Title
SecLA-Based Negotiation and Brokering of Cloud Resources.
Abstract
As the popularity of Cloud computing has grown during the last years, the choice of Cloud Service Provider (CSP) has become an important issue from user's perspective. Although the Cloud users are more and more concerned about their security in the Cloud and might have some specific security requirements, currently this choice is based on requirements related to the offered Service Level Agreements (SLA) and costs. Most of the CSPs do not provide user-understandable information regarding the security levels associated with their services, and in this way impede the users to negotiate their security requirements. In other words, the users do not have the technical means in terms of tools and semantics to choose the CSP that best suits their security demands. Industrial efforts on specification of Cloud security parameters in SLAs, also known as "Security Level Agreements" or SecLAs represent the initial steps towards solving this problem. The aim of this paper is to propose a practical approach that enables user-centric negotiation and brokering of Cloud resources. The proposed methodology relies on both the notion of SecLAs for establishing a common semantic between the CSPs and the users, and on a quantitative approach to evaluate the security levels associated with the specific SecLAs. This work is a result of the joint effort spent on the security metrology-related techniques being developed by the EU FP7 projects ABC4Trust/SPECS and, the framework for SLA-based negotiation and Cloud resource brokering proposed by the EU FP7 mOSAIC project. The feasibility of the proposed negotiation approach and its applicability for Cloud Federations is demonstrated in the paper with a real-world case study considering a scenario presented in the FP7 project SPECS. The presented scenario shows the negotiation of a user's security requirements with respect to a set of CSPs SecLAs, using both the information available in the Cloud Security Alliance's "Security, Trust & Assurance Registry" (CSA STAR) and the WS-Agreement standard.
Year
DOI
Venue
2013
10.1007/978-3-319-11561-0_1
Communications in Computer and Information Science
Keywords
Field
DocType
Cloud security,Security level agreements,Security metrics,Security negotiation,Resource brokering
Cloud resources,Service level,Security level,Computer science,Computer security,Popularity,Cloud computing security,Semantics,Database,Cloud computing,Negotiation
Conference
Volume
ISSN
Citations 
453
1865-0929
0
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.34
12
5
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Jesus Luna114316.72
Tsvetoslava Vateva253.85
Neeraj Suri31040112.91
Massimiliano Rak482077.71
Alessandra De Benedictis510019.81