19th Annual Computer Security Applications Conference (ACSAC '03)
Poly2 Paradigm: A Secure Network Service Architecture
Las Vegas, Nevada
December 08-December 12
ISBN: 0-7692-2041-3
General-purpose operating systems provide a rich computing environment both to the user and the attacker. The declining cost of hardware and the growing security concerns of software necessitate a revalidation of the many assumptions made in network service architectures. Enforcing sound design principles while retaining usability and flexibility is key to practical security. Poly2 is an approach to build a hardened framework for network services from commodity hardware and software. Guided by well-known security design principles such as least common mechanism and economy of mechanism, and driven by goals such as psychological acceptability and immediate usability, Poly2 provides a secure platform for network services. It also serves as a testbed for several security-related research areas such as intrusion detection, forensics, and high availability. This paper discusses the overall design and philosophy of Poly2, presents an initial implementation, and outlines future work.
Citation:
Eric Bryant, James Early, Rajeev Gopalakrishna, Gregory Roth, Eugene H. Spafford, Keith Watson, Paul Williams, Scott Yost, "Poly2 Paradigm: A Secure Network Service Architecture," acsac, pp.342, 19th Annual Computer Security Applications Conference (ACSAC '03), 2003