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Outline

International Grid Trust Federation towards worldwide interoperability in identity management UK Presidency 2005 e-IRG Meeting David L. Groep, IGTF and EUGridPMA Chair, 2005-12-13. Outline. Grid Security Authentication vs. Authorisation Grid Identity Management Authentication Federation

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Outline

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  1. International Grid Trust Federationtowards worldwide interoperability in identity managementUK Presidency 2005 e-IRG MeetingDavid L. Groep, IGTF and EUGridPMA Chair, 2005-12-13

  2. Outline Grid Security • Authentication vs. Authorisation • Grid Identity Management Authentication Federation • EUGridPMA • International Grid Trust Federation • Guidelines and Requirements Roadmap for an integrated AAI

  3. Essentials on Grid Security • Control access to shared services • Support multi-user collaborations • Composed of individuals acting alone – their home organisation administration may not know about their activities • Allow users/application communities to establish relations • Both personal and community-based aggregation of resources, based on personal or community-mediated trust • Enable single sign-on • Security must be hidden from the user as far as possible • Resource owner must always stay in control

  4. V i r t u a l C o m m u n i t y C P e r s o n E ( R e s e a r c h e r ) P e r s o n B F i l e s e r v e r F 1 ( A d m i n i s t r a t o r ) ( d i s k A ) C o m p u t e S e r v e r C 1 ' P e r s o n A P e r s o n D ( P r i n c i p a l I n v e s t i g a t o r ) ( R e s e a r c h e r ) P e r s o n B P e r s o n E ( S t a f f ) F i l e s e r v e r F 1 P e r s o n D ( F a c u l t y ) ( d i s k s A a n d B ) C o m p u t e S e r v e r C 2 C o m p u t e S e r v e r C 1 ( S t a f f ) P e r s o n A P e r s o n F ( F a c u l t y ) ( F a c u l t y ) P e r s o n C C o m p u t e S e r v e r C 3 ( S t u d e n t ) O r g a n i z a t i o n A O r g a n i z a t i o n B Virtual vs. Organic structure • Virtual communities (Virtual Organisation) are many • A single person will typically be in many communities • Users want single signon across all these communities Graphic from Frank Siebenlist, ANL & Globus AllianceGGF OGSA Working Group

  5. Stakeholders in Grid Security Grid Security is user centric • Conceptually, all members of a VO are equal • Users can provide their own services • Provider organisations may or may not have human members (or they actually only sell resources to a VO) • There is no a priori trust relationship between members • VO lifetime can vary from hours to decades • People and resources are members of multiple VOs • VOs not necessarily persistent (both long- and short-lived) • … but a relationship is required • as a basis for authorising access • for traceability and liability, incident handling, and accounting

  6. VO embedding today • as part of a Grid ‘ecosystem’where ecosystem takes care of end-to-end solution • ‘Infrastructure’ (a collective of Resource Centres) • a single project-centric VOuser groups join up together and participate in a single project • with implicit sharing agreement between users and centres • sharing across all user communities in the project • still typical for transient, ad-hoc research collaborations • any single user may (and will) participate in both types

  7. Relying parties in Grid Security • In Europe • Enabling Grid for E-sciencE (EGEE) (222 sites) • Distributed European Infrastructure for Supercomputer Applications (DEISA) (~11 sites) • South East European Grid (SEE-GRID) (10 countries) • many national projects (VL-e, UK e-Science, Grid.IT, IRISgrid, …) • In the Americas • EELA: E-infrastructure Europe and Latin America (24 partners) • WestGrid (6 sites), GridCanada, … • Open Science Grid (OSG) (54 sites) • TeraGrid (9 sites) • and also many others … • In the Asia-Pacific • AP Grid (~10 countries and regions participating) • Pacific Rim Applications and Grid Middleware Assembly (~15 sites) • … ~400 data as per December 8th, 2005

  8. Separating Authentication and Authorization • Single Authentication token (“passport”) • issued by a party trusted by all, • recognised by many resource providers, users, and VOs • satisfies traceability requirement • in itself does not grant any access, but provides a unique binding between an identifier and the subject* • Per-VO Authorisations (“visa”) • granted to a person/service or a set of them (a VO) • granted by the resource owner • based on the ‘passport’ name • providers can obtain lists of authorised users per VO,but can still ban individual users

  9. Grid Authorization today Leverages authentication provided by a PKI (the ‘passport’) • Identity management decoupled from access control • Creation of short-lived ‘tokens’ (‘proxy’ certificates) for single sign-on based on these identities But: • Variety of mechanisms • Per-resource list of authorized users • Directories of authorized users • Embedded assertions • Variety of sources of authority • Semantics to describe roles and rights differs • No common namespace • Integration with other AA mechanisms still in progress…

  10. Authentication

  11. PKI in academia and industry and … • Various commercial providers • Main commercial drive: secure web servers based on PKI • Entrust, Global Sign, Thawte, Verisign, SwissSign, … • primary market is server authentication, no end-user identities • usually expensive but don’t actually subsume liability … • are implicitly trusted by many, since web browsers pre-install the roots of trust • use of commercial CAs solves the ‘pop-up’ problem... so for (web) servers a pop-up free service is still needed • Academic PKI • generally a task of the NREN or national e-science project • got better attention only after the advance of grid computing • National PKI • in generally uptake of 1999/93/EC is slow • where available, a national PKI can be leveraged

  12. charter guidelines acceptance process The Federated PKI for Grid Authentication • A Federation of many independent CAs • common minimum requirements • trust domain as required by users and relying parties • well-defined and peer-reviewed acceptance process • No strict hierarchy with a single top • spread of reliability, and limitation of failure (resilience) • maximum leverage of national efforts and complementarities CA 2 CA 1 relying party n CA n CA 3 relying party 1

  13. Relying Party issues to be addressed Common Relying Party requests on the Authorities • standard accreditation profiles sufficient to assure approximate parity in CAs • monitor [] signing namespaces for name overlaps • a forum [to] participate and raise issues • [operation of] a secure collection point for information about CAs which you accredit • common practices where possible [list courtesy of the Open Science Grid]

  14. Building the federation • PKI providers (‘CAs’) and Relying Parties (‘sites’) together shape the common requirements • Several profiles for different identity management models • Authorities testify to compliance with profile guidelines • Peer-review process within the federation to (re) evaluate members on entry & periodically • Reduce effort on the relying parties • single document to review and assess for all CAs • Reduce cost on the CAs • no audit statement needed by certified accountants • but participation in the federation comes with a price • Requires that the federation remains manageable in size • Ultimate decision always remains with the RP

  15. EUGridPMA founded April 2004 as a successor to the CACG • The European Policy Management Authority for Grid Authentication in e-Science (hereafter called EUGridPMA) is a body • to establish requirements and best practices for grid identity providers • to enable a common trust domain applicable to authentication of end-entities in inter-organisational access to distributed resources. • As its main activity the EUGridPMA • coordinates a Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) for use with Grid authentication middleware. • The EUGridPMA itself does not provide identity assertions, but instead asserts that - within the scope of this charter – the certificates issued by the Accredited Authorities meet or exceed the relevant guidelines. The EUGridPMA “constitution”

  16. EUGridPMA Membership EUGridPMA membership for (classic) CAs • a single Authority • per country, • large region (e.g. the Nordic Countries), or • international treaty organization. • ‘the goal is to serve the largest possible community with a small number of stable CAs’ • operated as a long-term commitment Many CAs are operated by the (national) NREN(CESNET, ESnet, Belnet, NIIF, EEnet, SWITCH, DFN, … ) or by the e-Science programme/science foundation(UK eScience, VL-e, CNRS, … )

  17. Coverage of the EUGridPMA Green: Countries with an accredited CA • The EU member states (except LU, MT) • + AM, CH, IL, IS, NO, PK, RU, TR, “SEE-catch-all” Other Accredited CAs: • DoEGrids (.us) • GridCanada (.ca) • CERN • ASGCC (.tw)* • IHEP (.cn)* * Migrated to APGridPMA per Oct 5th, 2005

  18. The Catch-All CAs Project-centric “catch all” Authorities • For those left out of the rain in EGEE • CNRS “catch-all” (Sophie Nicoud) • coverage for all EGEE partners • For the South-East European Region • regional catch-all CA • For LCG world-wide • DoeGrids CA (Tony Genovese & Mike Helm, ESnet) • Registration Authorities through Ian Neilson

  19. EUGridPMA Relying Party Members • All EU 6th framework e-Infrastructure projects • DEISA • EGEE • SEE-GRID • The LHC Computing Grid Project (“LCG”) • The Open Science Grid Project (US) • TERENA • National projects represented via their national CA: • e-Science programme UK • Virtual Lab e-Science, the Netherlands • …

  20. TACAR Authoritative source for validation of trust anchors • independent administration improves resilience • TACAR certificate itself published in paper/journals • Many trust anchors collected, not only for grid use

  21. Growth of the CACG and EUGridPMA History

  22. March 2003: The Tokyo Accord • … meet at GGF conferences. … • … work on … Grid Policy Management Authority: GRIDPMA.org • develop Minimum requirements – based on EDG work • develop a Grid Policy Management Authority Charter • [with] representatives from major Grid PMAs: • European Data Grid and Cross Grid PMA: 16 countries, 19 organizations • NCSA Alliance • Grid Canada • DOEGrids PMA • NASA Information Power Grid • TERENA • Asian Pacific PMA:AIST, Japan; SDSC, USA; KISTI, Korea; Bll, Singapore; Kasetsart Univ., Thailand; CAS, China History

  23. APGridPMA TAGPMA Extending Trust:IGTF – the International Grid Trust Federation • common, global best practices for trust establishment • better manageability and response of the PMAs The America’s Grid PMA European Grid PMA Asia-Pacific Grid PMA

  24. APGridPMA • 13 members from the Asia-Pacific Region, • Launched June 1st, 2004, chaired by Yoshio Tanaka • First face-to-face meeting on Nov 29th, 2005 • Today 6 ‘production-quality’ authorities in operation • AIST (.jp) • APAC (.au) • BMG (.sg) • CMSD (.in) • HKU CS SRG (.hk) • KISTI (.kr) • NCHC (.tw) • NPACI (.us) • Osaka U. (.jp) • SDG (.cn) • USM (.my) • IHEP Beijing (.cn) • ASGCC (.tw)

  25. TAGPMA • To cover all of the Americas • 8 members to date • Launched June 28th, 2005chaired by Darcy Quesnel, CANARIE • SDSC (.us) • FNAL (.us) • Dartmouth (.us) • Brazil (pending) • Canarie (.ca) • OSG (.us) • TERAGRID (.us) • Texas H.E. Grid (.us) • DOEGrids (.us)

  26. APGridPMA • CA A1 • … • EUGridPMA • CA E1 • CA E2 • … • TAGPMA • CA T1 • … IGTF Federation Structure IGTF Federation Document trustrelations SubjectNamespaceAssignment DistributionNaming Conventions Common Authentication Profiles Classic(EUGridPMA) SLCS(TAGPMA)

  27. Common Guidelines for all of the IGTF Collective requirements(technology agnostic) Technology specificguidelinesManagement assigned to specific PMAs

  28. Guidelines: common elements • Coordinated namespace • Subject names refer to a unique entity (person, host) • Basis for authorization decisions • Common Naming • Common structure for trust anchor distribution in the federation • Trusted, redundant, download sources • Harmonized ‘concerns’ and ‘incident’ handling • Guaranteed point of contact • Forum to raise issues and concerns • Requirement for documentation of processes • Detailed policy and practice statement • Open to auditing by federation peers

  29. Guidelines: secured X.509 CAs • Identity vetting procedures • Based on (national) photo ID’s • Face-to-face verification of applicants via a network of Registration Authorities • Periodic renewal (once every year) • Record retention at least 3 years • Secure operation • off-line signing key or special (FIPS-140.3 or better) hardware • Response to incidents • Timely revocation of compromised certificates

  30. Guidelines: short-lived credential service • Issue short-lived credentials (for grid: proxies) based on another site-local authentication system • e.g. Kerberos CA based on existing administration • Same common guidelines apply • documented policies and processes • a reliable identity vetting mechanism • accreditation of the credential issuer with a PMA • identity vetting data retention • Same X.509 format, but no user-held secrets

  31. Relationships: IGTF, PMAs, TACAR and GGF

  32. Five years of growth December 2000: First CA coordination meeting for the DataGrid project March 2003:Tokyo Accord (GGF7) April 2004:Foundation of the EUGridPMA June 2004:Foundation of the APGridPMA June 2005:Foundation of TAGPMA (GGF14) October 2005:Establishment of the International Grid Trust Federation IGTF …

  33. Along the e-IRG Roadmap • the federated approach to • an integrated AA infrastructure for eEurope Towards an integrated AAI for academia in Europe • The e-IRG notes the timely operation of the EUGridPMA in conjunction with the TACAR CA Repository and it expresses its satisfaction for a European initiative that serves e-Science Grid projects. […] The e-IRG strongly encourages the EUGridPMA / TACAR to continue their valuable work […] (Dublin, 2004) • The e-IRG encourages work towards a common federation for academia and research institutes that ensures mutual recognition of the strength and validity of their authorization assertions.(The Hague, 2005)

  34. Recent developments in this direction • from the EUGridPMA side • Extending PMA and the IGTF actively to more countries and regions • Specifically open to inter-working with other federations • from TERENA • NRENs-GRID workshop series • TF-EMC2 / TF-Mobility • possible TACAR extensions • REFEDS – Research and Education Federations • broad AAI scope • IGTF, eduroam, A-Select, PAPI, SWITCH-AAI, InCommon, HAKA, FEIDE/Moria • Seehttp://www.terena.nl/tech/refeds/

  35. EUGridPMA – http://www.eugridpma.org/IGTF – http://www.gridpma.org/

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