Certificate 2294 - RSA BSAFE Crypto-C Micro Edition
intCertNum 2294
strVendorName RSA, The Security Division of EMC
strURL http://www.rsa.com
strAddress1 174 Middlesex Turnpike
strAddress2
strAddress3
strCity Bedford
strStateProv MA
strPostalCode 01730
strCountry 01730
strContact Rohit Mathur
strEmail rohit.mathur@rsa.com
strPhone +61 7 3032 5220
strFax
strContact2
strEmail2
strFax2
strPhone2
intCertNum 2294
strModuleName RSA BSAFE Crypto-C Micro Edition
strPartNumber Software Versions: 4.1 [1], 4.1.0.1 [2] and 4.1.2 [3]
memModuleNotes When operated in FIPS mode. When entropy is externally loaded, no assurance of the minimum strength of generated keys
str140Version 140-2
_sp_ Security Policy   [pdf][html][txt]
_cert_ Certificate   [pdf]
strPURL
strModuleType Software
strValidationDate 12/12/2014;12/21/2015;01/19/2016;01/22/2016;02/12/2016
intOverallLevel 1
memIndividualLevelNotes -Cryptographic Module Specification: Level 3;-Physical Security: N/A ;-Design Assurance: Level 3;;;-Operational Environment: Windows Server 2003 Enterprise R2 running on a Dell Dimension E521 without PAA [1]; Windows Server 2003 Enterprise R2 running on an Intel Mahobay with PAA [1]; Windows Server 2008 Enterprise SP2 running on an Intel Mahobay without PAA [1]; Windows Server 2008 Enterprise SP2 running on an Intel Mahobay with PAA [1]; Windows 7 Enterprise SP1 running on a Compaq Pro 6305 without PAA [1]; Windows 7 Enterprise SP1 running on a Compaq Pro 6305 with PAA [1]; Windows Server 2003 Enterprise R2 running on a Dell Dimension E521 without PAA [1]; Windows Server 2003 Enterprise R2 running on an Apple Mac Pro 1.1 with PAA [1]; Windows Server 2008 Enterprise R2 running on a Dell Dimension E521 without PAA [1]; Windows Server 2008 Enterprise R2 running on an Intel Mahobay with PAA [1]; Windows 7 Enterprise SP1 running on an Intel Mahobay without PAA [1]; Windows 7 Enterprise SP1 running on an Intel Mahobay with PAA [1]; Windows Server 2003 Enterprise R2 running on a HP Integrity RX2620 [1]; Windows Server 2008 Enterprise R2 running on a HP Integrity RX2620 [1][3]; Windows Server 2003 Enterprise R2 running on a Dell Dimension E521 without PAA [1]; Windows Server 2003 Enterprise R2 on ESX 5.1 running on a Dell M610 with PAA [1]; Windows Server 2008 Enterprise SP2 running on an Intel Mahobay without PAA [1]; Windows Server 2008 Enterprise SP2 running on an Intel Mahobay with PAA [1]; Windows 7 Enterprise SP1 running on a Compaq Pro 6305 without PAA [1]; Windows 7 Enterprise SP1 running on a Compaq Pro 6305 with PAA [1]; Windows Server 2003 Enterprise R2 running on a Dell Dimension E521 without PAA [1]; Windows Server 2003 Enterprise R2 running on an Apple Mac Pro 1.1 with PAA [1]; Windows Server 2008 Enterprise R2 running on a Dell Dimension E521 without PAA [1]; Windows Server 2008 Enterprise R2 running on an Intel Mahobay with PAA [1]; Windows 7 Enterprise SP1 running on an Intel Mahobay without PAA [1]; Windows 7 Enterprise SP1 running on an Intel Mahobay with PAA [1]; Windows Server 2012 R2 Standard running on a Compaq Pro 6305 without PAA [1]; Windows Server 2012 R2 Standard running on a Compaq Pro 6305 with PAA [1]; Windows 8.1 Enterprise running on an Intel Mahobay without PAA [1]; Windows 8.1 Enterprise running on an Intel Mahobay with PAA [1]; Windows Server 2003 Enterprise R2 running on a HP Integrity RX2620 [1]; Windows Server 2008 Enterprise R2 running on a HP Integrity RX2620 [1]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.5 on ESX 4.0 running on a Dell M610 without PAA [1]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.5 on ESX 4.0 running on a Dell M610 with PAA [1]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.5 on ESX 4.0 running on a Dell M610 without PAA [1]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.5 on ESX 4.0 running on a Dell M610 with PAA [1]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.1 on ESXi 4.1 running on a Dell M610 without PAA [1]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.1 on ESXi 4.1 running on a Dell M610 with PAA [1]; SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 on ESX 4.0 running on a Dell M610 without PAA [1]; SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 on ESX 4.0 running on a Dell M610 with PAA [1]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.1 on ESXi 4.1 running on a Dell M610 without PAA [1]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.1 on ESXi 4.1 running on a Dell M610 with PAA [1]; SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 on ESXi 4.1 running on a Dell M610 without PAA [1]; SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 on ESXi 4.1 running on a Dell M610 with PAA [1]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.5 running on a Server HP RX 2620 [1]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.3 running on a IBM Power 710 8231 - E2B [1]; SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 running on a IBM Power 710 8231 - E2B [1]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.3 running on a IBM Power 710 8231 - E2B [1]; SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 running on a IBM Power 710 8231 - E2B [1]; FreeBSD 8.3 on ESXi 5.0 running on a Dell M610 without PAA [1]; FreeBSD 8.3 on ESXi 5.0 running on a Dell M610 with PAA [1]; Mac OS X 10.8 running on an Apple MacBook6,1 without PAA [1]; Mac OS X 10.8 running on an Apple Mac Pro 5.1 with PAA [1]; Solaris 10 running on a Oracle SPARC T4-2 [1][3]; Solaris 11 running on a Oracle SPARC T4-2 [1][3]; Solaris 11 running on a Oracle SPARC Enterprise T5120 [1][3]; Solaris 11 running on a Oracle SPARC T4-2 without T4 accelerator [1][3]; Solaris 11 running on a Oracle SPARC T4-2 with T4 accelerator [1][3]; Solaris 10 on ESXi 4.1 running on a Dell M610 without PAA [1]; Solaris 10 on ESXi 4.1 running on a Dell M610 with PAA [1]; Solaris 10 running on a Oracle Sun Fire X2100 without PAA [1]; Solaris 10 running on a Oracle Sun Fire X2100 with PAA [1]; HPUX 11.31 running on a HP 9000/800/RP3410 [1][3]; HPUX 11.31 running on a HP 9000/800/RP3410 [1][3]; HPUX 11.31 running on a HP RX2620 [1][3]; HPUX 11.31 running on a HP RX2620 [1][3]; AIX 6.1 on Virtual I/O Server 2.2.2.1 running on a IBM Power 710 8231 - E2B [1][3]; AIX 6.1 on Virtual I/O Server 2.2.2.1 running on a IBM Power 710 8231 - E2B [1][3]; AIX 7.1 on Virtual I/O Server 2.2.2.1 running on a IBM Power 710 8231 - E1C [1][3]; AIX 7.1 on Virtual I/O Server 2.2.2.1 running on a IBM Power 710 8231 - E1C [1][3]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.8 on z/VM 6.2 running on a IBM s390x [1]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.8 on z/VM 6.2 running on a IBM s390x [1]; Ubuntu 12.04 LTS running on a Beagle dev board [1][3]; Fedora Core 17 running on a Beagle dev board [1]; Android 4.0.3 running on a Motorola RAZR I [1]; Android 2.3.6 running on a Samsung Galaxy S2 [1]; Android 4.1.2 running on a Google Nexus 7; iOS 7.1 running on an Apple iPad 3 [1]; iOS 7.1 running on an Apple iPad 4 [1]; VxWorks 6.4 running on a MVME6100 [1][3]; VxWorks 6.7 running on a MVME6100 [1][3]; VxWorks 6.8 running on a MX31 Lite Kit [1][3]; Windows Server 2008 Enterprise on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server without PAA [3]; Windows 7 Enterprise on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server without PAA [3]; Windows Server 2008 Enterprise on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server with PAA [3]; Windows 7 Enterprise on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server with PAA [3]; Windows Server 2008 Enterprise R2 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server without PAA [3]; Windows Server 2008 Enterprise R2 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server with PAA [3]; Windows Server 2012 Standard R2 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server without PAA [3]; Windows 8 Enterprise on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server without PAA [3]; Windows Server 2012 Standard R2 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server with PAA [3]; Windows 8 Enterprise on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server with PAA [3]; Windows 10 Enterprise on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server without PAA [3]; Windows 10 Enterprise on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server with PAA [3]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.11 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server without PAA [3]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.11 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server with PAA [3]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.7 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server without PAA [3]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.7 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server with PAA [3]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.1 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server without PAA [3]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.1 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server with PAA [3]; SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server without PAA [3]; SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server with PAA [3]; SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 12 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server without PAA [3]; SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 12 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server with PAA [3]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.11 running on a HP Integrity RX2620 [3]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.11 on PowerVM 2.2 running on an IBM 8231-E2B [3]; SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 on PowerVM 2.2 running on an IBM 8231-E2B [3]; FreeBSD 10.2 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server without PAA [3]; FreeBSD 10.2 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server with PAA [3]; Mac OSX 10.10 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Mac Pro 6.10 without PAA [3]; Mac OSX 10.10 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Mac Pro 6.10 with PAA [3]; Solaris 10 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server without PAA [3]; Solaris 10 on vCenter SUSE 11 running on a Cisco UCS C220 M3 Rack Server with PAA [3]; Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.11 on z/VM 6.2 running on a IBM s390x [3]; Fedora Core 20 running on a Wandboard Quad [3]; Fedora Core 22 running on an AMD Seattle A0 Overdrive Development System [3]; Android 4.1 running on a Motorola RAZR I [3]; Android 4.4 running on a Google Nexus 7 Tablet [3]; Android 5.1 running on a Google Nexus 5 [3]; Android 5.1 running on a Google Nexus 9 Tablet [3]; CentOS 6.6 running on a Dell R730xd [3]; Linaro Linux 3.10.68 running on a Fujitsu MB86S72 [2] (single-user mode)
strFIPSAlgorithms AES (Certs. #2859 [1], #3596 [3] and #3767 [2]);
CVL (Certs. #296 [1], #297 [1], #298 [1], #299 [1], #300 [1], #618 [3], #619 [3], #620 [3], #621 [3], #622 [3], #714 [2], #715 [2], #716 [2], #717 [2] and #740 [2]);
DRBG (Certs. #507 [1], #931 [3] and #1037 [2]);
DSA (Certs. #858 [1], #999 [3] and #1047 [2]);
ECDSA (Certs. #507 [1], #733 [3] and #810 [2]);
HMAC (Certs. #1799 [1], #2293 [3] and #2467 [2]);
PBKDF (vendor affirmed);
RSA (Certs. #1499 [1], #1850 [3] and #1938 [2]);
SHS (Certs. #2402 [1], #2958 [3] and #3137 [2]);
Triple-DES (Certs. #1706 [1], #2003 [3] and #2095 [2])
strOtherAlgorithms AES (non-compliant);
Camellia;
DES;
DESX;
DES40;
Diffie-Hellman;
Dual EC DRBG;
EC Diffie-Hellman;
ECAES (non-compliant);
ECIES;
GOST;
HMAC MD5;
MD2;
MD4;
MD5;
NDRNG;
RC2;
RC4;
RC5;
RNG;
RSA (key wrapping;
key establishment methodology provides between 112 and 150 bits of encryption strength;
non-compliant less than 112 bits of encryption strength);
SEED
strConfiguration Multi-chip standalone
memModuleDescription The Crypto-C Micro Edition (ME) Module is RSA, The Security Division of EMC's cryptographic library designed for securing mobile devices like wireless phones and personal digital assistants. It contains assembly-level optimizations on key wireless processors. Its functionality includes a wide range of data encryption and signing algorithms, including Triple-DES, the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) algorithm, the RSA Public Key Cryptosystem, the DSA government signature algorithm, MD5 and SHA1 message digest routines, and more.
intModuleCount 1
memAdditionalNotes Added SW 4.1.2, several algorithms, several OS's and updated the SP
Updated contact information.
Deprecated use of non-approved RNG and added new SW versions for bug fixes/adding a new OS.
strFirstValidtionDate 12/12/14 00:00:00
strLabName Leidos
strValidationYear 2014