Title :
A Provenance-Aware Policy Language (cProvl) and a Data Traceability Model (cProv) for the Cloud
Author :
Ali, Mohamed ; Moreau, L.
Author_Institution :
Orange Labs., France Telecom R&D UK Ltd., London, UK
fDate :
Sept. 30 2013-Oct. 2 2013
Abstract :
Provenance plays a pivotal in tracing the origin of something and determining how and why something had occurred. With the emergence of the cloud and the benefits it encompasses, there has been a rapid proliferation of services being adopted by commercial and government sectors. However, trust and security concerns for such services are on an unprecedented scale. Currently, these services expose very little internal working to their customers, this can cause accountability and compliance issues especially in the event of a fault or error, customers and providers are left to point finger at each other. Provenance-based trace ability provides a mean to address part of this problem by being able to capture and query events occurred in the past to understand how and why it took place. However, due to the complexity of the cloud infrastructure, the current provenance models lack the expressibility required to describe the inner-working of a cloud service. For a complete solution, a provenance-aware policy language is also required for operators and users to define policies for compliance purpose. The current policy standards do not cater for such requirement. To address these issues, in this paper we propose a provenance (trace ability) model cProv, and a provenance-aware policy language (cProvl) to capture trace ability data, and express policies for validating against the model. For implementation, we have extended the XACML3.0 architecture to support provenance, and provided a translator that converts cProvl policy and request into XACML type.
Keywords :
XML; authorisation; cloud computing; formal languages; XACML3.0 architecture; cProv; cProvl policy; cloud infrastructure; data traceability model; provenance-aware policy language; provenance-based traceability; translator; Access control; Cloud computing; Computational modeling; Data models; Engines; Standards; Syntactics; Prov; XACML; cProv; cProvl; cloud; data traceability; policy language; provenance;
Conference_Titel :
Cloud and Green Computing (CGC), 2013 Third International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Karlsruhe
DOI :
10.1109/CGC.2013.81