10-22-2014, 11:18 AM
Hi want the complete souce code for "Securing Brokerless Publish/Subscribe Systems
Using Identity Based Encryption" this project please help me.
Securing Brokerless Publish/Subscribe Systems
Using Identity Based Encryption
ABSTRACT
The provisioning of basic security mechanisms such as authentication and confidentiality is highly challenging in a content based publish/subscribe system. Authentication of publishers and subscribers is difficult to achieve due to the loose coupling of publishers and subscribers. Likewise, confidentiality of events and subscriptions conflicts with content-based routing. This paper presents a novel approach to provide confidentiality and authentication in a broker-less content-based publish/subscribe system. The authentication of publishers and subscribers as well as confidentiality of events is ensured, by adapting the pairing-based cryptography mechanisms, to the needs of a publish/subscribe system. Furthermore, an algorithm to cluster subscribers according to their subscriptions preserves a weak notion of subscription confidentiality. In addition to our previous work this paper contributes 1) use of searchable encryption to enable efficient routing of encrypted events, 2) multicredential routing a new event dissemination strategy to strengthen the weak subscription confidentiality, and 3) thorough analysis of different attacks on subscription confidentiality. The overall approach provides fine-grained key management and the cost for encryption, decryption, and routing is in the order of subscribed attributes. Moreover, the evaluations show that providing security is affordable w.r.t. 1) throughput of the proposed cryptographic primitives, and 2) delays incurred during the construction of the publish/subscribe overlay and the event dissemination.
EXISTING SYSTEM:
In the past, most research has focused only on providing expressive and scalable pub/sub systems, but little attention has been paid for the need of security. Existing approaches toward secure pub/sub systems mostly rely on the presence of a traditional broker network. These either address security under restricted expressiveness, for example, by using only keyword matching for routing events or rely on a network of (semi-)trusted brokers. Furthermore, existing approaches use coarse-grain epoch based key management and cannot provide fine-grain access control in a scalable manner. Nevertheless, security in broker-less pub/sub systems, where the subscribers are clustered according to their subscriptions, has not been discussed yet in the literature.
PROPOSED SYSTEM:
Proposed System presents a new approach to provide authentication and confidentiality in a broker-less pub/sub system. Our approach allow subscribers to maintain credentials according to their subscriptions. Private keys assigned to the subscribers are labeled with the credentials. A publisher associates each encrypted event with a set of credentials. We adapted identity-based encryption (IBE) mechanisms 1) to ensure that a particular subscriber can decrypt an event only if there is a match between the credentials associated with the event and the key; and 2) to allow subscribers to verify the authenticity of received events. Furthermore, we address the issue of subscription confidentiality in the presence of semantic clustering of subscribers. A weaker notion of subscription confidentiality is defined and a secure overlay maintenance protocol is designed to preserve the weak subscription confidentiality.
PROBLEM STATEMENT:
It include two entities in the system: publishers and subscribers. Both the entities are
computationally bounded and do not trust each other. Moreover, all the peers (publishers or subscribers) participating in the pub/sub overlay network are honest and do not deviate from the designed protocol. Likewise, authorized publishers only disseminate valid events in the system. However, malicious publishers may masquerade the authorized publishers and spam the overlay network with fake and duplicate events. We do not intend to solve the digital copyright problem; therefore, authorized subscribers do not reveal the content of successfully decrypted events to other subscribers.
SCOPE:
The pub/sub overlay proposed is similar to DPS system with modifications to ensure subscription confidentiality. In this paper, we, therefore, evaluate performance and scalability of the proposed pub/sub system only with respect to the security mechanisms and omit other aspects. In particular, we evaluate the performance of our system the overlay construction time and the event dissemination delays. We measure the average delay experienced by each subscriber to connect to a suitable position in an attribute tree. Delay is measured from the time a subscriber sends connection request message to a random peer in the tree till the time the connection is actually established. The evaluations are performed only for a single attribute tree. It shows that the average connection time (delay) increases with the number of peers in the system because of the increase in the height of the attribute tree (each new hop increases the network delay as well as time to apply security methods).
MODULE DESCRIPTION:
Number of Modules
After careful analysis the system has been identified to have the following modules:
1. Content-Based Publish/Subscribe Module.
2. Identity Based Encryption Module.
3. Key Generation for Publisher/Subscriber Module.
4. Secure Overlay Maintenance Module.
1. Content-Based Publish/Subscriber Module:
The routing of events from publishers to the relevant subscribers, we use the content-based data model. We consider pub/sub in a setting where there exists no dedicated broker infrastructure. Publishers and subscribers contribute as peers to the maintenance of a self-organizing overlay structure. To authenticate publishers, we use the concept of advertisements in which a publisher announces beforehand the set of events which it intends to publish.
2. Identity Based Encryption Module:
In our approach, publishers and subscribers interact with a key server. They provide credentials to the key server and in turn receive keys which fit the expressed capabilities in the credentials. Subsequently, those keys can be used to encrypt, decrypt, and sign relevant messages in the content based pub/sub system, i.e., the credential becomes authorized by the key server. The keys assigned to publishers and subscribers, and the ciphertexts, are labeled with credentials. In particular, the identity-based encryption ensures that a particular key can decrypt a particular ciphertext only if there is a match between the credentials of the ciphertext and the key. Publishers and subscribers maintain separate private keys for each authorized credential.
3. Key Generation For Publisher/Subscriber Module:
Publisher keys: Before starting to publish events, a publisher contacts the key server along with the credentials for each attribute in its advertisement. If the publisher is allowed to publish events according to its credentials, the key server will generate separate private keys for each credential. The public key of a publisher p for credential is generated.
Subscriber keys: Similarly, to receive events matching its subscription, a subscriber should contact the key server and receive the private keys for the credentials associated with each attribute A.
4.Secure Overlay Maintenance Module:
The secure overlay maintenance protocol is based on the idea that in the tree, subscribers are always connected according to the containment relationship between their credential. A new subscriber s generates a random key SW and encrypts it with the public keys for all credentials that cover its own credential, for example, a subscriber with credential will generate ciphertexts by applying the public keys. The generated cipher texts are added to a connection request (CR) and the request is forwarded to a random peer in the tree. A connection is established if the peer can decrypt any of the cipher text using its private keys.
SYSTEM SPECIFICATION
Hardware Requirements:
• System : Pentium IV 3.5 GHz.
• Hard Disk : 40 GB.
• Floppy Drive : 1.44 Mb.
• Monitor : 14’ Colour Monitor.
• Mouse : Optical Mouse.
• Ram : 1 GB.
Software Requirements:
• Operating system : Windows XP or Windows 7, Windows 8.
• Coding Language : Java – AWT,Swings,Networking
• Data Base : My Sql / MS Access.
• Documentation : MS Office
• IDE : Eclipse Galileo
• Development Kit : JDK 1.6
Using Identity Based Encryption" this project please help me.
Securing Brokerless Publish/Subscribe Systems
Using Identity Based Encryption
ABSTRACT
The provisioning of basic security mechanisms such as authentication and confidentiality is highly challenging in a content based publish/subscribe system. Authentication of publishers and subscribers is difficult to achieve due to the loose coupling of publishers and subscribers. Likewise, confidentiality of events and subscriptions conflicts with content-based routing. This paper presents a novel approach to provide confidentiality and authentication in a broker-less content-based publish/subscribe system. The authentication of publishers and subscribers as well as confidentiality of events is ensured, by adapting the pairing-based cryptography mechanisms, to the needs of a publish/subscribe system. Furthermore, an algorithm to cluster subscribers according to their subscriptions preserves a weak notion of subscription confidentiality. In addition to our previous work this paper contributes 1) use of searchable encryption to enable efficient routing of encrypted events, 2) multicredential routing a new event dissemination strategy to strengthen the weak subscription confidentiality, and 3) thorough analysis of different attacks on subscription confidentiality. The overall approach provides fine-grained key management and the cost for encryption, decryption, and routing is in the order of subscribed attributes. Moreover, the evaluations show that providing security is affordable w.r.t. 1) throughput of the proposed cryptographic primitives, and 2) delays incurred during the construction of the publish/subscribe overlay and the event dissemination.
EXISTING SYSTEM:
In the past, most research has focused only on providing expressive and scalable pub/sub systems, but little attention has been paid for the need of security. Existing approaches toward secure pub/sub systems mostly rely on the presence of a traditional broker network. These either address security under restricted expressiveness, for example, by using only keyword matching for routing events or rely on a network of (semi-)trusted brokers. Furthermore, existing approaches use coarse-grain epoch based key management and cannot provide fine-grain access control in a scalable manner. Nevertheless, security in broker-less pub/sub systems, where the subscribers are clustered according to their subscriptions, has not been discussed yet in the literature.
PROPOSED SYSTEM:
Proposed System presents a new approach to provide authentication and confidentiality in a broker-less pub/sub system. Our approach allow subscribers to maintain credentials according to their subscriptions. Private keys assigned to the subscribers are labeled with the credentials. A publisher associates each encrypted event with a set of credentials. We adapted identity-based encryption (IBE) mechanisms 1) to ensure that a particular subscriber can decrypt an event only if there is a match between the credentials associated with the event and the key; and 2) to allow subscribers to verify the authenticity of received events. Furthermore, we address the issue of subscription confidentiality in the presence of semantic clustering of subscribers. A weaker notion of subscription confidentiality is defined and a secure overlay maintenance protocol is designed to preserve the weak subscription confidentiality.
PROBLEM STATEMENT:
It include two entities in the system: publishers and subscribers. Both the entities are
computationally bounded and do not trust each other. Moreover, all the peers (publishers or subscribers) participating in the pub/sub overlay network are honest and do not deviate from the designed protocol. Likewise, authorized publishers only disseminate valid events in the system. However, malicious publishers may masquerade the authorized publishers and spam the overlay network with fake and duplicate events. We do not intend to solve the digital copyright problem; therefore, authorized subscribers do not reveal the content of successfully decrypted events to other subscribers.
SCOPE:
The pub/sub overlay proposed is similar to DPS system with modifications to ensure subscription confidentiality. In this paper, we, therefore, evaluate performance and scalability of the proposed pub/sub system only with respect to the security mechanisms and omit other aspects. In particular, we evaluate the performance of our system the overlay construction time and the event dissemination delays. We measure the average delay experienced by each subscriber to connect to a suitable position in an attribute tree. Delay is measured from the time a subscriber sends connection request message to a random peer in the tree till the time the connection is actually established. The evaluations are performed only for a single attribute tree. It shows that the average connection time (delay) increases with the number of peers in the system because of the increase in the height of the attribute tree (each new hop increases the network delay as well as time to apply security methods).
MODULE DESCRIPTION:
Number of Modules
After careful analysis the system has been identified to have the following modules:
1. Content-Based Publish/Subscribe Module.
2. Identity Based Encryption Module.
3. Key Generation for Publisher/Subscriber Module.
4. Secure Overlay Maintenance Module.
1. Content-Based Publish/Subscriber Module:
The routing of events from publishers to the relevant subscribers, we use the content-based data model. We consider pub/sub in a setting where there exists no dedicated broker infrastructure. Publishers and subscribers contribute as peers to the maintenance of a self-organizing overlay structure. To authenticate publishers, we use the concept of advertisements in which a publisher announces beforehand the set of events which it intends to publish.
2. Identity Based Encryption Module:
In our approach, publishers and subscribers interact with a key server. They provide credentials to the key server and in turn receive keys which fit the expressed capabilities in the credentials. Subsequently, those keys can be used to encrypt, decrypt, and sign relevant messages in the content based pub/sub system, i.e., the credential becomes authorized by the key server. The keys assigned to publishers and subscribers, and the ciphertexts, are labeled with credentials. In particular, the identity-based encryption ensures that a particular key can decrypt a particular ciphertext only if there is a match between the credentials of the ciphertext and the key. Publishers and subscribers maintain separate private keys for each authorized credential.
3. Key Generation For Publisher/Subscriber Module:
Publisher keys: Before starting to publish events, a publisher contacts the key server along with the credentials for each attribute in its advertisement. If the publisher is allowed to publish events according to its credentials, the key server will generate separate private keys for each credential. The public key of a publisher p for credential is generated.
Subscriber keys: Similarly, to receive events matching its subscription, a subscriber should contact the key server and receive the private keys for the credentials associated with each attribute A.
4.Secure Overlay Maintenance Module:
The secure overlay maintenance protocol is based on the idea that in the tree, subscribers are always connected according to the containment relationship between their credential. A new subscriber s generates a random key SW and encrypts it with the public keys for all credentials that cover its own credential, for example, a subscriber with credential will generate ciphertexts by applying the public keys. The generated cipher texts are added to a connection request (CR) and the request is forwarded to a random peer in the tree. A connection is established if the peer can decrypt any of the cipher text using its private keys.
SYSTEM SPECIFICATION
Hardware Requirements:
• System : Pentium IV 3.5 GHz.
• Hard Disk : 40 GB.
• Floppy Drive : 1.44 Mb.
• Monitor : 14’ Colour Monitor.
• Mouse : Optical Mouse.
• Ram : 1 GB.
Software Requirements:
• Operating system : Windows XP or Windows 7, Windows 8.
• Coding Language : Java – AWT,Swings,Networking
• Data Base : My Sql / MS Access.
• Documentation : MS Office
• IDE : Eclipse Galileo
• Development Kit : JDK 1.6