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Secrecy by Typing and File-Access Control
Venice, Italy July 05-July 07
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/CSFW.2006.2819th IEEE Computer Security Foundatio ...
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Avik Chaudhuri, University of California, Santa Cruz, USA
Martin Abadi, University of California, Santa Cruz, USA
Secrecy properties can be guaranteed through a combination of static and dynamic checks. The static checks may include the application of special type systems with notions of secrecy. The dynamic checks can be of many different kinds; in practice, the most important are access-control checks, often ones based on ACLs (access-control lists). In this paper, we explore the interplay of static and dynamic checks in the setting of a file system. For this purpose, we study a pi calculus with file-system constructs. The calculus supports both access-control checks and a form of static scoping that limits the knowledge of terms--including file names and contents--to groups of clients. We design a system with secrecy types for the calculus; using this system, we can prove secrecy properties by static typing of programs in the presence of file-system access-control checks.
Citation:
Avik Chaudhuri, Martin Abadi, "Secrecy by Typing and File-Access Control," csfw, pp.112-123, 19th IEEE Computer Security Foundations Workshop (CSFW'06), 2006
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