2
Agenda
Reference monitor, security kernel, and TCB Placing the reference monitor
Status information & controlled invocation Security features in microprocessors
Confused deputy problem Memory management and access control Historic examples, to keep matters simple
3
Security Mechanisms How can computer systems enforce
operational policies in practice? Questions that have to be answered:
Where should access control be located? (Second Fundamental Design Decision)
Are there any additional security requirements your solution forces you to consider?
The following definitions are taken from the Orange Book.
4
Reference Monitor (RM) Reference monitor: access control
concept that refers to an abstract machine that mediates all accesses to objects by subjects.
Security Kernel: The hardware firmware, and software elements of a TCB that implement the reference monitor concept. It must mediate all accesses, be protected from modification, and be verifiable as correct.
5
Placing the RM Hardware: access control mechanisms in
microprocessors Operating system kernel: e.g. hypervisor, i.e. a
virtual machine that emulates the host computer it is running on, or the Nexus operating system considered for Microsoft’s NGSCB architecture.
Operating system: e.g. access control in Unix and Windows 2000.
Services layer: access control in database systems, Java Virtual Machine,.NET Common Language Runtime, or CORBA middleware architecture.
Application: security checks in the application code to address application specific requirements.
6
RM – Design Choices
program
RM
kernel
kernel supported(e.g. in O/S)
program
RM
kernel
modifiedapplication (IRM)
RM
program
kernel
interpreter
7
Trusted Computing Base (TCB)
The totality of protection mechanisms within a computer system – including hardware, firmware, and software – the combination of which is responsible for enforcing a security policy.
A TCB consists of one or more components that together enforce a unified security policy over a product or system.
The ability of the TCB to correctly enforce a security policy depends solely on the mechanisms within the TCB and on the correct input by system administrative personnel of parameters related to the security policy.
8
Operating System Integrity
Assume that your O/S prevents unauthorized access to resources (as long as it works as intended).
To bypass protection, an attacker may try to disable the security controls by modifying the O/S.
Whatever your initial concern was, you are now facing an integrity problem. The O/S is not only the arbitrator of access requests, it is itself an object of access control.
New security policy: Users must not be able to modify the operating system.
This generic security policy needs strong and efficient support.
9
Operating System Integrity
To make life more complicated, you have to address two competing requirements. Users should be able to use (invoke) the O/S. Users should not be able to misuse the O/S.
Two important concepts commonly used to achieve these goals are: status information controlled invocation, also called restricted
privilege These concepts can be used in any layer of an IT
system, be it application software, O/S, or hardware.
10
Modes of Operation
To protect itself, an O/S must be able to distinguish computations ‘on behalf’ of the O/S from computations ‘on behalf’ of a user.
Status flag allows the system to work in different modes. Intel 80x86: two status bits and four modes Unix distinguishes between user and superuser
(root) Example: To stop users from writing directly to
memory and corrupting the logical file structure, the O/S could grant write access to memory locations only if the processor is in supervisor mode.
11
Why are such Modes Useful?
E.g., to stop users from writing directly to memory and corrupting the logical file structure, the O/S could grant write access to memory locations only if the processor is in supervisor mode.
We continue our example: A user wants to execute an operation requiring supervisor mode, e.g. write to memory.
To deal with this request, the processor has to switch between modes, but how should this switch be performed?
12
Controlled Invocation
Example continued: A user wants to write to memory (requires supervisor mode).
The system has now to switch between modes, but how should this switch be performed?
Simply changing the status bit to supervisor mode would give all supervisor privileges to the user without any control on what the user actually does.
Thus, the system should only perform a predefined set of operations in supervisor mode and then return to user mode before handing control back to the user.
Let’s refer to this process as controlled invocation.
14
Why Mechanisms at the Core?
For security evaluation at a higher level of assurance.
Security mechanisms in a given layer can be compromised from a layer below.
To evaluate security, you must check that security mechanisms cannot be bypassed.
The more complex a system, the more difficult this check becomes. At the core of a system you may find simple structures which are amenable to thorough analysis.
15
Why Mechanisms at the Core?
Putting security mechanisms into the core of the system can reduce performance overheads caused by security.Processor performance depends on the right choice and efficient implementation of a generic set of operations that is most useful to the majority of users. The same holds for security mechanisms.
Note: Some sources assume that TCBs and security kernels must enforce multi-level security policies.
16
Computer Architecture
Simple schematic description: central processing unit (CPU) memory bus connecting CPU and
memory input/output devices
MemoryCPU Bus
I/O
17
Core CPU Components
Registers: general purpose registers and dedicated registers like: program counter: points to the memory location
containing the next instruction to be executed. stack pointer: points to the top of the system
stack. status register: allows the CPU to keep essential
state information. Arithmetic Logic Unit (ALU): executes instructions
given in a machine language; executing an instruction may also set bits in the status register.
18
Memory StructuresSecurity characteristics of different types of memory:
RAM (random access memory): read/write memory; no guarantee of integrity or confidentiality.
ROM (read-only memory): provides integrity but not confidentiality; ROM may store (part of) the O/S.
EPROM (erasable & programmable read-only memory): could store parts of the O/S or cryptographic keys; technologically more sophisticated attacks threaten security.
WROM (write-once memory): memory contents are frozen once and for all, e.g. by blowing a fuse placed on the write line; WROM could hold cryptographic keys or audit logs.
19
Memory Structures Volatile memory loses its contents when power is
switched off. Memory contents still present after a short power loss. Can be reconstructed by special electronic techniques if
power has been switched off for some time. To counter such attacks, memory has to be overwritten
repeatedly with suitable bit patterns. Non-volatile (permanent) memory keeps its content
when power is switched off. If attacker has direct access to memory bypassing the CPU, cryptographic or physical measures are needed to protect sensitive data.
E.g., a light sensor in a tamper resistant module may detect an attempted manipulation and trigger the deletion of the data kept in the module.
20
Processes and Threads Process: a program in execution, consisting of
executable code, data, and the execution context, e.g. the contents of certain CPU registers.
A process has its own address space and communicates with other processes only through O/S primitives.
Logical separation of processes as a basis for security. A context switch between processes can be an expensive
operation. Threads: strands of execution within a process.
Threads share an address space to avoid the overheads of a full context switch, but they also avoid potential security controls.
Processes and threads are important units of control for the O/S, and for security. They are the ‘subjects’ of access control.
21
Traps – Interrupts CPU deals with interruptions of executions created
by errors in the program, user requests, hardware failure, etc., through exceptions, interrupts, and traps.
These terms refer to different types of events; we use trap as the generic term.
A trap is a special input to the CPU that includes an address (interrupt vector) in an interrupt vector table giving the location of the program (interrupt handler) that deals with the condition specified in the trap.
When a trap occurs, the CPU saves its current state on the stack and then executes the interrupt handler, taking control away from the user.
The interrupt handler has to restore the CPU to a proper state, e.g. by clearing the supervisor status bit, before returning control to the user.
22
Interrupt VectorsInterrupt Interrupt vector table Memory
TRAP #n
Interrupt vector
Interrupt handler
23
Interrupting Interrupts A further interrupt may arrive while the CPU deals
with a current interrupt, so the CPU may have to interrupt the current interrupt handler.
Improper handling of such a situation can cause security failures. Consider a system where a user can interrupt the execution of a program by typing CTRL-C so that the CPU returns to the O/S prompt with the status bit of the current process. A user could then enter supervisor mode by interrupting the execution of an O/S call.
The interrupt table is a particularly interesting point of attack and has to be protected adequately. Redirecting pointers is a very efficient way of compromising the integrity of the O/S.
24
Example: Intel 80x86 Support for access control at machine language
level based on protection rings. Two-bit field in the status register: four privilege
levels; Unix, Windows 2000 use levels 0 (O/S) and 3 (user).
Privilege levels can only be changed through POPF. Processes can only access objects in their ring or in
outer rings; processes can invoke subroutines only within their ring; processes need gates to execute procedures in an inner ring.
Information about system objects like memory segments, access control tables, or gates is stored in descriptors. The privilege level of an object is stored in the DPL field of its descriptor.
25
Intel 80x86 – Access Control
Descriptors held in descriptor table; accessed via selectors. Selector: 16-bit field, contains index for the object’s entry in
the descriptor table and a requested privilege level (RPL) field; only O/S has access to selectors.
Current privilege level (CPL): code segment register stores selector of current process; access control decisions can be made by comparing CPL (subject) and DPL (object).
Descriptor DPL
INDEX RPL
Descriptor table
selector
26
Intel 80x86: Controlled Invocation
Gate: system object pointing to a procedure, where the gate has a privilege level different from that of the procedure it points to.
Allow execute-only access to procedures in an inner ring.
Gate
outer ring procedure
inner ring procedure
27
Intel 80x86: Controlled Invocation
A subroutine call saves state information about the calling process and the return address on the stack. Should this stack be in the inner ring? Violates
the security policy forbidding write to an inner ring.
Should this stack be in the outer ring? The return address could be manipulated from the outer ring.
Therefore, part of the stack (how much is described in the gate’s descriptor) is copied to a more privileged stack segment.
28
A Loophole?
When invoking a subroutine through a gate, the CPL changes to the level of the code the gate is pointing to; on returning from the subroutine, the CPL is restored to that of the calling process.
The outer-ring process may ask the inner-ring procedure to copy an inner ring object to the outer ring; this will not be prevented by any of the mechanisms presented so far, nor does it violate the stated security policy.
Known as luring attack, or as confused deputy problem.
29
Remedy
To take into account the level of the calling process, use the adjust privilege level (ARPL) instruction.
This instruction changes the RPL fields of all selectors to the CPL of the calling process. The system then compares the RPL (in the selector) and the DPL (in the descriptor) of an object when making access control decisions.
31
Security Mechanisms in O/S
O/S manages access to data and resources; multitasking O/S interleaves execution of processes belonging to different users. It has to
separate user space from O/S space, logically separate users, restrict the memory objects a process can access.
Logical separation of users at two levels: file management, deals with logical memory objects memory management, deals with physical memory
objects For security, this distinction is important.
32
Segments and Pages Segmentation divides memory into logical units of
variable lengths. +A division into logical units is a good basis for
enforcing a security policy. Units of variable length make memory
management more difficult. Paging divides memory into pages of equal length.
+Fixed length units allow efficient memory management.
Paging is not a good basis for access control as pages are not logical units. One page may contain objects requiring different protection. Page faults can create a covert channel.
33
A Covert Channel When a process accesses a logical object stored on
more than one page, a page fault occurs whenever a new page is requested.
A covert channel exists if page faults are observable. Consider a password scheme where the password
entered is compared character by character with the reference password stored in memory. Access is denied the moment an incorrect match is found.
If a password is stored across a page boundary, then observing a page fault indicates that the piece of the password on the first page has been guessed correctly. If the attacker can control where the password is stored on the page, password guessing becomes easy.
34
Exploiting the Covert Channel
Page 1 Page 2
P ASSWORD
PA SSWORD
PAS SWORD
PASS WORD
1st guess
2nd guess
3rd guess
4th guess
…
35
Memory Protection O/S controls access to data objects in memory. A data object is represented by a collection of bits
stored in certain memory locations. Access to a logical object is ultimately translated
into access operations at machine language level. Three options for controlling access to memory:
operating system modifies the addresses it receives from user processes;
operating system constructs the effective addresses from relative addresses it receives from user processes;
operating system checks whether the addresses it receives from user processes are within given bounds.
36
Address Sandboxing (Modification)
Don’t memorize Address consists of segment identifier and offset. When
the operating system receives an address, it sets the correct segment identifier as follows:
Bitwise AND of the address with mask_1 clears the segment identifier; bitwise OR with mask_2 sets the segment identifier to the intended value SEG_ID.
seg_id offsetaddress
0....0 1….1mask_1
0….0 offset
SEG_ID 0….0mask_2
SEG_ID offseteffective address
} bitwise AND
} bitwise OR
37
Relative Addressing Clever use of addressing modes can keep processes out
of forbidden memory areas. Fence registers: base register addressing keeps users
out of O/S space; fence register points to top of user space.
Bounds register define the bottom of the user space. Base and bounds registers allow to separate program from data space.
fence register
base
offset
+
memory
O/S space
user space
38
Function codes Motorola 68000 function codes indicate
processor status so that address decoder may select between user and supervisor memory or between data and programs.
FC2 FC1 FC0
0 0 1 0 0 0
0 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 1
(undefined,reserved) user data user program (undefined,reserved) (undefined,reserved) supervisor data supervisor program interrupt acknowledge
39
General Lessons
The ability to distinguish between data and programs is a useful security feature, providing a basis for protecting programs from modification.
From a more abstract point of view, memory has been divided into different regions. Access control can then refer to the location a data object or program comes from.
This can serve as a first example for location based access control. Distributed systems or computer networks may use location based access control at the level of network nodes.
40
Tagged Architectures
Tagged architectures indicate type of each memory object.
OP ………………
STR ………………
… ………………
… ………………
… ………………
INT ………………
tag data
41
Summary Security policies can be enforced in any
layer of a computer system. Mechanisms at lower layers tend to be
more generic and are universally applied to all “applications” above, but might not quite match the requirements of the application.
Mechanisms at upper layers are more application specific, but applications have to be secured individually.
This fundamental dilemma is a recurring theme in information security.
43
Why Security Models?
When we have implemented a security policy, do we know that it will (and can) be enforced?
E.g., if policies get too intricate, contradicting rules may apply to a given access request.
To prove that a policy will be enforced, the policy has to be formally specified.
A security model is a formal description of a security policy.
44
Security Models
Models are used in high assurance security evaluations (smart cards are currently a fruitful area of application).
Models are important historic milestones in computer security (e.g. Bell-LaPadula).
The models presented today are not recipes for security but can be a starting point when you have to define a model yourself.
45
Agenda
State Machine Models (short review) Bell-LaPadula (BLP) model
BLP security policies BLP Basic Security Theorem Tranquility Covert channels
Case Study: Multics interpretation of BLP
46
State Machine Models State Machines (automata) are abstract
models that record relevant features, like the security of a computer system, in their state.
States change at discrete points in time, e.g. triggered by a clock or an input event.
State machine models have numerous applications in computer science: processor design, programming languages, or security.
47
Examples
Switch: two states, ‘on’ and ‘off’ One input ‘press’
Ticket machine: State: ticket requested, money to be paid inputs: ticket requests, coins; output: ticket, change
Microprocessors: state: register contents, inputs: machine instructions
48
Basic Security Theorems To design a secure system with the help of
state machine models, define state set so that it captures ‘security’, check that all state transitions starting in a
‘secure’ state yield a ‘secure’ state, check that initial state of system is ‘secure’.
Security is then preserved by all state transitions. The system will always be ‘secure’.
This Basic Security Theorem has been derived without any definition of ‘security’!
49
Bell-LaPadula Model (BLP) State machine model developed in the
1970s for the analysis of MLS operating systems.
Subjects and objects labeled with security levels that form a partial ordering.
The policy: No information flow from ‘high’ security levels down to ‘low’ security level (confidentiality).
Only considers information flows that occur when a subject observes or alters an object.
Access permissions defined through an access control matrix and security levels.
50
Constructing the State Set1. All current access operations:
an access operation is described by a triple (s,o,a), s S, o O, a AE.g.: (Alice, fun.com, read)
The set of all current access operations is an element of PP(S O A)E.g.: {(Alice, fun.com, read), (Bob, fun.com, write), …}
51
Constructing the State Set2. Current assignment of security levels:
maximal security level: fS: S L (L … labels) current security level: fC: S L classification: fo: O L
The security level of a user is the user’s clearance. Current security level allows subjects to be down-
graded temporarily (more later). F LS LS LO is the set of security level
assignments; f = (fS, fC, fO) denotes an element of F.
52
Constructing the State Set
3. Current permissions: defined by the access control matrix M. MM is the set of access control matrices.
The state set of BLP: V = B MM F B is our shorthand for PP(S O A) b denotes a set of current access operations a state is denoted by (b,M,f)
53
BLP Policies
Discretionary Security Property (ds-property): Access must be permitted by the access control matrix: (s,o,a) Mso
Simple Security (ss)-Property (no read-up): if (s,o,a) b, then fS(s) fO(o) if access is in observe mode.
The ss-property is a familiar policy for controlling access to classified paper documents.
54
On Subjects In the ss-property, subjects act as observers. In a computer system, subjects are processes
and have no memory of their own. Subjects have access to memory objects. Subjects can act as channels by reading one
memory object and transferring information to another memory object.
In this way, data may be declassified improperly.
56
Star Property
-Property (star property) (no write-down): if (s,o,a) b and access is in alter mode then fC(s) fO(o); also, if subject s has access to object o in alter mode, then fO(o’) fO(o) for all objects o’ accessed by s in observe mode.
The very first version of BLP did not have the -property.
Mandatory BLP policies: ss-property and -property.
58
No Write-Down
The -property prevents high level subjects from sending legitimate messages to low level subjects.
Two ways to escape from this restriction: Temporarily downgrade high level subject;
hence the current security level fC; BLP subjects have no memory of their own!
Exempt trusted subjects from the -property. Redefine the -property and demand it only for
subjects that are not trusted.
59
Trusted Subjects
Trusted subjects may violate security policies! Distinguish between trusted subjects and trustworthy subjects.
60
Basic Security Theorem
A state is secure, if all current access tuples (s,o,a) are permitted by the ss-, -, and ds-properties.
A state transition is secure if it goes from a secure state to a secure state.
Basic Security Theorem: If the initial state ofa system is secure and if all state transitions are secure, then the system will always be secure.
61
Basic Security Theorem
This Basic Security Theorem has nothing to do with the BLP security policies, only with state machine modeling.
62
BLP & Security Construct system with operation downgrade:
downgrades all subjects and objects to system low. enters all access rights in all positions of the access
control matrix. As a result, any state is secure in the BLP
model. Should such a system be regarded secure?
McLean: no, everybody is allowed to do everything. Bell: yes, if downgrade was part of the system
specification.
63
Tranquility
No BLP policies for changing access control data.
BLP assumes tranquility: access control data do not change.
Operational model: users get clearances and objects are classified following given rules.
The system is set up to enforce MLS policies for the given clearances and classifications.
Changes to clearances and classifications requires external input.
64
Covert Channels
Communications channels that allow transfer of information in a manner that violates the system’s security policy. Storage channels: e.g. through operating
system messages, file names, etc. Timing channels: e.g. through monitoring
system performance Orange Book: 100 bits per second is
‘high’ bandwidth for storage channels, no upper limit on timing channels.
65
Covert Channels
The bandwidth of some covert channels can be reduced by reducing the performance of the system.
Covert channels are not detected by BLP modeling.
66
Applying BLP—Multics Multics was designed to be a secure,
reliable, ..., multi-user O/S. Multics became too cumbersome for
some project members, who then created something much simpler, viz Unix.
The history of the two systems illustrates for relation between commercial success and the balance between usability and security.
We will sketch how the Bell-LaPadula model can be used in the design of a secure O/S.
67
Multics Interpretation of BLP
The inductive definition of security in BLP makes it relatively easy to check whether a system is secure.
To show that Multics is secure, we have to find a description of the O/S which is consistent with BLP, and verify that all state transitions are secure.
68
Subjects
Subjects in Multics are processes. Each subject has a descriptor segment containing information about the process
The security level of subjects are kept in a process level table and a current-level table.
The active segment table records all active processes; only active processes have access to an object.
69
Objects
For each object the subject currently has access to, there is a segment descriptor word (SDW) in the subject’s descriptor segment.
The SDW contains the name of the object, a pointer to the object, and flags for read, execute, and write access.
Segment_id pointer
r: on w: one: off
segmentdescriptor
word
70
Directories Objects are memory segments, I/O devices, ... Objects are organized hierarchically in a
directory tree; directories are again segments. Information about an object, like its security
level or its access control list (ACL), are kept in the object’s parent directory.
To change an object’s access control parameters and to create or delete an object requires write or append access rights to the parent directory.
71
Compatibility
To access an object, a process has to traverse the directory tree from the root directory to the target object.
If any directory in this path is not accessible to the process, the target object is not accessible either.
Compatibility: The security level of an object must always dominate the security level of its parent directory.
72
BLP State in Multics Current access b: stored in the SDWs in the
descriptor segments of the active processes; the active processes are found in the active segment table. The descriptor segment base register (DSBR) points to the descriptor segment of the current process.
Level function f: security levels of the subjects are stored in the process level table and the current-level table; the security level of an object is stored in its parent directory.
Access control matrix M: represented by the ACLs; for each object, the ACL is stored in its parent directory; each ACL entry specifies a process and the access rights the process has on that object.
73
current process
current-level table
DSBR
w:off r:on e:off
segment-id ptr
descriptor segment of current process
subject
segment-id
object
current pro. Lc segment-id LOLC LO?
parent directory
74
MAC in Multics
Multics access attributes for data segments with translation to BLP access rights:
read r execute e, r read & write w write a
75
The -property for Multics For any SDW in the descriptor segment
of an active process, the current level of the process dominates the level of the segment if the
read or execute flags are on and the write flag is off,
is dominated by the level of the segment if the read flag is off and the write flag is on,
is equal to the level of the segment if the read flag is on and the write flag is on.
76
Kernel Primitives
Kernel primitives are the input operations in Multics
Example: the get-read primitive requests read access to an object
It takes as its parameters a process-id and a segment-id.
If the state transitions in an abstract model of the Multics kernel preserve the BLP security policies, then the BLP Basic Security Theorem proves the ‘security’ of Multics.
77
Conditions for get-read
The O/S has to check whether the ACL of segment-id, stored in the
segment's parent directory, lists process-id with read permission,
the security level of process-id dominates the security level of segment-id,
process-id is a trusted subject, or the current security level of process-id dominates the security level of segment-id.
If all three conditions are met, access is permitted and a SDW in the descriptor segment of process-id is added/updated.
78
More Kernel Primitives
release-read: release an object; the read flag in the corresponding SDW is turned off; if thereafter no flag is on, the SDW is removed from the descriptor segment.
give-read: grant read access to another process (DAC).
rescind-read: withdraw a read permission given to another process.
79
More Kernel Primitives
create-object: create an object; the O/S has to check that write access on the object's directory segment is permitted and that the security level of the segment dominates the security level of the process.
change-subject-current-security-level: the O/S has to check that no security violations are created by the change
This kernel primitive, as well as the primitive change-object-security-level were not intended for implementation (tranquility).
80
Aspects of BLP
Descriptive capability of its state machine model: can be used for other properties, e.g. for integrity.
Its access control structures, access control matrix and security levels: can be replaced by other structures, e.g. by S S O to capture ‘delegation’.
The actual security policies, the ss-, -, and ds-properties: can be replaced by other policies (see Biba model).
A specific application of BLP, e.g. its Multics interpretation.
81
Limitations of BLP
Restricted to confidentiality. No policies for changing access rights; a
complete general downgrade is secure; BLP intended for systems with static security levels.
BLP contains covert channels: a low subject can detect the existence of high objects when it is denied access.
Sometimes, it is not sufficient to hide only the contents of objects. Also their existence may have to be hidden.
82
Security Models—Introduction
Bell-LaPadula model designed to capture a specific ‘military’ security policy.
At one time treated as ‘the model of security’. However, security requirements dependent on
the application; many applications do not need multi-level security.
We will now look at models for ‘commercial’ integrity policies.
We will also examine some theoretical foundations of access control.
83
Agenda
Biba model Chinese Wall model Clark Wilson Model Harrison-Ruzo-Ullman model
Reminder: Turing machines& decidability, NP-completeness
Information flow models Enforcement monitors
84
Biba Model Integrity policies prohibit the corruption of ‘clean’
high level entities by ‘dirty’ low level entities. Clean and dirty shorthand for high integrity and low
integrity. Concrete meaning of integrity levels is application
dependent. Subjects and objects labelled with elements from a
lattice (L, ) of integrity levels by functions fS:S L and fO:O L.
Information may only flow downwards in the integrity lattice; only information flows caused directly by access operations considered.
Biba model: state machine model similar to BLP; no single high-level integrity policy.
85
Biba With Static Integrity Levels
Simple Integrity Property (no write-up): If subject s can modify (alter) object o, then fS(s) fO(o).
Integrity -Property: If subject s can read (observe) object o, then s can have write access to some other object o’ only if fO(o) fO(o’).
Invoke Property: A ‘dirty’ subject s1 must not touch a ‘clean’ object indirectly by invoking s2: Subject s1 can invoke subject s2 only if fS(s1) fS(s2).
86
Biba: Dynamic Integrity Levels
Low watermark policies automatically adjust levels (as in the Chinese Wall model):
Subject Low Watermark Policy: Subject s can read (observe) an object o at any integrity level. The new integrity level of s is g.l.b.(fS(s),fO(o)).
Object Low Watermark Policy: Subject s can modify (alter) an object o at any integrity level. The new integrity level of o is g.l.b.(fS(s),fO(o)).
87
Biba for Protection Rings
Ring Property: A ‘dirty’ subject s1 may invoke a ‘clean’ tool s2 to touch a ‘clean’ object:
Subject s1 can read objects at all integrity levels, modify objects o with fS(s1) fO(o), and invoke a subject s2 only if fS(s1) fS(s2).
The ring property is the opposite of the invoke property!
Captures integrity protection in operating systems based on protection rings.
88
Chinese Wall Model In financial institutions analysts deal with a
number of clients and have to avoid conflicts of interest.
Components: subjects: analysts objects: data item for a single client company datasets: y:O C gives for each
object its company dataset conflict of interest classes: companies that are
competitors; x: O P(C) gives for each object o the companies with a conflict of interest on o
‘labels’: company dataset + conflict of interest class
sanitized information: no access restrictions
89
Chinese Wall Model – Policies Simple Security Property: Access is only
granted if the object requested is in the same company dataset as an
object already accessed by that subject; does not belong to any of the conflict of
interest classes of objects already accessed by that subject.
Formally: N = (Nso)sS,oO , Boolean matrix, Nso = true if
s has accessed o; ss-property: subject s gets access to object
o only if for all objects o’ with Nso’ = true, y(o) = y(o’) or y(o) x(o’).
90
Chinese Wall: - Property Indirect information flow: A and B are competitors
having accounts with the same Bank. Analyst_A, dealing with A and the Bank, updates the
Bank portfolio with sensitive information about A. Analyst_B, dealing with B and the Bank, now has access
to information about a competitor.
conflictof interestclass
read
A
B
Bank
Analyst_A
Analyst_B
read
write
write
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Chinese Wall: - Property - Property: A subject s is permitted write
access to an object only if s has no read access to any object o’, which is in a different company dataset and is unsanitized. subject s gets write access to object o only if s
has no read access to an object o’ with y(o) y(o’) or x(o’) {}
Access rights of subjects change dynamically with every access operation.
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Chinese Wall: - Property
A
BBank
Analyst_A
Analyst_B
read
write
write
read
blocked by -property
blocked by -property
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Clark-Wilson Model
Addresses security requirements of commercial applications. ‘Military’ and ‘commercial’ are shorthand for different ways of using computers.
Emphasis on integrity internal consistency: properties of the internal
state of a system external consistency: relation of the internal
state of a system to the outside world. Mechanisms for maintaining integrity: well-
formed transactions & separation of duties.
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Clark-Wilson: Access Control Subjects & objects are ‘labeled’ with programs. Programs serve as intermediate layer between
subjects and objects. Access control:
define access operations (transformation procedures) that can be performed on each data item (data types).
define the access operations that can be performed by subjects (roles).
Note the difference between a general purpose operating system (BLP) and an application oriented IT system (Clark-Wilson).
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Access Control in CWuser
TP
LogCDI
CDIa CDIb
UDI
authenticationauthorization
append must be validated
integrity checks,permissions checked
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CW: Certification Rules Five certification rules suggest how one should
check that the security policy is consistent with the application requirements.
CR1: IVPs (initial verification procedures) must ensure that all CDIs (constrained data items) are in a valid state when the IVP is run.
CR2: TPs (transformation procedures) must be certified to be valid, i.e. valid CDIs must always be transformed into valid CDIs. Each TP is certified to access a specific set of CDIs.
CR3: Access rules must satisfy any separation of duties requirements.
CR4: All TPs must write to an append-only log. CR5: Any TP that takes an UDI (unconstrained data
item) as input must either convert the UDI into a CDI or reject the UDI and perform no transformation at all.
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CW: Enforcement Rules Describe mechanisms within the computer
system that should enforce the security policy:
ER1: For each TP maintain and protect the list of entries (CDIa,CDIb,...) giving the CDIs the TP is certified to access.
ER2: For each user maintain and protect the list of entries (TP1, TP2,...)} specifying the TPs user can execute.
ER3: The system must authenticate each user requesting to execute a TP.
ER4: Only subjects that may certify an access rule for a TP may modify the respective list; this subject must not have execute rights on that TP.
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Reminder Is it better to have a very expressive policy
language or a simple language where it is easier to check the impact of policy decisions?
In an expressive language, it is easier to capture the intended policy (what we think we want) but more difficult to verify that the policy actually does what it is supposed to do.
In a simple language we may not be able to capture our intentions precisely, but there are efficient means to check what the policy does
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Access Control
Scenario: security policy given as access control matrix; beyond read/write operations there are also operations for changing access rights (discretionary access control) and for creating new subjects and objects.
Question: Given a policy, can we answer the question “Will this particular principal ever be allowed to access this resource?”
Access rights can change so we have to do more than simply check the current access control matrix.
100
Harrison-Ruzzo-Ullman Model
Harrison-Ruzzo-Ullman model (HRU, 1976): defines authorization systems where we can explore answers to our question.
Components of the HRU model: set of subjects S set of objects O set of access rights R access matrix M = (Mso)sS,oO : entry Mso is a
subset of R defining the rights subject s has on object o
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Primitive Operations in HRU
Six primitive operations for manipulating subjects, objects, and the access matrix:
enter r into Mso
delete r from Mso
create subject s delete subject s create object o delete object o
Commands in HRU model (examples):
command create_file(s,f)create fenter o into Ms,f
enter r into Ms,f
enter w into Ms,f
end
command grant_read(s,p,f)
if o in Ms,f
then enter r in Mp,f
end
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HRU Policies
Policy management question: Is this subject allowed to access this object?
The HRU access matrix describes the state of the system; commands effect changes in the access matrix.
HRU can model policies for allocating access right; to verify compliance with a given policy, you have to check that no undesirable access rights can be granted.
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‘Leaking’ of Rights in HRU
An access matrix M is said to leak the right r if there exists a command c that adds r into a position of the access matrix that previously did not contain r.
M is safe with respect to the right r if no sequence of commands can transform M into a state that leaks r.
Do not expect the meaning of ‘leak’ and ‘safe’ to match your own intuition.
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Safety Properties of HRU The safety problem cannot be tackled in its
full generality. Theorem. Given an access matrix M, a
right r, and a set of commands, verifying the safety of M with respect to r is undecidable.
There does not exist a general algorithm that answers our policy question for all instances of the HRU model.
For restricted models, the chances of success are better.
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Restricted Models Mono-operational commands contain a single
operation:Theorem. Given a mono-operational authorization system, an access matrix M, and a right r, verifying the safety of M with respect to r is decidable.
With two operations per command, the safety problem is undecidable.
Limiting the size of the authorization system also makes the safety problem tractable.Theorem. The safety problem for arbitrary authorization systems is decidable if the number of subjects is finite.
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HRU – Summary Do not memorize the details of HRU. Do not memorize the individual undecidability
theorems for the HRU variants. Remember the important message: The more
expressive the security model, the more difficult it is to verify security.
You don’t have to know the basics of computational complexity theory for this course but it helps to appreciate the challenges in formally verifying security.
107
Information Flow Models Similar framework as BLP: objects are labeled with
security classes (form a lattice), information may flow upwards only.
Information flow described in terms of conditional entropy (equivocation information theory)
Information flows from x to y if we learn something about x by observing y:
explicit information flow: y:= x implicit information flow: IF x=0 THEN y:=1 covert channels
Proving security is undecidable.
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Non-interference Models A group of users, using a certain set of
commands, is non-interfering with another group of users if what the first group does with those commands has no effect on what the second group of users can see.
Take a state machine where low users only see outputs relating to their own inputs. High users are non-interfering with low users if the low users see the same no matter whether the high users had been providing inputs or not.
Active research area in formal methods.
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Execution MonitorsSecurity Policies (again)
Three classes of security policies: Access control: restricts what operations
principals can perform on objects. Information flow: restricts what
principals can infer about objects from observing system behaviour.
Availability: restrict principals from denying others the use of a resource.
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Execution Monitoring
The practicality of a security policy depends on whether it is enforceable and at what cost.
Execution Monitoring (EM): enforcement mechanisms that monitor execution steps of a target system and terminate the target’s execution if it is about to violate the security policy being enforced.
EM includes security kernels, reference monitors, firewalls, most other operating system, …
111
Beyond EM Enforcement mechanisms that use more
information than is available only from observing the steps of a target’s execution only are outside EM.
Information provided to an EM mechanism is insufficient to predict future steps the target might take, alternative possible executions, or all possible target executions.
Compilers and theorem-provers that analyze a static representation of a target to deduce information about all of its possible executions are not EM mechanisms.
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Beyond EM
Mechanisms that modify a target before executing it are also outside EM.
The modified target must be equivalent to the original, except for aborting executions that violate the security policy of interest.
A definition of equivalence is thus required to analyze this class of mechanisms.
In-line reference monitors and reflection techniques fall in this category.
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Executions & Properties
We are interested in the executions of a target system.
Executions are sequences of steps, e.g. machine instructions.
We use Ψ to denote the set of all executions, finite and infinite, of our target system
Let σ [ ..i ] denote the first i steps of σ. A set Γ of executions is called a property if
membership of an element is determined by the element alone, not by other elements.
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EM & Properties A security policy must be a property to
have an enforcement mechanism in EM. Not every security policy is a property. Some security policies cannot be defined
as a predicate on individual executions. Information flow policies: information
flows from “high” to “low” if a low user can somehow detect actions by a high user.
We have to compare executions where the high user is active with executions where the high user is inactive.
115
EM & Properties
Not every property is EM enforceable. Enforcement mechanisms in EM cannot
look into the future when making decisions on an execution.
Consider an execution that reaches a state that satisfies the security policy but goes through “insecure” states
An EM has to prohibit such an insecure prefix of a secure execution.
116
Safety & Liveness
In the HRU model, we were talking about “safe” access matrices.
In discussions about security you may find further references to safety & liveness.
Safety properties: nothing bad can happen. Liveness properties: something good will
happen eventually.
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EM & Safety Non EM-Enforceable Security Policies: If the
set of executions for a security policy is not a safety property, then that policy does not have an enforcement mechanism from EM.
EM enforcement mechanisms enforce security policies that are safety properties.
It is not the case that all safety properties have EM enforcement mechanisms.
118
Safety & Security Policies Access control defines safety properties: partial
executions that end with attempting an unacceptable operation will be prohibited.
Information flow does not define sets that are properties; so information flow cannot be a safety property and in turn cannot be enforced by EM.
Availability is not a safety property: any partial execution can be extended in a way that allows a principal to access the resource.
Availability defined in respect to a Maximum Waiting Time (MWT) is a safety property; once an execution has waited beyond MWT, any extension will also wait beyond MWT.
119
The 3rd Design Principle If you design complex systems that can only be
described by complex models, finding proofs of security becomes difficult.
In the worst case (undecidability), no universal algorithm exists that verifies security in all cases.
If you want verifiable security properties, you are better off with a security model of limited complexity.
Such a model may not describe all desirable security properties, but you may gain efficient methods for verifying ‘security’.
In turn, you are advised to design simple systems that can be adequately described in the simple model.
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The more expressive a security model is, both with respect to the security properties and the systems it can describe, the more difficult it is usually to verify security properties.
121
Summary
The theoretical foundations for access control are relevant in practice.
It helps to know in which complexity class your policy language and enforcement algorithm put you in.
Powerful description languages may leave you with undecidable enforcement problems.
Much of current efforts on policy languages in ‘trust management’ and web services access control revolves around these issues.
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