Equivalence-preserving corrective enforcement of security properties
by Raphaël Khoury; Nadia Tawbi
International Journal of Information and Computer Security (IJICS), Vol. 7, No. 2/3/4, 2015

Abstract: Runtime monitoring is a widely used approach for the enforcement of security policies. It allows the safe execution of untrusted code by observing the execution and reacting if needed to prevent a violation of a user-defined security policy. Previous studies have determined that the set of security properties enforceable by monitors is greatly extended by giving the monitor some licence to transform its target execution. In this study, we present a new framework to model and study the behaviour of such monitors. In order to assure that the enforcement is meaningful, we bound the monitor's ability to transform the target execution by a restriction stating that any transformation must preserve equivalence between the monitor's input and output. We proceed by giving examples of meaningful equivalence relations and identify the security policies that are enforceable with their use. We also relate our work to previous work in this field. Finally, we investigate how an a priori knowledge of the target program's behaviour would increase the monitor's enforcement power.

Online publication date: Thu, 12-Nov-2015

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