Visible to the public Resiliency Policies in Access Control Revisited

TitleResiliency Policies in Access Control Revisited
Publication TypeConference Paper
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsCrampton, Jason, Gutin, Gregory, Watrigant, Rémi
Conference NameProceedings of the 21st ACM on Symposium on Access Control Models and Technologies
PublisherACM
Conference LocationNew York, NY, USA
ISBN Number978-1-4503-3802-8
KeywordsAccess Control, computational complexity, Computing Theory, control theory, fixed-parameter tractability, pubcrawl, resilience, Resiliency, Security Policies Analysis, workflow satisfiability
Abstract

Resiliency is a relatively new topic in the context of access control. Informally, it refers to the extent to which a multi-user computer system, subject to an authorization policy, is able to continue functioning if a number of authorized users are unavailable. Several interesting problems connected to resiliency were introduced by Li, Wang and Tripunitara [13], many of which were found to be intractable. In this paper, we show that these resiliency problems have unexpected connections with the workflow satisfiability problem (WSP). In particular, we show that an instance of the resiliency checking problem (RCP) may be reduced to an instance of WSP. We then demonstrate that recent advances in our understanding of WSP enable us to develop fixed-parameter tractable algorithms for RCP. Moreover, these algorithms are likely to be useful in practice, given recent experimental work demonstrating the advantages of bespoke algorithms to solve WSP. We also generalize RCP in several different ways, showing in each case how to adapt the reduction to WSP. Li et al also showed that the coexistence of resiliency policies and static separation-of-duty policies gives rise to further interesting questions. We show how our reduction of RCP to WSP may be extended to solve these problems as well and establish that they are also fixed-parameter tractable.

URLhttp://doi.acm.org/10.1145/2914642.2914650
DOI10.1145/2914642.2914650
Citation Keycrampton_resiliency_2016