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Joint work with Emilien Antoine, Gerome  Miklau , Julia  Stoyanovich and Vera  Zaychik Moffitt

Introducing Access Control in Webdamlog Serge Abiteboul INRIA Saclay & ENS Cachan. Joint work with Emilien Antoine, Gerome  Miklau , Julia  Stoyanovich and Vera  Zaychik Moffitt. Mai 30 , 2012. ICDE 2012. The Web as a distributed knowledge base

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Joint work with Emilien Antoine, Gerome  Miklau , Julia  Stoyanovich and Vera  Zaychik Moffitt

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  1. Introducing Access Control in Webdamlog Serge AbiteboulINRIA Saclay& ENS Cachan Joint work with EmilienAntoine, Gerome Miklau, Julia Stoyanovichand Vera ZaychikMoffitt Mai 30, 2012 ICDE 2012

  2. The Web as a distributed knowledge base • Webdamlog: a rule-based language for the Web • Access control in Webdamlog • The Webdamlog system • Conclusion

  3. A typical Web user’s data • What kinds of data? • data: photos, music, movies, reports, email • metadata: photo taken by Alice in Paris on ... • ontologies: Alice’s ontology and mapping with other ontologies • localization: Alice’s pictures are on Picasa, back-ups are at INRIA • security: Facebook credentials (Alice, 123456) • annotations: Alice likes Elvis’ website • beliefs: Alice believes Elvis is alive • external knowledge: Bob keeps copies of Alice’s pictures • time, provenance, ... all kinds Social data

  4. A typical Web user’s data • What kinds of data? • Where is the data? • laptop, desktop, smartphone, tablet, car computer • mail, address book, agenda • Facebook, LinkedIn, Picasa, YouTube, Tweeter • svn, Google docs • also access to data / information of family, friends, companies associations all kinds everywhere

  5. A typical Web user’s data • What kinds of data? • Where is the data? all kinds everywhere heterogeneous • What kind of organization? • terminology: different ontologies • systems: personal machines, social networks • distribution: different localization • security: different protocols • quality: incomplete / inconsistent information

  6. Example of processing Alice and Bob are getting engaged. Their friends want to offer them an album of photos where they are together To make such a photo album • Find friends of Alice& Bob (say with Facebook) • for each friend, find where she keeps her photos (say, Picassa) • find the means to access her photos possibly via friends • find the photos that feature Bob and Alice together, e.g., using tags or face recognition software • possibly ask someone to verify the results Some reasoning is needed to execute these tasks automatically!

  7. A typical Web user • Overwhelmed by the mass of information • Cannot find the information needed • Is not aware of important events • Cannot manage/control how others access and use his/her own data

  8. How can systems help? • We need to move from a Web of text to a Web of knowledge • In the spirit of semantic Web • To better support user needs, • Systems need to analyze what is happening and construct knowledge • Systems should exchange knowledge • Systems should reason and infer knowledge YOU need help!

  9. Thesis All this forms a distributed knowledge base with processing based on automated reasoning

  10. Our topic • Distributed reasoning Exchanging facts and rules Webdamlog • Access control with access control

  11. The Web as a distributed knowledge base • Webdamlog: a rule-based language for the Web • Access control in Webdamlog • The Webdamlog system • Conclusion

  12. Webdamlog: a datalog-style language Datalog A prehistoric language by Web time... + nice and compact syntax + well-studied with many extensions + recursion essential: network cycles Webdamlog Not as simple/beautiful & procedural Needed for real Web applications! Webdamlog is not datalog

  13. Webdamlog: an extension of datalog Datalog program fof(x,y) :- friend(x,y) fof(x,y) :- friend(x,z), fof(z,y) Extensional facts (stored in the database) friend(“peter”,”paul”) friend(“paul”, “mary”) friend(“mary”,”sue”) Intentional facts (derived) fof(“peter”,”paul”) fof(“peter”,”mary”) fof(“peter”, “sue”) fof(“paul”, “mary”) fof(“paul”, “sue”) fof(“mary”,”sue”)

  14. Webdamlog: an extension of datalog Extends datalog • negation, updates, distribution, delegation, time For a world that is • distributed: autonomous and asynchronous peers • dynamic: knowledge evolves; peers come and go Influenced by • Active XML (INRIA) - for distribution & intentional data • Dedalus (UC Berkeley) - for time & implementation

  15. Facts Facts are of the form m@p(a1, ..., an), where m is a relationname & pis a peer name a1, ..., an are data values (n is the arity of m@p) the set of data values includes the relations and peer names Examples friend@my-iphone(“peter”, “paul”) extensional fof@my-iphone(“adam”, “paul”) intentional

  16. Examples of facts data & metadata: pictures@alice-iphone(1771.jpg, “Paris”, 11/11/2011) ontology: isA@yago.com("Elvis”, theKing) annotations: tags@delicious.com(“wikipedia.org”, encyclopedia) localization: where@alice(pictures, picasa/alice) access rights: right@picasa(pictures, friends, read) security: secret@picasa/alice; public@picasa/alice

  17. Rules A term is a variable or a constant Rules are of the form $R@$P($U) :- (not) $R1@$P1($U1), ..., (not) $Rn@$Pn($Un) where $R, $Ri are relation terms $P, $Pi are peer terms $U, $Ui are tuples of terms Safety condition $R and $P must appear positively bound in the body each variable in a negative literal must appear positively bound in the body Examples coming up, stay tuned

  18. State transition Choose some peer p randomly – asynchronously Compute the transition of p the database updates at p the messages sent to other peers the delegations of rulesto other peers Keep going forever (I0, Γ0, ∅) ➝ (I1, Γ1, Γ1*) ➝... ➝ (In, Γn, Γn*) ➝... Fair sequence: each peer is selected infinitely often

  19. The semantics of rules Classification based on locality and nature of head predicates (intentional or extensional) • Local rule at my-laptop: all predicates in the body of the rules are from my-laptop Local with local intentional head classic datalog Local with local extensional head database update Local with non-local extensional head messaging between peers Local with non-local intentional head view delegation Non-local general delegation

  20. Local rules with localintentional head Example: Rule at peer my-laptop friendis extensional, fofis intentional fof@my-iphone($x, $y) :- friend@my-iphone($x,$y) fof@my-iphone($x,$y) :- friend@my-iphone($x,$z), fof@my-iphone($z,$y) fofis the transitive closure of friend Datalog= Webdamlog with only local rules and local intentional head

  21. Local rules with local extensional head A new fact is insertedinto the local database believe@my-iphone(“Alice”, $loc) :- tell@my-iphone($p,”Alice”, $loc), friend@my-iphone($p)

  22. Local rules with non-local extensional head A new fact is sent to an external peer via a message $message@$peer($name, “Happy birthday!”) :- today@my-iphone($date), birthday@my-iphone($name,$message, $peer, $date) • Extensional facts: • today@my-iphone(March 6) • birthday@my-iphone("Manon”, “sendmail”, “gmail.com”, March 6) • sendmail@gmail.com("Manon”, “Happy birthday”)

  23. Local rules with non-local intentional head View delegation! boyMeetsGirl@gossip-site($girl, $boy) :- girls@my-iphone($girl, $loc), boys@my-iphone($boy, $loc) Semantics of boyMeetGirl@gossip-siteis a join of relations girls and boys from my-iphone Formally, my-iphone delegates a rule boyMeetGirl@gossip-site(g,b) for each g, b, l, girls@my-iphone(g,l), boys@my-iphone(b,l)

  24. Non-local rules: general delegation (at my-iphone):boyMeetsGirl@gossip-site($girl, $boy) :- girls@my-iphone($girl, $loc), boys@alice-iphone($boy, $loc) Suppose that girls@my-iphone(“Alice”, “Julia's birthday”) holds. Then my-iphoneinstalls the following rule at alice-iphone (at alice-iphone):boyMeetsGirl@gossip-site(“Alice”, $boy) :- boys@alice-iphone($boy, “Julia's birthday”) When girls@my-iphone(“Alice”, “Julia's birthday”) no longer holds,my-iphoneuninstalls the rule

  25. Complexity of delegation: illustration fof(x,y) :- friend(x,y) (at p) fof@p(x,y) :- peers@p($q), friend@$q(x,y) If peers@p contains 100 000 tuples peers@p(q1), ...., peers@p(q100 000) This rule will install 100 000 rules! for i=1 to 100 000 (at qi) fof@p(x,y) :- friend@qi(x,y) Data complexitytransformed into program complexity

  26. Summary of results [PODS 2011] • Formal definition of the semantics of Webdamlog • Results on expressivity • the model with delegation is more general, unless all peers and programs are known in advance • Convergence is very hard to achieve • positive Webdamlog • strongly stratified programs with negation

  27. The Web as a distributed knowledge base • Webdamlog: a rule-based language for the Web • Access control in Webdamlog • The Webdamlog system • Conclusion

  28. Requirements Data access Users would like to control who can read and modify their information Data dissemination Users would like to control how their data are transferred from one participant to another, and how they are combined, with the owner of each piece of data keeping some control over it Application control Users would like to control which applications can run on their behalf, and what information these applications can access.

  29. The general picture • The privileges we consider: read, write, grant • For read: • Coarse grained access control: at the relation level • Fine grain access control: at the tuple level 

  30. Insertion in extentional relationsDefinition of intensional relations • Requires write privilege on the target relation • [at Alice] alicePhotos@Bob($f) :- person@Alice($p, “Friend”), personInPhoto@Alice($pid, $p), photo@Alice($pid,−, $f) • [at Alice] allPhotos@Alice($f) :alicePhotos@Alice($f) • [at Bob] allPhotos@Alice($f) :- bobPhotos@Bob($f)

  31. Who can read a fact ? – default • Extensional relations: if you have read privilege to the relation • Intensional relations: if you have read privilege to the relation & if you can read all the tuples that have been used to create this fact – provenance of the fact

  32. Digression: provenance • Provenance of a tuple • How it was constructed: conjunction • Alternatives: disjunction

  33. Digression: provenance graph (Also used for maintenance in case of update) rule1 boys@p(John, Julia's birthday) girls@p(Jane, Julia’s birthday) × × rule3 gossip@p(Jane, John) × × + boyMeetsGirl@p(Jane, John)

  34. Coarse grain access control • [at Alice] alicePhotos@Bob($f) :- person@Alice($p, “Friend”), personInPhoto@Alice($pid, $p), photo@Alice($pid,−, $f) • alicePhotos@Bobis extensional • Whoever has read access to alicePhotos@Bob sees all the relation

  35. Fine grain access control • [at Alice] allPhotos@Alice($f) : alicePhotos@Alice($f) • [at Bob] allPhotos@Alice($f) :- bobPhotos@Bob($f) • allPhotos@Alice is intensional • Sue who has read privilege to allPhotos@Alice and alicePhotos only, can see only the photos of Alice in allPhotos • Lili who has read privilege to the three relations, sees everything

  36. Overwriting the default for intensional data • Let us change the rule to: • [at Alice] allPhotos@$x($f) :- alicePhotos@Alice($f), friends@Alice($x) • Issue: you can read the photos only if you also have read privilege to friends@Alice

  37. Overwriting the default for intensional data • [at Alice] allPhotos@$x($f) :- alicePhotos@Alice($f), [hide friends@Alice($x)] • Hide: block the provenance from friends@Alice • Similar mechanism for extensional data – expose

  38. Issues with non local rules • [at Bob] message@Sue(“I hate you”) :- date@Alice(d) aliceSecret@Bob(x) :-date@Alice(d), secret@Alice(x) Ignoring access rights, by delegation, this results in running • [at Alice] message@Sue(“I hate you”) :- date@Alice(d) aliceSecret@Bob(x) :- date@Alice(d), secret@Alice(x)

  39. Default solution: sand box We run the rule at Alice in a Sandbox • We use the access rights of Bob So the second rule does not succeed in sending secrets • The message specifies that this is done at Bob’s request So requires authentication/signatures • Alternative: delegation without sandbox. Possible if the peer that asks for the delegation is given the privilege to install rules at the other peer – Here if Alice gives Bob the right to install a rule in her environment

  40. Access control implementation • A program with access control is compiled locally in a Webdamlog program without that is executed • Access control data is managed like any other data Relation acl(defines relation access) Relation kind (ext or int) • Based on provenance implemented as a distributed graph • On-going work on optimization

  41. The Web as a distributed knowledge base • Webdamlog: a rule-based language for the Web • Access control in Webdamlog • The Webdamlog system

  42. The Webdamlog engine Based on Bud • developed at UC Berkeley Manages knowledge • Stores facts and rules • exchanges knowledge with other engines • performs reasoning

  43. The engine: beyond Bud • Compilation of (Bud’s language) • Main Webdamlog features not supported by Bud • Variable relation and peer names • Delegations with dynamic changes of the program Webdamlog+AC ⇒ Webdamlog ⇒ Bloom

  44. The Webdamlog peer Support communication with other peers and with users Support common security protocols Support wrappers to external systems such as Facebook Provides Web interfaces

  45. Provenance graphs • Records the history of derivation • Provenancesemiringsemantics [Green et al. 07] • Used for performance optimization • Used for fine grain access control • Other possible uses such as explanation of results

  46. The Web as a distributed knowledge base • Webdamlog: a rule-based language for the Web • Access control in Webdamlog • The Webdamlog system • Conclusion

  47. Thesis Let us turn the Web into a distributed knowledge base with billions of users supported by billions of systems analyzing information extracting knowledge exchanging knowledge inferring knowledge

  48. Webdamlog Language • A language for distributed data management [PODS 2011] • Datalog with distribution, updates, messaging • Main novelty: delegation Implementation • WebdamExchange peer in Java [demo ICDE 2011] • Webdamlog engine based on Bud [demo Sigmod 2013] Access control: on-going work with Miklau-Stoyanovich Probabilistic Webdamlog: on-going work with Deutch-Vianu

  49. Grazie ! Cambridge University Press, 2012http://webdam.inria.fr/Jorge

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