en" formatid="watch-list-043"  xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iodef-1.0"  xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"  xsi:schemaLocation="urn:ietf:params:xml:schema:iodef-1.0">  <Incident purpose="reporting" restriction="private">    <IncidentID name="csirt.example.com">908711</IncidentID>    <ReportTime>2006-08-01T00:00:00-05:00</ReportTime>    <Description>Watch-list of known bad IPs or networks</Description>    <Assessment>      <Impact type="admin" completion="succeeded" />      <Impact type="recon" completion="succeeded" />    </Assessment>    <Contact type="organization" role="creator">      <ContactName>CSIRT for example.com</ContactName>      <Email>contact@csirt.example.com</Email>    </Contact>    <!-- Separate <EventData> used to convey different <Expectation> -->    <EventData>      <Flow>        <System category="source">          <Node>            <Address category="ipv4-addr">192.0.2.53</Address>          </Node>Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 65]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007          <Description>Source of numerous attacks</Description>        </System>      </Flow>      <!-- Expectation class indicating that sender of list would like           to be notified if activity from the host is seen -->      <Expectation action="contact-sender" />    </EventData>    <EventData>      <Flow>        <System category="source">          <Node>            <Address category="ipv4-net">192.0.2.16/28</Address>          </Node>          <Description>            Source of heavy scanning over past 1-month          </Description>        </System>      </Flow>      <Flow>        <System category="source">          <Node>            <Address category="ipv4-addr">192.0.2.241</Address>          </Node>          <Description>C2 IRC server</Description>        </System>      </Flow>      <!-- Expectation class recommends that these networks           be filtered -->      <Expectation action="block-host" />    </EventData>  </Incident></IODEF-Document>8.  The IODEF Schema  <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>  <xs:schema targetNamespace="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iodef-1.0"             xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iodef-1.0"             xmlns:iodef="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iodef-1.0"             xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"             elementFormDefault="qualified"             attributeFormDefault="unqualified">    <xs:annotation>      <xs:documentation>      Incident Object Description Exchange Format v1.00, seeRFC 5070Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 66]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007      </xs:documentation>    </xs:annotation>  <!--   ====================================================================   == IODEF-Document class                                           ==   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="IODEF-Document">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:sequence>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Incident"                      maxOccurs="unbounded"/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="version"                      type="xs:string" fixed="1.00"/>        <xs:attribute name="lang"                      type="xs:language" use="required"/>        <xs:attribute name="formatid"                      type="xs:string"/>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>  <!--   ====================================================================   ===  Incident class                                              ===   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="Incident">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:sequence>          <xs:element ref="iodef:IncidentID"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:AlternativeID"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:RelatedActivity"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:DetectTime"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:StartTime"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:EndTime"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:ReportTime"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Description"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Assessment"                      maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Method"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 67]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007          <xs:element ref="iodef:Contact"                      maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:EventData"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:History"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:AdditionalData"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="purpose" use="required">          <xs:simpleType>            <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">              <xs:enumeration value="traceback"/>              <xs:enumeration value="mitigation"/>              <xs:enumeration value="reporting"/>              <xs:enumeration value="other"/>              <xs:enumeration value="ext-value"/>            </xs:restriction>          </xs:simpleType>        </xs:attribute>        <xs:attribute name="ext-purpose"                      type="xs:string" use="optional"/>        <xs:attribute name="lang"                      type="xs:language"/>        <xs:attribute name="restriction"                      type="iodef:restriction-type" default="private"/>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>  <!--   ====================================================================   ==  IncidentID class                                              ==   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="IncidentID" type="iodef:IncidentIDType"/>    <xs:complexType name="IncidentIDType">      <xs:simpleContent>        <xs:extension base="xs:string">          <xs:attribute name="name"                        type="xs:string" use="required"/>          <xs:attribute name="instance"                        type="xs:string" use="optional"/>          <xs:attribute name="restriction"                        type="iodef:restriction-type" default="public"/>        </xs:extension>      </xs:simpleContent>    </xs:complexType>Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 68]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007  <!--   ====================================================================   ==  AlternativeID class                                           ==   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="AlternativeID">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:sequence>          <xs:element ref="iodef:IncidentID"                      maxOccurs="unbounded"/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="restriction"                      type="iodef:restriction-type"/>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>  <!--   ====================================================================   ==  RelatedActivity class                                         ==   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="RelatedActivity">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:choice>          <xs:element ref="iodef:IncidentID"                      maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:URL"                      maxOccurs="unbounded"/>        </xs:choice>        <xs:attribute name="restriction"                      type="iodef:restriction-type"/>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>  <!--   ====================================================================   ===  AdditionalData class                                        ===   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="AdditionalData" type="iodef:ExtensionType"/>  <!--  ====================================================================  ===  Contact class                                               ===  ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="Contact">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:sequence>          <xs:element ref="iodef:ContactName"                      minOccurs="0"/>Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 69]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007          <xs:element ref="iodef:Description"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:RegistryHandle"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:PostalAddress"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Email"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Telephone"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Fax"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Timezone"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Contact"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:AdditionalData"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="role" use="required">          <xs:simpleType>            <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">              <xs:enumeration value="creator"/>              <xs:enumeration value="admin"/>              <xs:enumeration value="tech"/>              <xs:enumeration value="irt"/>              <xs:enumeration value="cc"/>              <xs:enumeration value="ext-value"/>            </xs:restriction>          </xs:simpleType>        </xs:attribute>        <xs:attribute name="ext-role"                      type="xs:string" use="optional"/>        <xs:attribute name="type" use="required">          <xs:simpleType>            <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">              <xs:enumeration value="person"/>              <xs:enumeration value="organization"/>              <xs:enumeration value="ext-value"/>            </xs:restriction>          </xs:simpleType>        </xs:attribute>        <xs:attribute name="ext-type"                      type="xs:string" use="optional"/>        <xs:attribute name="restriction"                      type="iodef:restriction-type"/>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 70]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007    <xs:element name="ContactName"                type="iodef:MLStringType"/>    <xs:element name="RegistryHandle">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:simpleContent>          <xs:extension base="xs:string">            <xs:attribute name="registry">              <xs:simpleType>                <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">                  <xs:enumeration value="internic"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="apnic"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="arin"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="lacnic"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="ripe"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="afrinic"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="local"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="ext-value"/>                </xs:restriction>              </xs:simpleType>            </xs:attribute>            <xs:attribute name="ext-registry"                          type="xs:string" use="optional"/>          </xs:extension>        </xs:simpleContent>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>    <xs:element name="PostalAddress">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:simpleContent>          <xs:extension base="iodef:MLStringType">            <xs:attribute name="meaning"                          type="xs:string" use="optional"/>          </xs:extension>        </xs:simpleContent>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>    <xs:element name="Email" type="iodef:ContactMeansType"/>    <xs:element name="Telephone" type="iodef:ContactMeansType"/>    <xs:element name="Fax" type="iodef:ContactMeansType"/>    <xs:complexType name="ContactMeansType">      <xs:simpleContent>        <xs:extension base="xs:string">          <xs:attribute name="meaning"                        type="xs:string" use="optional"/>        </xs:extension>      </xs:simpleContent>Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 71]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007    </xs:complexType>  <!--   ====================================================================   ===  Time-based classes                                          ===   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="DateTime"                type="xs:dateTime"/>    <xs:element name="ReportTime"                type="xs:dateTime"/>    <xs:element name="DetectTime"                type="xs:dateTime"/>    <xs:element name="StartTime"                type="xs:dateTime"/>    <xs:element name="EndTime"                type="xs:dateTime"/>    <xs:element name="Timezone"                type="iodef:TimezoneType"/>    <xs:simpleType name="TimezoneType">      <xs:restriction base="xs:string">        <xs:pattern value="Z|[\+\-](0[0-9]|1[0-4]):[0-5][0-9]"/>      </xs:restriction>    </xs:simpleType>  <!--   ====================================================================   ===  History class                                               ===   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="History">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:sequence>          <xs:element ref="iodef:HistoryItem"                      maxOccurs="unbounded"/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="restriction"                      type="iodef:restriction-type" default="default"/>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>    <xs:element name="HistoryItem">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:sequence>          <xs:element ref="iodef:DateTime"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:IncidentID"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Contact"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Description"Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 72]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:AdditionalData"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="restriction"                      type="iodef:restriction-type"/>        <xs:attribute name="action"                      type="iodef:action-type" use="required"/>        <xs:attribute name="ext-action"                      type="xs:string" use="optional"/>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>  <!--   ====================================================================   ===  Expectation class                                           ===   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="Expectation">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:sequence>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Description"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:StartTime"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:EndTime"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Contact"                      minOccurs="0"/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="restriction"                      type="iodef:restriction-type" default="default"/>        <xs:attribute name="severity"                      type="iodef:severity-type"/>        <xs:attribute name="action"                      type="iodef:action-type" default="other"/>        <xs:attribute name="ext-action"                      type="xs:string" use="optional"/>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>  <!--   ====================================================================   ===  Method class                                                ===   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="Method">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:sequence>          <xs:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 73]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007            <xs:element ref="iodef:Reference"/>            <xs:element ref="iodef:Description"/>          </xs:choice>          <xs:element ref="iodef:AdditionalData"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="restriction"                      type="iodef:restriction-type"/>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>    <xs:element name="Reference">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:sequence>          <xs:element name="ReferenceName"                      type="iodef:MLStringType"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:URL"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Description"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>        </xs:sequence>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>  <!--   ====================================================================   ===  Assessment class                                            ===   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="Assessment">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:sequence>          <xs:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">            <xs:element ref="iodef:Impact"/>            <xs:element ref="iodef:TimeImpact"/>            <xs:element ref="iodef:MonetaryImpact"/>          </xs:choice>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Counter"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Confidence" minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:AdditionalData"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="occurrence">          <xs:simpleType>            <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">              <xs:enumeration value="actual"/>              <xs:enumeration value="potential"/>            </xs:restriction>          </xs:simpleType>Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 74]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007        </xs:attribute>        <xs:attribute name="restriction"                      type="iodef:restriction-type"/>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>    <xs:element name="Impact">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:simpleContent>          <xs:extension base="iodef:MLStringType">            <xs:attribute name="severity"                          type="iodef:severity-type"/>            <xs:attribute name="completion">              <xs:simpleType>                <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">                  <xs:enumeration value="failed"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="succeeded"/>                </xs:restriction>              </xs:simpleType>            </xs:attribute>            <xs:attribute name="type"                          use="optional" default="unknown">              <xs:simpleType>                <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">                  <xs:enumeration value="admin"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="dos"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="extortion"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="file"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="info-leak"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="misconfiguration"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="recon"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="policy"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="social-engineering"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="user"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="unknown"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="ext-value"/>                </xs:restriction>              </xs:simpleType>            </xs:attribute>            <xs:attribute name="ext-type"                          type="xs:string" use="optional"/>          </xs:extension>        </xs:simpleContent>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>    <xs:element name="TimeImpact">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:simpleContent>          <xs:extension base="iodef:PositiveFloatType">Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 75]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007            <xs:attribute name="severity"                          type="iodef:severity-type"/>            <xs:attribute name="metric"                          use="required">              <xs:simpleType>                <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">                  <xs:enumeration value="labor"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="elapsed"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="downtime"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="ext-value"/>                </xs:restriction>              </xs:simpleType>            </xs:attribute>            <xs:attribute name="ext-metric"                          type="xs:string" use="optional"/>            <xs:attribute name="duration"                          type="iodef:duration-type"/>            <xs:attribute name="ext-duration"                          type="xs:string" use="optional"/>          </xs:extension>        </xs:simpleContent>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>    <xs:element name="MonetaryImpact">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:simpleContent>          <xs:extension base="iodef:PositiveFloatType">            <xs:attribute name="severity"                          type="iodef:severity-type"/>            <xs:attribute name="currency"                          type="xs:string"/>          </xs:extension>        </xs:simpleContent>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>    <xs:element name="Confidence">      <xs:complexType mixed="true">        <xs:attribute name="rating" use="required">          <xs:simpleType>            <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">              <xs:enumeration value="low"/>              <xs:enumeration value="medium"/>              <xs:enumeration value="high"/>              <xs:enumeration value="numeric"/>              <xs:enumeration value="unknown"/>            </xs:restriction>          </xs:simpleType>        </xs:attribute>Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 76]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>  <!--   ====================================================================   === EventData class                                              ===   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="EventData">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:sequence>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Description"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:DetectTime"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:StartTime"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:EndTime"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Contact"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Assessment"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Method"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Flow"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Expectation"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Record"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:EventData"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:AdditionalData"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="restriction"                      type="iodef:restriction-type" default="default"/>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>  <!--   ====================================================================   ===  Flow class                                                ===   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="Flow">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:sequence>          <xs:element ref="iodef:System"Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 77]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007                      maxOccurs="unbounded"/>        </xs:sequence>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>  <!--   ====================================================================   ===  System class                                                ===   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="System">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:sequence>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Node"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Service"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:OperatingSystem"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Counter"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Description"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:AdditionalData"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="restriction"                     type="iodef:restriction-type"/>        <xs:attribute name="interface"                      type="xs:string"/>        <xs:attribute name="category">          <xs:simpleType>            <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">              <xs:enumeration value="source"/>              <xs:enumeration value="target"/>              <xs:enumeration value="intermediate"/>              <xs:enumeration value="sensor"/>              <xs:enumeration value="infrastructure"/>              <xs:enumeration value="ext-value"/>            </xs:restriction>          </xs:simpleType>        </xs:attribute>        <xs:attribute name="ext-category"                      type="xs:string" use="optional"/>        <xs:attribute name="spoofed"                      default="unknown">          <xs:simpleType>            <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">              <xs:enumeration value="unknown"/>              <xs:enumeration value="yes"/>Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 78]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007              <xs:enumeration value="no"/>            </xs:restriction>          </xs:simpleType>        </xs:attribute>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>  <!--  ====================================================================  === Node class                                                   ===  ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="Node">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:sequence>          <xs:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">            <xs:element name="NodeName"                        type="iodef:MLStringType" minOccurs="0"/>            <xs:element ref="iodef:Address"                        minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          </xs:choice>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Location"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:DateTime"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:NodeRole"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Counter"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>        </xs:sequence>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>    <xs:element name="Address">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:simpleContent>          <xs:extension base="xs:string">            <xs:attribute name="category" default="ipv4-addr">              <xs:simpleType>                <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">                  <xs:enumeration value="asn"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="atm"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="e-mail"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="mac"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="ipv4-addr"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="ipv4-net"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="ipv4-net-mask"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="ipv6-addr"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="ipv6-net"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="ipv6-net-mask"/>Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 79]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007                  <xs:enumeration value="ext-value"/>                </xs:restriction>              </xs:simpleType>            </xs:attribute>            <xs:attribute name="ext-category"                          type="xs:string" use="optional"/>            <xs:attribute name="vlan-name"                          type="xs:string"/>            <xs:attribute name="vlan-num"                          type="xs:integer"/>          </xs:extension>        </xs:simpleContent>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>    <xs:element name="Location" type="iodef:MLStringType"/>    <xs:element name="NodeRole">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:simpleContent>          <xs:extension base="iodef:MLStringType">            <xs:attribute name="category" use="required">              <xs:simpleType>                <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">                  <xs:enumeration value="client"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="server-internal"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="server-public"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="www"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="mail"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="messaging"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="streaming"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="voice"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="file"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="ftp"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="p2p"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="name"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="directory"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="credential"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="print"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="application"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="database"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="infra"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="log"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="ext-value"/>                </xs:restriction>              </xs:simpleType>            </xs:attribute>            <xs:attribute name="ext-category"                          type="xs:string" use="optional"/>          </xs:extension>Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 80]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007        </xs:simpleContent>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>  <!--   ====================================================================   ===  Service Class                                               ===   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="Service">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:sequence>          <xs:choice minOccurs="0">            <xs:element name="Port"                        type="xs:integer"/>            <xs:element name="Portlist"                        type="iodef:PortlistType"/>          </xs:choice>          <xs:element name="ProtoType"                      type="xs:integer" minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element name="ProtoCode"                      type="xs:integer" minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element name="ProtoField"                      type="xs:integer" minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Application"                      minOccurs="0"/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="ip_protocol"                      type="xs:integer" use="required"/>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>    <xs:simpleType name="PortlistType">      <xs:restriction base="xs:string">        <xs:pattern value="\d+(\-\d+)?(,\d+(\-\d+)?)*"/>      </xs:restriction>    </xs:simpleType>  <!--   ====================================================================   ===  Counter class                                              ===   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="Counter">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:simpleContent>          <xs:extension base="xs:double">            <xs:attribute name="type" use="required">              <xs:simpleType>                <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">                  <xs:enumeration value="byte"/>Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 81]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007                  <xs:enumeration value="packet"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="flow"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="session"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="event"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="alert"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="message"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="host"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="site"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="organization"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="ext-value"/>                </xs:restriction>              </xs:simpleType>            </xs:attribute>            <xs:attribute name="ext-type"                          type="xs:string" use="optional"/>            <xs:attribute name="meaning"                          type="xs:string" use="optional"/>            <xs:attribute name="duration"                          type="iodef:duration-type"/>            <xs:attribute name="ext-duration"                          type="xs:string" use="optional"/>          </xs:extension>        </xs:simpleContent>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>  <!--   ====================================================================   ===  Record class                                                ===   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="Record">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:sequence>          <xs:element ref="iodef:RecordData"                      maxOccurs="unbounded"/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="restriction"                      type="iodef:restriction-type"/>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>    <xs:element name="RecordData">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:sequence>          <xs:element ref="iodef:DateTime"                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Description"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:Application"Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 82]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007                      minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:RecordPattern"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:RecordItem"                      maxOccurs="unbounded"/>          <xs:element ref="iodef:AdditionalData"                      minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="restriction"                      type="iodef:restriction-type"/>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>    <xs:element name="RecordPattern">      <xs:complexType>        <xs:simpleContent>          <xs:extension base="xs:string">            <xs:attribute name="type" use="required">              <xs:simpleType>                <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">                  <xs:enumeration value="regex"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="binary"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="xpath"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="ext-value"/>                </xs:restriction>              </xs:simpleType>            </xs:attribute>            <xs:attribute name="ext-type"                          type="xs:string" use="optional"/>            <xs:attribute name="offset"                          type="xs:integer" use="optional"/>            <xs:attribute name="offsetunit"                          use="optional" default="line">              <xs:simpleType>                <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">                  <xs:enumeration value="line"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="byte"/>                  <xs:enumeration value="ext-value"/>                </xs:restriction>              </xs:simpleType>            </xs:attribute>            <xs:attribute name="ext-offsetunit"                          type="xs:string" use="optional"/>            <xs:attribute name="instance"                          type="xs:integer" use="optional"/>          </xs:extension>        </xs:simpleContent>      </xs:complexType>    </xs:element>Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 83]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007    <xs:element name="RecordItem"                type="iodef:ExtensionType"/>  <!--   ====================================================================   ===  Classes that describe software                       ===   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:complexType name="SoftwareType">      <xs:sequence>        <xs:element ref="iodef:URL"                    minOccurs="0"/>      </xs:sequence>      <xs:attribute name="swid"                    type="xs:string" default="0"/>      <xs:attribute name="configid"                    type="xs:string" default="0"/>      <xs:attribute name="vendor"                    type="xs:string"/>      <xs:attribute name="family"                    type="xs:string"/>      <xs:attribute name="name"                    type="xs:string"/>      <xs:attribute name="version"                    type="xs:string"/>      <xs:attribute name="patch"                    type="xs:string"/>    </xs:complexType>    <xs:element name="Application"                type="iodef:SoftwareType"/>    <xs:element name="OperatingSystem"                type="iodef:SoftwareType"/>  <!--   ====================================================================   === Miscellaneous simple classes                                 ===   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:element name="Description"                type="iodef:MLStringType"/>    <xs:element name="URL"                type="xs:anyURI"/>  <!--   ====================================================================   === Data Types                                           ===   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:simpleType name="PositiveFloatType">      <xs:restriction base="xs:float">        <xs:minExclusive value="0"/>Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 84]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007      </xs:restriction>    </xs:simpleType>    <xs:complexType name="MLStringType">      <xs:simpleContent>        <xs:extension base="xs:string">          <xs:attribute name="lang"                        type="xs:language" use="optional"/>        </xs:extension>      </xs:simpleContent>    </xs:complexType>    <xs:complexType name="ExtensionType" mixed="true">      <xs:sequence>        <xs:any namespace="##any" processContents="lax"                minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>      </xs:sequence>      <xs:attribute name="dtype"                    type="iodef:dtype-type" use="required"/>      <xs:attribute name="ext-dtype"                    type="xs:string" use="optional"/>      <xs:attribute name="meaning"                    type="xs:string"/>      <xs:attribute name="formatid"                    type="xs:string"/>      <xs:attribute name="restriction"                    type="iodef:restriction-type"/>    </xs:complexType>  <!--   ====================================================================   === Global attribute type declarations                          ===   ====================================================================  -->    <xs:simpleType name="restriction-type">      <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">        <xs:enumeration value="default"/>        <xs:enumeration value="public"/>        <xs:enumeration value="need-to-know"/>        <xs:enumeration value="private"/>      </xs:restriction>    </xs:simpleType>    <xs:simpleType name="severity-type">      <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">        <xs:enumeration value="low"/>        <xs:enumeration value="medium"/>        <xs:enumeration value="high"/>      </xs:restriction>    </xs:simpleType>Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 85]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007    <xs:simpleType name="duration-type">      <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">        <xs:enumeration value="second"/>        <xs:enumeration value="minute"/>        <xs:enumeration value="hour"/>        <xs:enumeration value="day"/>        <xs:enumeration value="month"/>        <xs:enumeration value="quarter"/>        <xs:enumeration value="year"/>        <xs:enumeration value="ext-value"/>      </xs:restriction>    </xs:simpleType>    <xs:simpleType name="action-type">      <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">        <xs:enumeration value="nothing"/>        <xs:enumeration value="contact-source-site"/>        <xs:enumeration value="contact-target-site"/>        <xs:enumeration value="contact-sender"/>        <xs:enumeration value="investigate"/>        <xs:enumeration value="block-host"/>        <xs:enumeration value="block-network"/>        <xs:enumeration value="block-port"/>        <xs:enumeration value="rate-limit-host"/>        <xs:enumeration value="rate-limit-network"/>        <xs:enumeration value="rate-limit-port"/>        <xs:enumeration value="remediate-other"/>        <xs:enumeration value="status-triage"/>        <xs:enumeration value="status-new-info"/>        <xs:enumeration value="other"/>        <xs:enumeration value="ext-value"/>      </xs:restriction>    </xs:simpleType>    <xs:simpleType name="dtype-type">      <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">        <xs:enumeration value="boolean"/>        <xs:enumeration value="byte"/>        <xs:enumeration value="character"/>        <xs:enumeration value="date-time"/>        <xs:enumeration value="integer"/>        <xs:enumeration value="ntpstamp"/>        <xs:enumeration value="portlist"/>        <xs:enumeration value="real"/>        <xs:enumeration value="string"/>        <xs:enumeration value="file"/>        <xs:enumeration value="path"/>        <xs:enumeration value="frame"/>Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 86]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007        <xs:enumeration value="packet"/>        <xs:enumeration value="ipv4-packet"/>        <xs:enumeration value="ipv6-packet"/>        <xs:enumeration value="url"/>        <xs:enumeration value="csv"/>        <xs:enumeration value="winreg"/>        <xs:enumeration value="xml"/>        <xs:enumeration value="ext-value"/>      </xs:restriction>    </xs:simpleType>  </xs:schema>9.  Security Considerations   The IODEF data model itself does not directly introduce security   issues.  Rather, it simply defines a representation for incident   information.  As the data encoded by the IODEF might be considered   privacy sensitive by the parties exchanging the information or by   those described by it, care needs to be taken in ensuring the   appropriate disclosure during both document exchange and subsequent   processing.  The former must be handled by a messaging format, but   the latter risk must be addressed by the systems that process, store,   and archive IODEF documents and information derived from them.   The contents of an IODEF document may include a request for action or   an IODEF parser may independently have logic to take certain actions   based on information that it finds.  For this reason, care must be   taken by the parser to properly authenticate the recipient of the   document and ascribe an appropriate confidence to the data prior to   action.   The underlying messaging format and protocol used to exchange   instances of the IODEF MUST provide appropriate guarantees of   confidentiality, integrity, and authenticity.  The use of a   standardized security protocol is encouraged.  The Real-time Inter-   network Defense (RID) protocol [18] and its associated transport   binding IODEF/RID over SOAP [19] provide such security.   In order to suggest data processing and handling guidelines of the   encoded information, the IODEF allows a document sender to convey a   privacy policy using the restriction attribute.  The various   instances of this attribute allow different data elements of the   document to be covered by dissimilar policies.  While flexible, it   must be stressed that this approach only serves as a guideline from   the sender, as the recipient is free to ignore it.  The issue of   enforcement is not a technical problem.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 87]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 200710.  IANA Considerations   This document uses URNs to describe an XML namespace and schema   conforming to a registry mechanism described in [15]   Registration for the IODEF namespace:   o  URI: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iodef-1.0   o  Registrant Contact: See the first author of the "Author's Address"      section of this document.   o  XML: None.  Namespace URIs do not represent an XML specification.   Registration for the IODEF XML schema:   o  URI: urn:ietf:params:xml:schema:iodef-1.0   o  Registrant Contact: See the first author of the "Author's Address"      section of this document.   o  XML: See the "IODEF Schema" inSection 8 of this document.11.  Acknowledgments   The following groups and individuals, listed alphabetically,   contributed substantially to this document and should be recognized   for their efforts.   o  Patrick Cain, Cooper-Cain Group, Inc.   o  The eCSIRT.net Project   o  The Incident Object Description and Exchange Format Working-Group      of the TERENA task-force (TF-CSIRT)   o  Glenn Mansfield Keeni, Cyber Solutions, Inc.   o  Hiroyuki Kido, NARA Institute of Science and Technology   o  Kathleen Moriarty, MIT Lincoln Laboratory   o  Brian Trammell, CERT/NetSADanyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 88]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 200712.  References12.1.  Normative References   [1]   World Wide Web Consortium, "Extensible Markup Language (XML)         1.0 (Second Edition)", W3C Recommendation , October 2000,         <http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/REC-xml-20001006>.   [2]   World Wide Web Consortium, "XML XML Schema Part 1: Structures         Second Edition", W3C Recommendation , October 2004,         <http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema-1/>.   [3]   World Wide Web Consortium, "XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second         Edition", W3C Recommendation , October 2004,         <http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema-2/>.   [4]   World Wide Web Consortium, "Namespaces in XML", W3C         Recommendation , January 1999,         <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names/>.   [5]   World Wide Web Consortium, "XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0", W3C         Candidate Recommendation , June 2006,         <http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath20/>.   [6]   Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement         Levels",RFC 2119, March 1997.   [7]   Philips, A. and M. Davis, "Tags for Identifying of Languages",RFC 4646, September 2006.   [8]   Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform         Resource Identifiers (URI): Generic Syntax",RFC 3986,         January 2005`.   [9]   Freed, N. and J. Postel, "IANA Charset Registration         Procedures",BCP 2978, October 2000.   [10]  Sciberras, A., "Schema for User Applications",RFC 4519,         June 2006.   [11]  Resnick, P., "Internet Message Format",RFC 2822, April 2001.   [12]  Klyne, G. and C. Newman, "Date and Time on the Internet:         Timestamps",RFC 3339, July 2002.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 89]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007   [13]  International Organization for Standardization, "International         Standard: Data elements and interchange formats - Information         interchange - Representation of dates and times", ISO 8601,         Second Edition, December 2000.   [14]  International Organization for Standardization, "International         Standard: Codes for the representation of currencies and funds,         ISO 4217:2001", ISO 4217:2001, August 2001.   [15]  Mealling, M., "The IETF XML Registry",RFC 3688, January 2004.12.2.  Informative References   [16]  Keeni, G., Demchenko, Y., and R. Danyliw, "Requirements for the         Format for Incident Information Exchange (FINE)", Work         in Progress, June 2006.   [17]  Debar, H., Curry, D., Debar, H., and B. Feinstein, "Intrusion         Detection Message Exchange Format",RFC 4765, March 2007.   [18]  Moriarty, K.,"Real-time Inter-network Defense", Work         in Progress, April 2007.   [19]  Moriarty, K. and B. Trammell,"IODEF/RID over SOAP", Work         in Progress, April 2007.   [20]  Shafranovich, Y., "Common Format and MIME Type for Comma-         Separated Values (CSV) File",RFC 4180, October 2005.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 90]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007Authors' Addresses   Roman Danyliw   CERT - Software Engineering Institute   Pittsburgh, PA   USA   EMail: rdd@cert.org   Jan Meijer   EMail: jan@flyingcloggies.nl   Yuri Demchenko   University of Amsterdam   Amsterdam   Netherlands   EMail: demch@chello.nlDanyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 91]

RFC 5070                         IODEF                     December 2007Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions   contained inBCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors   retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY, THE IETF TRUST AND   THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS   OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF   THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be   found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at   ietf-ipr@ietf.org.Danyliw, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 92]

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