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Eighth IEEE International Enterprise Distributed Object Computing Conference
Security Patterns: A Method for Constructing Secure and Efficient Inter-Company Coordination Systems
Monterey, California
September 20-September 24
ISBN: 0-7695-2214-9
Nobukazu Yoshioka, National Institute of Informatics
Shinichi Honiden, The University of Tokyo
Anthony Finkelstein, University College London
As the Internet, intranets and other wide-area open networks grow, novel techniques for building distributed systems notably mobile agents, are attracting increasing attention. This is particularly the case for inter-company system coordination applications. A key difficulty in constructing such systems is to meet the security requirements while at the same time respecting the requirements for efficient implementation. In this paper, we propose a method that addresses this problem and show an application of the method to a real implemented system, the Environmentally Conscious Product (ECP) design support system. Our approach enables developers to specify several candidate system behaviors that satisfy the security requirements. We use patterns for this purpose. Patterns are abstract templates of system behavior fragments. The patterns include agent migrations, communications between applications and security procedures. We model the performance data associated with each pattern. Developers can then select an efficient implementation using this model to compare the performance data of the candidates. We evaluate our approach with a significant real-world example, the ECP design support system that essentially requires inter-company system coordination.
Citation:
Nobukazu Yoshioka, Shinichi Honiden, Anthony Finkelstein, "Security Patterns: A Method for Constructing Secure and Efficient Inter-Company Coordination Systems," edoc, pp.84-97, Eighth IEEE International Enterprise Distributed Object Computing Conference, 2004
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