oasis

Cross-Enterprise Security and Privacy Authorization (XSPA) Profile of Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML) for Healthcare Version 1.0

OASIS Standard

1 November 2009

Specification URIs:

This Version:

http://docs.oasis-open.org/security/xspa/v1.0/saml-xspa-1.0-os.html  

http://docs.oasis-open.org/security/xspa/v1.0/saml-xspa-1.0-os.pdf   

http://docs.oasis-open.org/security/xspa/v1.0/saml-xspa-1.0-os.doc   (Authoritative)

Previous Version:

http://docs.oasis-open.org/security/xspa/v1.0/saml-xspa-1.0-cs01.html 

http://docs.oasis-open.org/security/xspa/v1.0/saml-xspa-1.0-cs01.pdf  

http://docs.oasis-open.org/security/xspa/v1.0/saml-xspa-1.0-cs01.doc   (Authoritative) 

Latest Version:

http://docs.oasis-open.org/security/xspa/v1.0/saml-xspa-1.0.html

http://docs.oasis-open.org/security/xspa/v1.0/saml-xspa-1.0.pdf

http://docs.oasis-open.org/security/xspa/v1.0/saml-xspa-1.0.doc (Authoritative)

Technical Committee:

OASIS Security Services (SAML) TC

Chair(s):

Brian Campbell, Ping Identity Corporation

Hal Lockhart, Oracle Corporation

Editor(s):

Mike Davis, Department of Veterans Affairs

Duane DeCouteau, Department of Veterans Affairs

David Staggs, Department of Veterans Affairs

Related work:

·         Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML) v2.0

Declared XML Namespace(s):

urn:oasis:names:tc:xacml:2.0

urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:1.0

urn:oasis:names:tc:saml:2.0

Abstract:

This profile describes a framework in which SAML is encompassed by cross-enterprise security and privacy authorization (XSPA) to satisfy requirements pertaining to information-centric security within the healthcare community.

Status:

This document was last revised or approved by the OASIS Security Services (SAML) TC on the above date. The level of approval is also listed above. Check the “Latest Version” or “Latest Approved Version” location noted above for possible later revisions of this document.

Technical Committee members should send comments on this specification to the Technical Committee’s email list. Others should send comments to the Technical Committee by using the “Send A Comment” button on the Technical Committee’s web page at http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/security/.

For information on whether any patents have been disclosed that may be essential to implementing this specification, and any offers of patent licensing terms, please refer to the Intellectual Property Rights section of the Technical Committee web page (http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/security/ipr.php.

The non-normative errata page for this specification is located at http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/security/.

Notices

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Table of Contents

1      Introduction. 5

1.1 Terminology. 5

1.2 Normative References. 5

1.3 Non-Normative References. 6

2      XSPA profile of SAML Implementation. 7

2.1 Interactions between Parties. 7

2.1.1 Access Control Service (Service User) 7

2.1.2 Access Control Service (Service Provider) 7

2.1.3 Attributes. 7

2.1.4 Security Policy. 8

2.1.5 Privacy Policy. 8

2.2 Protocols. 8

2.3 Transmission Integrity. 8

2.4 Transmission Confidentiality. 8

2.5 Error States. 8

2.6 Security Considerations. 8

2.7 Confirmation Identifiers. 9

2.8 Metadata Definitions. 9

2.9 Naming Syntax, Restrictions and Acceptable Values. 9

2.10 Namespace Requirements. 9

2.11 Attribute Rules of Equality. 9

2.12 Attribute Naming Syntax, Restrictions and Acceptable Values. 9

2.12.1 Name. 9

2.12.2 National Provider Identifier (NPI) – (optional) 9

2.12.3 Organization. 10

2.12.4 Organization-ID.. 10

2.12.5 Structural Role. 10

2.12.6 Functional Role. 10

2.12.7 Permission (optional) 10

2.12.8 Action. 10

2.12.9 Execute (optional) 10

2.12.10 Object 11

2.12.11 Purpose of Use (POU) 11

2.12.12 Resource. 12

3      Conformance. 13

3.1 Introduction. 13

3.2 Conformance Tables. 14

A.     Acknowledgements. 15

B.     Revision History. 17

Table of Figures

Figure 1: Interaction between Parties 7

Figure 2: Determining Subject Permissions 12


1      Introduction

This document describes a framework that provides access control interoperability useful in the healthcare environment.  Interoperability is achieved using SAML assertions that carry common semantics and vocabularies in exchanges specified below.

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 in [RFC2119].

The keywords ”MUST”, “MUST NOT”, “REQUIRED”, “SHALL”, “SHALL NOT”, “SHOULD”, “SHOULD NOT”, “RECOMMENDED”, “MAY”, and “OPTIONAL” are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].

The following definitions establish additional terminology and usage in this profile:

Access Control Service (ACS) – The Access Control Service is the enterprise security service that supports and implements user-side and service-side access control capabilities.  The service would be utilized by the Service and/or Service User.

Object – An object is an entity that contains or receives information.  The objects can represent information containers (e.g., files or directories in an operating system, and/or columns, rows, tables, and views within a database management system) or objects can represent exhaustible system resources, such as printers, disk space, and central processing unit (CPU) cycles.  ANSI RBAC (American National Standards Institute Role Based Access Control)

Operation - An operation is an executable image of a program, which upon invocation executes some function for the user.  Within a file system, operations might include read, write, and execute.  Within a database management system, operations might include insert, delete, append, and update.  An operation is also known as an action or privilege.  ANSI RBAC

Permission - An approval to perform an operation on one or more RBAC protected objects.  ANSI RBAC

Structural Role - A job function within the context of an organization whose permissions are defined by operations on workflow objects.  ASTM (American Society for Testing and Materials) E2595-2007

Service Provider (SP) - The service provider represents the system providing a protected resource and relies on the provided security service.

Entity - An entity may also be known as a principal and/or subject, which represents an application, a machine, or any other type of entity that may act as a requester in a transaction.

Service User - The service user represents any individual entity [such as on an Electronic Health Record (EHR)/personal health record (PHR) system] that needs to make a service request of a Service Provider.

1.2 Normative References

[RFC2119] S. Bradner, Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels, http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2119.txt, IETF RFC 2119, March 1997.

[SAMLPROF] OASIS Standard, “Profiles for the OASIS Security Assertion Markup Language, v2.0,” March 2005. http://docs.oasis-open.org/security/saml/v2.0/saml-profiles-2.0-os.pdf  

[ASTM E1986-98 (2005)] Standard Guide for Information Access Privileges to Health Information.

[ASTM E2595 (2007)] Standard Guide for Privilege Management Infrastructure

[SAML] OASIS Standard, “Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML) v2.0” http://docs.oasis-open.org/security/saml/v2.0/saml-core-2.0-os.pdf  

[HL7-PERM] HL7 Security Technical Committee, HL7 Version 3 Standard: Role-based Access Control Healthcare Permission Catalog, (Available through http://www.hl7.org/library/standards.cfm), Release 1, Designation: ANSI/HL7 V3 RBAC, R1-2008, Approval Date 2/20/2008.

[HL7-CONSENT] HL7 Consent Related Vocabulary Confidentiality Codes Recommendation, http://lists.oasis-open.org/archives/xacml-demo-tech/200712/doc00003.doc, from project submission: http://lists.oasis-open.org/archives/xacml-demo-tech/200712/msg00015.html  

1.3 Non-Normative References

[XSPA-SAML-INTRO]

OASIS Committee Working Draft, “Introductory overview of XSPA Profile of SAML for Healthcare,” http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/document.php?document_id=30407

[XSPA-SAML-EXAMPLES]

OASIS Committee Working Draft, “Implementation examples of XSPA Profile of SAML for Healthcare,” http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/document.php?document_id=30408

2      XSPA profile of SAML Implementation

The XSPA profile of SAML describes the minimum vocabulary necessary to provide access control over resources and functionality within and between healthcare information technology (IT) systems.  Additional introductory information and examples can be found in Cross-Enterprise Security and Privacy Authorization (XSPA) a Profile of Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML) Implementation Examples [XSPA-SAML-EXAMPLES].

2.1 Interactions between Parties

Figure 1 displays an overview of interactions between parties in the exchange of healthcare information.  Elements described in the figure are explained in the subsections below.  The Service Request, Identity Assertion, and Authorization Attributes in Figure 1 are prepared by the Service User Access Control Service and MAY be passed in a single assertion from the Service User to the Service Provider.  The Service Provider Access Control Service evaluates the request against policy and indicates to the Service Provider if the request may be fulfilled.

Figure 1: Interaction between Parties

2.1.1 Access Control Service (Service User)

The XSPA profile of SAML supports sending all requests through an Access Control Service (ACS).  The Access Control Service receives the Service User request and responds with a SAML assertion containing user authorizations and attributes.  To perform its function, the ACS collects all the attributes (e.g. organization-id, structural role, functional role, purpose of use, requested resource, and actions) necessary to create the Service User requested assertion. 

In addition to creating the request, the requesting ACS is responsible for enforcing local security and privacy policy.

2.1.2 Access Control Service (Service Provider)

The Service Provider ACS is responsible for the parsing of assertions, evaluating the assertions against the security and privacy policy, and making and enforcing a decision on behalf of the Service Provider.

2.1.3 Attributes

Attributes are information related to user location, role, purpose of use, and requested resource requirements and actions necessary to make an access control decision.

2.1.4 Security Policy

The security policy includes the rules regarding authorizations required to access a protected resource and additional security conditions (location, time of day, cardinality, separation of duty, purpose, etc.) that constrain enforcement.

2.1.5 Privacy Policy

The privacy policy includes the set of consent directives and other privacy conditions (object masking, object filtering, user, role, purpose, etc.) that constrain enforcement.

2.2 Protocols

This profile utilizes the SAML 2.0 core specification to define the elements exchanged in a cross-enterprise service request that supports security and privacy policies.  Requests MAY be exchanged using a SAML assertion containing elements such as saml2:Issuer, saml2:NameID, and saml2:AttributeStatement.

2.3 Transmission Integrity

The XSPA profile of SAML recommends the use of reliable transmission protocols.  Where transmission integrity is required, this profile makes no specific recommendations regarding mechanism or assurance level.

2.4 Transmission Confidentiality

The XSPA profile of SAML recommends the use of secure transmission protocols.  Where transmission confidentiality is required, this profile makes no specific recommendations regarding mechanisms.

2.5 Error States

This profile adheres to error states describe in SAML 2.0.

2.6 Security Considerations

The following security considerations are established for the XSPA profile of SAML:

·         Participating information domains have agreed to use XSPA profile and that a trust relationship exists,

·         Entities are members of defined information domains under the authorization control of a defined set of policies,

·         Entities have been identified and provisioned (credentials issued, privileges granted, etc.) in accordance with policy,

·         Privacy policies have been identified and provisioned (consents, user preferences, etc.) in accordance with policy,

·         Pre-existing security and privacy policies have been provisioned to Access Control Services,

·         The capabilities and location of requested information/document repository services are known,

·         Secure channels are established as required by policy,

·         Audit services are operational and initialized, and

·         Entities have asserted membership in an information domain by successful and unique authentication.

2.7 Confirmation Identifiers

The manner used by the relying party to confirm that the requester message came from a system entity that is associated with the subject of the assertion will depend upon the context and sensitivity of the data.  For confirmations requiring a specific level of assurance, this profile specifies the use of National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Special Publication 800-63 Electronic Authentication Guideline.  In addition, this profile specifies the Liberty Identity Access Framework (LIAF) criteria for evaluating and approving credential service providers.

2.8 Metadata Definitions

This profile will utilize the SAML <Attribute> element for all assertions.

2.9 Naming Syntax, Restrictions and Acceptable Values

This profile conforms to SAML 2.0 specification.

2.10 Namespace Requirements

The NameFormat Extensible Markup Language (XML) attribute in <Attribute> elements MUST be urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:attrname-format:uri.

2.11 Attribute Rules of Equality

All asserted attributes will be typed as strings.  Two <Attribute> elements refer to the same SAML attribute if and only if their Name XML attribute values are equal in a binary comparison.

2.12 Attribute Naming Syntax, Restrictions and Acceptable Values

The Name XML attribute MUST adhere to the rules specified for that format, as defined by [SAMLCore].  For purposes of human readability, there may also be a requirement for some applications to carry an optional string name together with the Object Identifier (OID) Uniform Resource Name (URN).  The optional XML attribute FriendlyName (defined in [SAMLCore]) MAY be used for this purpose, but is not translatable into an XACML attribute equivalent.

This profile will utilize the namespace of urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:1.0

Example of use:

<saml:Attribute NameFormat="urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:attrname-format:uri" Name="urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:1.0:organization">

 <saml:AttributeValue xsi:type="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#string">

   County Hospital

 </saml:AttributeValue>

</saml:Attribute>

2.12.1 Name

Name is the name of the user as required by Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) Privacy Disclosure Accounting.  The name will be typed as a string and in plain text with an identifying tag of <urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:1.0:subject:subject-id>.

2.12.2 National Provider Identifier (NPI) – (optional)

NPI is a US Government issued unique provider identifier required for all Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) Privacy Disclosure Accounting transactions. NPI will be typed as a string in plain text with an identifying element of <urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:1.0:subject:npi>.

2.12.3 Organization

Organization is the organization that the user belongs to as required by HIPAA Privacy Disclosure Accounting.  Organization will be typed as a string in plain text with an identifying element of <urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:1.0:subject:organization>.

2.12.4 Organization-ID

Organization-ID is the unique identifier of  the consuming organization and/or facility.

2.12.5 Structural Role

Structural Role is the value of the principal’s structural role.  Structural roles that are used in this profile are defined in Table 2 “Healthcare Personnel that Warrant Differing Levels of Access Control” of ASTM 1986-98 (2005) Standard Guide for Information Access Privileges to Health Information.  ASTM E1986

Structural roles are described in greater depth in ASTM E2595-07, Standard Guide for Privilege Management Infrastructure.

Structural roles provide authorizations on objects at a global level without regard to internal details.  Examples include authorization to participate in a session, authorization to connect to a database, authorization to participate in an order workflow, or connection to a protected uniform resource locator (URL).  The structural role is the role name referenced by the patient’s consent directive.

2.12.6 Functional Role

Functional role can include custom attributes related to application functionality agreed upon by the parties in an exchange.

2.12.7 Permission (optional)

Permission is not required by this profile.  Permission is determined by the action on the target.  See “Action” below.  The permission is the ANSI INCITS (International Committee for Information Technology Standards) RBAC compliant action-object pair representing the authorization required for access by the protected resource.

2.12.8 Action

The HL7 (Health Level Seven) RBAC Permission catalog is an ANSI INCITS 359-2004 RBAC compliant vocabulary that provides a minimal permission subset for interoperability.  This profile specifies the use of the following HL7 RBAC Permission Catalog Actions:

·         Append

·         Create

·         Delete

·         Read

·         Update

·         Execute

2.12.9 Execute (optional)

Execute refers to complex functions and stored procedures that provide for extended actions within the healthcare environment.  Examples include "print", "suspend", and "sign".  Execute can include custom attributes related to functionality agreed upon by the parties in an exchange.

2.12.10 Object

Objects are any system resource subject to access control.  This profile specifies the use of HL7 RBAC Permission Catalog as the object vocabulary in an action-object permission pair.  HL7 RBAC Permission Catalog provides the minimum set of interoperable objects suitable for the support of security and privacy access control decisions in this profile.

2.12.11 Purpose of Use (POU)

Purpose of use provides context to requests for information resources.  Each purpose of use will be unique to a specific assertion, and will establish the context for other security and privacy attributes.  For a given claim, all assertions must be bound to the same purpose of use.  Purpose of use allows the service to consult its policies to determine if the user’s authorizations meet or exceed those needed for access control.  Purpose of Use will be typed as string with an identifying element of <urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:1.0:subject:purposeofuse>

The following list of healthcare related purposes of use is specified by this profile:

 

Table 1:  Values for Purpose of Use

Description

Allowed Value

Healthcare Treatment

TREATMENT

Payment

PAYMENT

Operations

OPERATIONS

Emergency Treatment

EMERGENCY

System Administration

SYSADMIN

Research

RESEARCH

Marketing

MARKETING

Request of the Individual

REQUEST

Public Health

PUBLICHEALTH

 

Figure 2 illustrates the general relationship between subject (user) and granted permissions to specific objects as a relationship to their POU.  Roles in this relationship are placeholders for permissions.  Permission defines the object-action relationship.

Figure 2: Determining Subject Permissions

2.12.12 Resource

The object(s) for which access is requested must be identical to the object(s) for which the authorization assertions of this profile apply.  A requested resource is not required to be a simple object but may instead be a process or workflow.  This profile specifies the use of HL7 RBAC Permission Catalog as the resource vocabulary. .

3      Conformance

3.1 Introduction

The XSPA profile of SAML addresses the following aspects of conformance:

This profile describes a minimum vocabulary set that must be supported in order to claim conformance.

An Implementation must conform at minimum to the SAML v2.0 specification.  The following tables describes the Attribute naming syntax, restrictions, and acceptable values,

 

Table 2:  Attribute Naming, Typing, and Acceptable Value Set

Identifier

Type

Valid Values

urn:oasis:names:tc:xacml:1.0:subject:subject-id

String

Is the name of the user as required by Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) Privacy Disclosure Accounting.  The name will be typed as a string and in plain text.

urn:oasis:names:tc:xpsa:1.0:subject:organization

String

Organization the requestor belongs to as required by Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)Privacy Disclosure Accounting.

urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:1.0:subject:organization-id

anyURI

Unique identifier of the consuming organization and/or facility

urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:1.0:subject:hl7:permission

String

Refer to [HL7-PERM] and its OID representation.

urn:oasis:names:tc:xacml:2.0:subject:role

String

Structural Role refer to [ASTM E1986-98 (2005)] and its OID representation.

urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:1,0:subject:purposeofuse

String

TREATMENT, PAYMENT, OPERATIONS, EMERGENCY, SYSADMIN, MARKETING, RESEARCH, REQUEST, PUBLICHEALTH

urn:oasis:names:tc:xacml:1.0:resource:resource-id

String

Unique identifier of the resource defined by and controlled by the servicing organization. In healthcare this is the patient unique identifier.

urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:1.0:resource:hl7:type

String

For minimum interoperability set of objects and supporting actions refer to [HL7-PERM] and their OID representations.

urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:1.0:environment:locality

String

Unique identifier of the servicing organization.

urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:2.0:subject:npi

String

National Provider ID provided by U.S. Government for all active providers.

*Note: The OID for the HL7 Permission Catalog [HL7-PERM] is 2.16.840.1.113883.13.27.  The OID for structural roles referenced in [ASTM E1986-98 (2005)] is 1.2.840.10065.1986.7

 

The mechanism used to identify the patent in a standardized way, e.g. resource:resource-id, is outside the scope of the profile.

HL7 RBAC Permission Catalog [HL7-PERM] represents a conformant minimum interoperability set for object/action pairings.

 

3.2 Conformance Tables

The following section identifies portions of the profile that MUST be adhered to in order to claim conformance.

Note: “M” is mandatory “O” is optional.

Attributes

The implementation MUST use the attributes associated with the following identifiers in the way this profile has defined.

Table 3: Conformance Attributes

Identifiers

urn:oasis:names:tc:xacml:1.0:subject:subject-id

M

urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:1.0:subject:organization-id

M

urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:1.0:organization

M

urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:1.0:subject:hl7:permission

O

urn:oasis:names:tc:xacml:2.0:subject:role ASTM E1986-98 (2005) Structured Role Value

M

Urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:1.0:subject:functional-role

O

urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:1.0:subject:purposeofuse

M

urn:oasis:names:tc:xacml:1.0:resource:resource-id

M

urn:oasis:names:tc:xacml:1.0:action:action-id HL7 Permission Catalog Resource Action Value

O

urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:1.0:resource:hl7:type HL7 Permission Catalog Object Value

O

urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:1.0:environment:locality

M

urn:oasis:names:tc:xspa:2.0:subject:npi

O

 

A.  Acknowledgements

The following individuals have participated in the creation of this specification and are gratefully acknowledged:

Participants in the 2009 HIMSS Interoperability Demonstration of the XSPA profile:

Steve Steffensen, Department of Defense

Daniel Dority, Jericho Systems Corporation

Brian McClung, Jericho Systems Corporation

Brendon Unland, Jericho Systems Corporation

Anil Saldhana, Red Hat

Dilli Doral, Sun Microsystems

Steven Jarosz, Sun Microsystems

Mike Davis, Veterans Health Administration

Duane DeCouteau, Veterans Health Administration

David Staggs, Veterans Health Administration

 

Security Services (SAML) TC members during the development of this specification:

George Fletcher, AOL

Scott Messick, Booz Allen Hamilton

Keiron Salt, BTplc

Colin Young, BTplc

Kyle Meadors, Drummond Group Inc.

Michael Merrill, EMC Corporation

Rob Philpott, EMC Corporation

Giles Hogben, ENISA

Carolina Canales-Valenzuela, Ericsson

Lakshmi Thiyagarajan, Hewlett-Packard

Guy Denton, IBM

Heather Hinton, IBM

Maryann Hondo, IBM

Anthony Nadalin, IBM

John Bradley, Individual

David Chadwick, Individual

Jeff Hodges, Individual

Conor Cahill, Intel Corporation

Scott Cantor, Internet2

Nathan Klingenstein, Internet2

Bob Morgan, Internet2

Yassir Elley, Juniper Networks

Steve Hanna, Juniper Networks

Thomas Hardjono, M.I.T.

Tom Scavo, National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA)

Peter Davis, NeuStar, Inc.

Marie Henderson, New Zealand State Services Commission

Colin Wallis, New Zealand State Services Commission

William Young, New Zealand State Services Commission

Frederick Hirsch, Nokia Corporation

Abbie Barbir, Nortel

Srinath Godavarthi, Nortel

Paul Madsen, NTT Corporation

Harry Haury, NuParadigm Government Systems, Inc.

Will Hopkins, Oracle Corporation

Ari Kermaier, Oracle Corporation

Hal Lockhart, Oracle Corporation

Prateek Mishra, Oracle Corporation

Vamsi Motukuru, Oracle Corporation

Willem de Pater, Oracle Corporation

Paul Toal, Oracle Corporation

Brian Campbell, Ping Identity Corporation

Anil Saldhana, Red Hat

Michael Engler, SAP AG

Kent Spaulding, Skyworth TTG Holdings Limited

Humphrey Zhang, Skyworth TTG Holdings Limited

Bhavna Bhatnagar, Sun Microsystems

Eve Maler, Sun Microsystems

Ronald Monzillo, Sun Microsystems

Emily Xu, Sun Microsystems

Mike Beach, The Boeing Company

Karsten Huneycutt, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Duane DeCouteau, Veterans Health Administration

David Staggs, Veterans Health Administration

B.  Revision History

 

Document ID

Date

Committer

Comment

xspa-saml-profile-01

12 Sep 2008

Mike Davis & David Staggs

Initial draft v0.0

xspa-saml-profile-02

15 Sep 2008

Craig Winter

QA Review / Revision v0.1

xspa-saml-profile-wd-03

31 Oct 2008

Duane DeCouteau

Incorporate initial SS TC feedback

xspa-saml-profile-cd-01

4 Nov 2008

Duane DeCouteau

Approved Committee Draft v1.0

xspa-saml-profile-cd-01

5 Nov 2008

Craig Winter

QA Review / Revision v1.1

xspa-saml-profile-pr-01

5 Nov 2008

David Staggs

Approved Public Review Draft v1.0

xspa-saml-profile-pr-02

29 May 2009

David Staggs

Changes to Public Review Draft pr02

saml-xspa-1.0-cd04

15 July 2009

Duane DeCouteau

Final TC Review Comments