JOURNAL ARTICLE

A Context-centric Security Middleware for Service Provisioning in Pervasive Computing

Abstract

Pervasive user mobility, wireless connectivity and the widespread diffusion of portable devices raise new challenges for ubiquitous service provisioning. An emerging architecture solution in the wireless Internet is based on mobile proxies (implemented as mobile agent-based middleware components) over the fixed network that follow the movements and act on behalf of the limited wireless clients. It is crucial that mobile proxies have full visibility of their context, i.e., the set of available and relevant resources, depending on access control rules, client location, user preferences, privacy requirements, terminal characteristics, and current state of hosting environments. The paper presents the design and implementation of a context-centric security middleware, called UbiCOSM, for MA-based service provisioning in pervasive computing. UbiCOSM dynamically determines the contexts of mobile proxies, and effectively rules the access to them, by taking into account different types of metadata (user profiles and authorization policies), expressed at a high level of abstraction and cleanly separated from the service logic. The paper also shows the functioning of UbiCOSM in the design and the development of a mobile context-centric airport business assistant.

Keywords:
Computer science Provisioning Middleware (distributed applications) Ubiquitous computing Mobile computing Computer network Context (archaeology) Computer security Distributed computing Operating system

Metrics

15
Cited By
1.59
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
15
Refs
0.84
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Mobile Agent-Based Network Management
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computer Networks and Communications
Access Control and Trust
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Sociology and Political Science
Peer-to-Peer Network Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computer Networks and Communications
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