The simple answer is FAR 25, paragraphs 571. But it's not really as simple as that. Once you touch the subject you discover a very deep body of knowledge on material properties, test data, cyclic load specra, and then there's the progress that these requirements made through time, which means that some aircraft comply with different rules, depending on when they were designed. I would not recommend trying to figure this out from scratch without tapping an experienced analyst's shoulder.
Let me step back a bit...
If your member status shows you in the "Marine/Ocean" industry, then may I guess that you are looking for guidance in the aviation industry because you are not finding suitable answers from design guidelines in your own industry? Which is odd because the monocoque structure of steel ocean vessels has a lot of similarities to aircraft monocoque fuselages, with the exception of scale and environment, and that design requirements existed for them, just like there are for aircraft.
So, where is this crack? In what kind of vessel? Why have you not posted in a forum appropriate to ocean vessels where codes specific to your problem can be addressed?
STF