Publication | Closed Access
Scalable Web Content Attestation
23
Citations
20
References
2009
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringInformation SecurityVerificationSlow Tpm HardwareSoftware AnalysisFormal VerificationSpork ServiceHardware SecuritySoftware Performance TestingTrusted Execution EnvironmentSecure ComputingTrusted Operating SystemData PrivacyComputer ScienceSecurity Testing MethodData SecurityTrustworthy ComputingWeb PerformanceSoftware TestingSystem SoftwareWeb ContentIntegrity Verification
The Web is a primary means of information sharing for most organizations and people. Currently, a recipient of Web content knows nothing about the environment in which that information was generated other than the specific server from whence it came (and even that information can be unreliable). In this paper, we develop and evaluate the Spork system that uses the trusted platform module (TPM) to tie the Web server integrity state to the Web content delivered to browsers, thus allowing a client to verify that the origin of the content was functioning properly when the received content was generated and/or delivered. We discuss the design and implementation of the Spork service and its browser-side Firefox validation extension. In particular, we explore the challenges and solutions of scaling the delivery of mixed static and dynamic content using exceptionally slow TPM hardware. We perform an in-depth empirical analysis of the Spork system within Apache Web servers. This analysis shows Spork can deliver nearly 8,000 static or over 7,000 dynamic integrity-measured Web objects per-second. More broadly, we identify how TPM-based content Web services can scale with manageable overheads and deliver integrity-measured content with manageable overhead.
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