<<The ESB has the responsibility to preserve the transport layer
security of an incoming message. It follows that in cases where the
threats to the ESB are from unauthorized access only, it may mean that
the ESB does not do any additional security processing on an incoming
request. In other cases the ESB may offer a mediation which validates
that the transport protocol underneath the request is part of a trust
relationship. Included in this level of mediation are "typical"
transport layer security techniques such as virtual private networks
(VPNs) and (mutually authenticated) SSL used to validate the trust
relationship between invoker and service. The ESB, as a trusted
component within a service-oriented architecture, then must be able to
provide transport layer security, and establish a trust relationship,
between the origin of the request and the ESB entry point for services.

Allowing the ESB node to mediate transport level security and trust
relationships establishes the ESB as a component in the security
model. The ESB then supplies a service, that brokers or mediates
security for all the services on the bus, removing the need for each
service to independently manage and evaluate trust relationships with
every possible service invoker.>>

You can read this at:

http://www.ebizq.net/hot_topics/soa/features/6554.html

How useful a security role does the ESB you sell or use play??

Gervas







 
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