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SIGCOMM
2009
ACM

Delegating network security with more information

14 years 6 months ago
Delegating network security with more information
Network security is gravitating towards more centralized control. Strong centralization places a heavy burden on the administrator who has to manage complex security policies and be able to adapt to users’ requests. To be able to cope, the administrator needs to delegate some control back to end-hosts and users, a capability that is missing in today’s networks. Delegation makes administrators less of a bottleneck when policy needs to be modified and allows network administration to follow organizational lines. To enable delegation, we propose ident++—a simple protocol to request additional information from end-hosts and networks on the path of a flow. ident++ allows users and end-hosts to participate in network security enforcement by providing information that the administrator might not have or rules to be enforced on their behalf. In this paper we describe ident++ and how it provides delegation and enables flexible and powerful policies. Categories and Subject Descriptors ...
Jad Naous, Ryan Stutsman, David Mazières, N
Added 28 May 2010
Updated 28 May 2010
Type Conference
Year 2009
Where SIGCOMM
Authors Jad Naous, Ryan Stutsman, David Mazières, Nick McKeown, Nickolai Zeldovich
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