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Title Aspectizing Java Access Control
Authors Rodolfo Toledo, Angel Núñez, Éric Tanter, Jacques Noyé
Publication date January 2012
Abstract It is inevitable that some concerns crosscut a sizeable
application, resulting in code scattering and tangling. This issue is
particularly severe for security-related concerns: it is difficult to be
confident about the security of an application when the implementation of
its security-related concerns is scattered all over the code and tangled
with other concerns, making global reasoning about security precarious. In
this study, we consider the case of access control in Java, which turns out
to be a crosscutting concern with a non-modular implementation based on
runtime stack inspection. We describe the process of modularizing access
control in Java by means of Aspect-Oriented Programming (AOP). We first show
a solution based on AspectJ, the most popular aspect-oriented extension to
Java, that must rely on a separate automata infrastructure. We then put
forward a novel solution via dynamic deployment of aspects and scoping
strategies. Both solutions, apart from providing a modular specification of
access control, make it possible to easily express other useful policies
such as the Chinese wall policy. However, relying on expressive scope
control results in a compact implementation, which, at the same time,
permits the straightforward expression of even more interesting policies.
These new modular implementations allowed by AOP alleviate maintenance and
evolution issues produced by the crosscutting nature of access
control.
Pages 101-117
Volume 38
Journal name IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
Publisher IEEE Computer Society Press (Los Alamitos, CA, USA)
Reference URL View reference page