The Fifth International Workshop on Trusted Collaboration

Research Article

Model-driven simulation for cross-domain policy enforcement

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  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.4108/icst.trustcol.2010.5,
        author={Zhengping Wu and Lifeng Wang},
        title={Model-driven simulation for cross-domain policy enforcement},
        proceedings={The Fifth International Workshop on Trusted Collaboration},
        publisher={IEEE},
        proceedings_a={TRUSTCOL},
        year={2011},
        month={5},
        keywords={model-driven simulation policy enforcement policy modeling cross-domain enforcement},
        doi={10.4108/icst.trustcol.2010.5}
    }
    
  • Zhengping Wu
    Lifeng Wang
    Year: 2011
    Model-driven simulation for cross-domain policy enforcement
    TRUSTCOL
    ICST
    DOI: 10.4108/icst.trustcol.2010.5
Zhengping Wu1,*, Lifeng Wang1,*
  • 1: Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Bridgeport
*Contact email: zhengpiw@bridgeport.edu, lifengw@bridgeport.edu

Abstract

This paper proposes an enforcement architecture and develop a simulation framework for cross-domain policy enforcement. The entire simulation environment is used to solve the problem of enforcing policies across domain boundaries when permanent or temporary collaborations have to span over multiple domains. In reality, different systems from different organizations or domains have very different high-level policy representations and various low-level enforcement mechanisms, such as high-level security policies, privacy configurations, and low-level system calls (services). To make sure the compatibility and enforceability of one policy set in another domain, a simulation environment is needed before actual policy deployment and code development. The framework developed in this simulation environment can also be used to generate policy enforcement code directly for permanent integrations or temporary interactions. This framework provides various functions to enforce policies automatically or semi-automatically across domains as by-products. A case study in healthcare information systems confirms the advantages of these new functions and facilities in this simulation environment.