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Lookup NU author(s): Professor Brian RandellORCiD
Security and reliability issues in distributed systems have been investigated for several years at LAAS using a technique called Fragmentation-Redundancy-Scattering (FRS). The aim of FRS is to tolerate both accidental and intentional faults: the core idea consists in fragmenting confidential information in order to produce insignificant fragments and then in scattering the fragments so obtained in a redundant fashion across a distributed system, such as a large network of workstations and servers. Of these workstations, in principle just the user’s own workstation needs to be regarded as trusted, whereas from this user’s viewpoint the other workstations and servers, which in all probability are under someone else’s control, can be untrusted devices. This paper describes an object-oriented approach to the use of FRS, now under development at LAAS and Newcastle. This approach greatly eases the task of application programmers who seek to ensure reliable secure processing, as well as storage, of confidential information. The approach involves fragmenting a confidential object using its composition structure, i.e., in terms of a hierarchy of sub-objects (the "is-part-of" relation of the object model), each of course with its own subsidiary operations or “methods”. The fragmentation process continues until the resulting sub-objects are as far as possible such as to be individually non-confidential. Replicas of non-confidential objects are then scattered among untrusted stations. By such means much of the processing of object methods, as well as the storing of much object state information, can be carried out safely on untrusted equipment.
Author(s): Fabre J-C, Deswarte Y, Randell B
Editor(s): Echtle, K., Hammer, D.K., Powell, D.
Publication type: Conference Proceedings (inc. Abstract)
Publication status: Published
Conference Name: 1st European Dependable Computing Conference (EDCC)
Year of Conference: 1994
Pages: 21-38
Date deposited: 22/09/2010
ISSN: 0302-9743 (Print) 1611-3349 (Online)
Publisher: Springer-Verlag
URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-58426-9_122
DOI: 10.1007/3-540-58426-9_122
Library holdings: Search Newcastle University Library for this item
Series Title: Lecture Notes in Computer Science
ISBN: 9783540584261