Hi Bryan,

Yes, I'm hoping that it creates some renewed interest.

River is currently limited to local networks and vpn's. So we'll be providing improved security options for developers using local networks, but also be able to completely lock down a public service that's reachable over https.

Anyone with an IPv6 address, will be able to provide a service to clients also using IPv6, anywhere in the world over https and we're not going to have the IPv4 private network NAT issue.

We'll need a few public lookup services available over https and people will be able to create their own.

It's likely that multicast packets will be blocked by some networks, so unicast lookup over https is important to fill that gap.

Once people have a link to at least one https lookup service, then they'll be able to search for other lookup services registered there to perform a far wider global search. Then we have delayed unmarshalling to allow local filtering to occur using logical operations before provisioning code.

Cheers,

Peter.

On 20/04/2018 12:09 AM, Bryan Thompson wrote:
Peter,

That sounds like a quite a bit of interesting progress!

Maybe we could brainstorm some examples of secure services on the
list, implement some examples, and publish the services and their
code?

Bryan

On Thu, Apr 19, 2018 at 5:19 AM, Peter<j...@zeus.net.au>  wrote:
What I’ve been up to:

1. Moved atomic serialization and support for OSGi into AtomicILFactory, so
BasicILFactory functionality effectively remains unchanged. Taking advantage
of the Extensible part of JERI. Note we can also support other protocols by
taking advantage of JERI's extensibility.
2. Newly created TLS RMIServerSocketFactory and RMIClientSocketFactory
utilise the current Subject for credentials to perform TLS handshakes and
connections. This is allows the Registry to be secured for Phoenix, so
Phoenix can run in secure mode, using JERI Secure endpoints for the
ActivationSystem and other components and use the same LoginModule for both.
SSL RMI socket factory's included with the jvm require access to a KeyStore
and don't utilise the Subject. Note that a truststore is still required.
Using the Subject is more flexible and it's extensible with LoginModule.
a. JERI with secure sockets and atomic serialization can now be utilised for
the following services in Phoenix:
i. ActivationMonitor,
ii. ActivationSystem,
iii. Activator.
b. RMI with TLS sockets for securing:
i. Registry service
ii. LocateRegistry methods.
3. Lots of additional testing using atomic endpoints over JSSE, transient
and activatable configurations for tests.
a. We currently have about 1400 tests, and this is being compounded to 5600
tests with each configuration (there’s more configuration options so this
can go higher eventually). 1400 tests take about 24 hours to complete, so
we’re talking 4 days’ worth of testing for a full run.
4. FindBugs Static testing and more bug fixes.

I’m getting ready to fill out the modular build structure for River and
populate it with River’s code.

Next steps are then to donate externally developed features, module by
module, so people can digest the changes and propose improvements they want
too.

I’m very close to being able to deploy a locked down secure version of
Reggie with TLS and atomic serialization over IPv6, so we can have a public
lookup service permanently running so people can register their services
there, this will be locatable via https unicast and IPv6 Global multicast.
We can then update and modernise the service browser, so people can
experiment with these services.

I’m also thinking we need to set up a small Certificate Authority, so any
user can request a user certificate be signed, and service providers also. I
think we should keep these separate, as users could remain relatively
anonymous, client certificates are only required to prevent MITM attacks.
Services will require more discretion as users will consume their code, so I
think we need a reputation system, where services that behave badly can be
identified and have their certificates revoked at a Hold level, or revoked
irreversibly depending on whether they rectify the issue with their service.

We could also have different CA signing certs that represent levels of
trust, so you basically start with a minimal level of trust and as you build
up your reputation, you get your certificate signed with CA signer cert that
represents a higher level of trust.

Services will be able to track client certificates, but don’t need to know
any personal details, your private certificate will be your identity
basically.

So what I’m thinking is, we can create a service ecosystem, where we’re
using secure TLS certificates, so companies / people can interact securely.

Regards,

Peter.

Reply via email to