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e-Science 2008 4th IEEE International Conference on e-Science

Main Conference Sessions

Rethinking Grid Security Architecture

Authors

  • Yuri Demchenko, UvA
  • Cees Laat de, UvA
  • Oscar Koeroo, NIKHEF
  • David Groep, NIKHEF

Abstract

The security models used in Grid systems today strongly bear the marks of their diverse origin. Historically retrofitted to the distributed systems they are designed to protect and control, the security models implementation is tailored toward a few specific deployment scenarios. A common approach toward even the "basic" elements such as authentication to resources is only now emerging, whereas for more complex issues, such as community organization, integration of site access control with operating systems, cross-domain resource provisioning, or overlay community Grids, there is no single coherent and consistent "security" view.

Via this paper we aim to share some observations on current security models and solutions found in Grid architectures and deployments today and identify architectural limitations in solving complex access control and policy enforcement scenarios in distributed resource management. The paper provides a short overview of the OGSA security services and other security solutions used in Grid middleware and operations practice. However, it is becoming clear that further development in Grid requires a fresh look at the concepts, both operationally and security-wise. This paper analyses the security aspects of different types of Grids and a set of use cases that may require extended security functionality, such as dynamic security context management, and management of stateful services. Recent developments in open systems security, and revisiting basic security concepts in networking and computing including the OSI Security Architecture and the concepts used in the Trusted Computing Base, provide interesting examples on how some of the conceptual security problems in Grid can be addressed. This paper is thus intended to initiate and stimulate the wider discussion on the concepts of Grid security, thereby setting the scene for and providing input to a Grid security taxonomy leading to a more consistent Grid Security Architecture.

Date and Time

Friday, December 12, 9:30 a.m. to 10:00 a.m.

Room Number

208

More Information

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