Proposal of a Two-Phase Validation Commit Protocol as a Solution to Guarantee Trustworthiness of Transactions on Cloud Servers

Maddirala Narasimha Rao, G. Sreenivasa Reddy, Y. Dasradh Ram Reddy, G. Manoj Someswar

Abstract


In distributed transactional database systems deployed over cloud servers, entities cooperate to form proofs of authorizations that are justified by collections of certified credentials. These proofs and credentials may be evaluated and collected over extended time periods under the risk of having the underlying authorization policies or the user credentials being in inconsistent states. It therefore becomes possible for policy-based authorization systems to make unsafe decisions that might threaten sensitive resources. In this research paper, we highlight the criticality of the problem. We then define the notion of trusted transactions when dealing with proofs of authorization. Accordingly, we propose several increasingly stringent levels of policy consistency constraints, and present different enforcement approaches to guarantee the trustworthiness of transactions executing on cloud servers. We propose a Two-Phase Validation Commit protocol as a solution, which is a modified version of the basic Two-Phase Validation Commit protocols. We finally analyze the different approaches presented using both analytical evaluation of the overheads and simulations to guide the decision makers to which approach to use.
KEYWORDS: Two-Phase Validation Commit; Byzantine failure; Transaction Manager(TM); Certificate Authorities (CAs)

Full Text:

PDF




Copyright (c) 2016 Maddirala Narasimha Rao, G. Sreenivasa Reddy, Y. Dasradh Ram Reddy, G. Manoj Someswar

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

 

All published Articles are Open Access at  https://journals.pen2print.org/index.php/ijr/ 


Paper submission: ijr@pen2print.org