A Dynamic End-to-End Security for Coordinating Multiple Protections within a Linux Desktop

Abstract

Index Terms-end-to-end security, multi-domains, protection mechanisms, coordination, Linux. Abstract-Currently, application protection models are mostly static and independent. It means that the applications cannot handle multiple domains to manage accordingly the permissions for a given user request. Managing multiple domains is becoming a more and more common issue as desktop applications are growing in complexity to provide better-designed user interfaces. Today, protection systems are almost everywhere. Multiple systems of protection are available from the Linux kernel such as SELinux or PIGA-Protect to get a Mandatory Protection. Those systems provide a per-syscall validation process. Network protections are also available such as the IPtables firewalling mechanism. Protections for languages or frameworks also exist such as for Java or .NET. But, solutions are missing for coordinating the various mechanisms that protect different levels of the global information system. The purpose is to reuse and coordinate efficiently those different levels of protection in order to provide a end-to-end protection that manages dynamically multiple domains. Thus, the same host can support multiple domains for the user requests while providing a transparent endto-end security that protects against complex scenarios of attack. This paper describes an attempt to deliver such a system for controlling efficiently the user requests

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