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Luis-Felipe Cabrera, Allen W. Luniewski, and James W. Stamos. Fine-grained access control in a transactional object-oriented system. Computing Systems, 5(3):199--216, 1992. RR n 22 Georges Brun-Cottan, Mesaac Makpangou

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Adaptable Replicated Objects in Distributed Environments - Brun-Cottan, Makpangou   (Correct)

....the architecture components, especially the basic interfaces of the access object and the consistency manager. 3. 1 Exploiting type specific information One technique to increase concurrency and performance is to exploit object semantics [12, 13, 17, 22] Another is fine grain concurrency control [3]. Our architecture supports both, thanks to intentions. INRIA Adaptable Replicated Objects in Distributed Environments 7 Consistency Manager Access Object Access Object Replica 2 Replica 1 Client 2 Consistency Manager Client 1 Address Space 2 Address Space 1 Client 3 Figure 1: Concrete ....

Luis-Felipe Cabrera, Allen W. Luniewski, and James W. Stamos. Fine-grained access control in a transactional object-oriented system. Computing Systems, 5(3):199--216, 1992. RR n 22 Georges Brun-Cottan, Mesaac Makpangou


Access Control for an Object-Oriented Distributed Platform - Ooi (1993)   (Correct)

....this, cryptographic protection of the capabilities make them more difficult to forge. 2.6 CACL CACL [49] is an efficient protection scheme for object oriented systems which does not require any architectural support. CACL was developed at the IBM Almaden Research Centre for the Melampus project [50, 51] although the ideas from CACL may be widely used. The protection scheme aims to provide a cost efficient method for supporting fine grained access control on objects based on using ACLs integrated with the type system (the name CACL is a combination of C apabilities and Access Control Lists) The ....

Luis-Felipe Cabrera, Allen W. Luniewski, and James W. Stamos. Fine-grained access control in a transactional object-oriented system. Computing Systems, 5(3):199--216, Summer 1992.


Adaptable Replicated Objects in Distributed Environments - Brun-Cottan, Makpangou   (Correct)

....the architecture components, especially the basic interfaces of the access object and the consistency manager. 3. 1 Exploiting type specific information One technique to increase concurrency and performance is to exploit object semantics [12, 13, 18, 23] Another is fine grain concurrency control [3]. Our architecture supports both, thanks to intentions. An intention characterizes an activity (a set of data accesses limited in time) that a client plans to perform on a replicated object. More precisely, an intention identifies a client, an activity domain (i.e. the logical parts of the object ....

Luis-Felipe Cabrera,Allen W. Luniewski,and James W. Stamos. Fine-grained access control in a transactional object-oriented system. Computing Systems, 5(3):199--216, 1992.

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