DocumentCode
2376067
Title
Testing Security Policies: Going Beyond Functional Testing
Author
Traon, Yves Le ; Mouelhi, Tejeddine ; Baudry, Benoit
fYear
2007
fDate
5-9 Nov. 2007
Firstpage
93
Lastpage
102
Abstract
While important efforts are dedicated to system functional testing, very few works study how to test specifically security mechanisms, implementing a security policy. This paper introduces security policy testing as a specific target for testing. We propose two strategies for producing security policy test cases, depending if they are built in complement of existing functional test cases or independently from them. Indeed, any security policy is strongly connected to system functionality: testing functions includes exercising many security mechanisms. However, testing functionality does not intend at putting to the test security aspects. We thus propose test selection criteria to produce tests from a security policy. To quantify the effectiveness of a set of test cases to detect security policy flaws, we adapt mutation analysis and define security policy mutation operators. A library case study, a 3-tiers architecture, is used to obtain experimental trends. Results confirm that security must become a specific target of testing to reach a satisfying level of confidence in security mechanisms.
Keywords
Access control; Context modeling; Data security; Genetic mutations; Libraries; Permission; Reliability engineering; Software reliability; Software testing; System testing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Software Reliability, 2007. ISSRE '07. The 18th IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location
Trollhattan
ISSN
1071-9458
Print_ISBN
978-0-7695-3024-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISSRE.2007.27
Filename
4402200
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