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Building Application-aware IPsec Policy System
Professor Haining Wang
Department of Computer Science
College of William and MaryAlgorithms for Data Migration
Date : Tuesday, October 11, 2005
Time : 11:00 - 12:00
Location : Science & Tech II, Room 320
Abstract:
As a security mechanism at the network-layer, the IP security
protocol
(IPsec) has been available for years, but its usage is limited to Virtual
Private Networks (VPNs). The end-to-end security services provided by IPsec have
not been widely used. To bring the IPsec services into wide usage, a standard
IPsec API is a potential solution. However, the realization of a user-friendly
IPsec API
involves many modifications on the current IPsec and Internet Key Exchange (IKE)
implementations. An alternative approach is to configure application-specific
IPsec policies, but the current IPsec policy system lacks the knowledge of the
context of applications running at upper layers, making it infeasible to
configure application-specific policies in practice.
In this talk, we propose an application-aware IPsec policy system on the
existing IPsec/IKE infrastructure, in which a socket monitor running in the
application context reports the socket activities to the application policy
engine. In turn, the engine translates the application policies into the
underlying security policies, and then writes them into the IPsec Security
Policy Database (SPD) via the existing IPsec policy management interface. We
implement a prototype in Linux (Kernel 2.6) and evaluate it in our testbed. The
experimental results show that the overhead of policy translation is
insignificant, and the overall system performance of the enhanced IPsec is
comparable to those of security mechanisms at upper layers. Configured with the
application-aware IPsec policies, both secured applications at upper layers and
legacy applications can transparently obtain IP security enhancements.
Seminar Point of contact: Prof Sushil Jajodia jajodia@gmu.edu
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