HP-UX System Administrator's Guide: Security Management HP-UX 11i v3 (B3921-90020, September 2010)

Table Of Contents
operations. By cryptographic wrapping, private keys can be rendered usable only on
a specific platform with a specific embedded TPM. This is useful for ensuring against
unauthorized use of private keys on platforms other than those intended by the key
owners. A TCS-generated key is effectively restricted for use on a single platform.
The TCS package provides an extensive set of library functions for application
development. These library functions have been specified by the Trusted Computing
Group for implementation on a wide range of platform architectures. The TCS package
also includes commands for generating and maintaining TCS keys, and for bulk
encryption of user data. You can find more information on TPM and Trusted Computing
at: https://www.trustedcomputinggroup.org/home.
With TCS installed, TPM protection of private keys becomes available to a number of
applications:
HP-UX Encrypted Volume File System (EVFS) volumes can be configured to use
TCS keys. With TCS, these volumes can only be decrypted on a specific server
with the correct TPM chip. Procedures are provided for encrypted volume backup
and configuration of ServiceGuard clustering when TCS keys are employed.
HP-UX SecureShell now contains support for utilization of TCS keys for servers
establishing encrypted sessions with remote clients. This prevents a SecureShell
server from being easily transferred to another platform.
With HP-UX OpenSSL, TCS key protection can be easily integrated into applications
that rely on OpenSSL for cryptographic operations. The Stunnel product available
with Internet Express provides a solid example of how TCS keys can be integrated
through OpenSSL. An application server employing Stunnel to establish encrypted
sessions can utilize TCS keys through Stunnel.
For more information, see the HP-UX TCS documentation:
http://www.hp.com/go/hpux-security-docs
Click HP-UX Trusted Computing Services (TCS) Software.
B.12 Security Patches
HP-UX Software Assistant (SWA) is a command-line based tool that consolidates and
simplifies patch management and security bulletin management on HP-UX systems.
The SWA tool is new for HP-UX releases as of January 2007, replaces Security Patch
Check (SPC), and is the HP-recommended utility to use to maintain currency with
HP-published security bulletins for HP-UX software.
HP provides up-to-date software patches to known security problems that allow
unauthorized root access to your system.
For more information, see the HP-UX SWA documentation:
http://www.hp.com/go/hpux-security-docs
Click HP-UX Software Assistant (SWA) Software.
B.12 Security Patches 197