7,324 research outputs found
A flexible mandatory access control policy for XML databases
A flexible mandatory access control policy (MAC) for XML
databases is presented in this paper. The label type and label
access policy can be defined according to the requirements of
applications. In order to preserve the integrity of data in XML
databases, a constraint between a read access rule and a write
access rule in label access policy is introduced. Rules for label
assignment and propagation are proposed to alleviate the
workload of label assignment. Also, a solution for resolving
conflicts of label assignments is proposed. At last, operations for
implementation of the MAC policy in a XML database are
illustrated
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A practical mandatory access control model for XML databases
A practical mandatory access control (MAC) model for XML databases is presented in this paper. The
label type and label access policy can be defined according to the requirements of different applications. In order to
preserve the integrity of data in XML databases, a constraint between a read-access rule and a write-access rule in
label access policy is introduced. Rules for label assignment and propagation are presented to alleviate the workload
of label assignments. Furthermore, a solution for resolving conflicts in label assignments is proposed. Rules for
update-related operations, rules for exceptional privileges of ordinary users and the administrator are also proposed
to preserve the security of operations in XML databases. The MAC model, we proposed in this study, has been
implemented in an XML database. Test results demonstrated that our approach provides rational and scalable
performance
Security oriented e-infrastructures supporting neurological research and clinical trials
The neurological and wider clinical domains stand to gain greatly from the vision of the grid in providing seamless yet secure access to distributed, heterogeneous computational resources and data sets. Whilst a wealth of clinical data exists within local, regional and national healthcare boundaries, access to and usage of these data sets demands that fine grained security is supported and subsequently enforced. This paper explores the security challenges of the e-health domain, focusing in particular on authorization. The context of these explorations is the MRC funded VOTES (Virtual Organisations for Trials and Epidemiological Studies) and the JISC funded GLASS (Glasgow early adoption of Shibboleth project) which are developing Grid infrastructures for clinical trials with case studies in the brain trauma domain
Active artefact management for distributed software engineering
We describe a software artefact repository that provides its contents with some awareness of their own creation. "Active" artefacts are distinguished from their passive counterparts by their enriched meta-data model which reflects the work-flow process that created them, the actors responsible, the actions taken to change the artefact, and various other pieces of organisational knowledge. This enriched view of an artefact is intended to support re-use of both software and the expertise gained when creating the software. Unlike other organisational knowledge systems, the meta-data is intrinsically part of the artefact and may be populated automatically from sources including existing data-format specific information, user supplied data and records of communication.
Such a system is of increased importance in the world of
"virtual teams" where transmission of vital organisational
knowledge, at best difficult, is further constrained by the
lack of direct contact between engineers and differing development cultures
Dynamic Model-based Management of Service-Oriented Infrastructure.
Models are an effective tool for systems and software design. They allow software architects to abstract from the non-relevant details. Those qualities are also useful for the technical management of networks, systems and software, such as those that compose service oriented architectures. Models can provide a set of well-defined abstractions over the distributed heterogeneous service infrastructure that enable its automated management. We propose to use the managed system as a source of dynamically generated runtime models, and decompose management processes into a composition of model transformations. We have created an autonomic service deployment and configuration architecture that obtains, analyzes, and transforms system models to apply the required actions, while being oblivious to the low-level details. An instrumentation layer automatically builds these models and interprets the planned management actions to the system. We illustrate these concepts with a distributed service update operation
Supporting the clinical trial recruitment process through the grid
Patient recruitment for clinical trials and studies is a large-scale task. To test a given drug for example, it is desirable that as large a pool of suitable candidates is used as possible to support reliable assessment of often moderate effects of the drugs. To make such a recruitment campaign successful, it is necessary to efficiently target the petitioning of these potential subjects. Because of the necessarily large numbers involved in such campaigns, this is a problem that naturally lends itself to the paradigm of Grid technology. However the accumulation and linkage of data sets across clinical domain boundaries poses challenges due to the sensitivity of the data involved that are atypical of other Grid domains. This includes handling the privacy and integrity of data, and importantly the process by which data can be collected and used, and ensuring for example that patient involvement and consent is dealt with appropriately throughout the clinical trials process. This paper describes a Grid infrastructure developed as part of the MRC funded VOTES project (Virtual Organisations for Trials and Epidemiological Studies) at the National e-Science Centre in Glasgow that supports these processes and the different security requirements specific to this domain
PREMIS Requirement Statement Project Report
This is the report of the PRESTA Project, the objective of which was to develop a requirements specification for preservation metadata based on the PREMIS (PREservation Metadata: Implementation Strategies) final report, the Data Dictionary for Preservation Metadata
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