Attribute-based Access Control (ABAC) was recently proposed as a general model which is able to capture the main existing access control models. This paper discusses the problems of configuring ABAC and engineering access policies. We question how to design attributes, how to assign attributes to subjects, objects, actions, and how to formulate access policies which bind subjects to objects and actions via attributes. Inspired by the role mining problem in Role-based Access Control, in this paper we propose the first attempt to formalise ABAC in a matrix form and define formally a problem of access policy engineering. Our approach is based on the XACML standard to be more practical.
Towards Attribute-based Access Control Policy Engineering Using Risk
Leanid Krautsevich;Aliaksandr Lazouski;Fabio Martinelli;Paolo Mori;Artsiom Yautsiukhin
2013
Abstract
Attribute-based Access Control (ABAC) was recently proposed as a general model which is able to capture the main existing access control models. This paper discusses the problems of configuring ABAC and engineering access policies. We question how to design attributes, how to assign attributes to subjects, objects, actions, and how to formulate access policies which bind subjects to objects and actions via attributes. Inspired by the role mining problem in Role-based Access Control, in this paper we propose the first attempt to formalise ABAC in a matrix form and define formally a problem of access policy engineering. Our approach is based on the XACML standard to be more practical.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.