This disclosure relates to managing access to resources on a device.
In many instances, computational devices may include data, application, and/or network resources whose accessibility is controlled by security protocols. For example, resources such as user accounts, administration rights, password protection, database management, and others may be managed by or otherwise associated with different entities (e.g., an enterprise, a user).
Like reference symbols in the various drawings indicate like elements.
In some implementations, a single user device may include multiple perimeters that logically separate computer resources (e.g., applications, data, network access, configuration files) such that a perimeter may be prevented from accessing resources included in a different perimeter. For example, the perimeters may prevent personal resources in one perimeter may be prevented from accessing corporate resources in another perimeter or vice-versa. Keeping corporate data, applications, and networks isolated from personal data, applications, and networks is desirable because a user can use a single device to separately access the different groups of resources. In other words, an enterprise may extend a secured perimeter on a single user device without interfering with the user's personal experience on the same device. This disclosure is directed to enabling cross perimeter access based on one or more policies. In other words, resources in a perimeter may be accessed by a different perimeter based on a policy assigned to the requesting perimeter or a policy assigned to the target perimeter. Managing cross perimeter access includes controlling what information can be transferred between the perimeters and, specifically, what data and networks can be accessed by applications that are executed within the perimeters and what perimeter resources (if any) can be accessed by applications external to the perimeter.
In some implementations, access to perimeter resources can be controlled by defining, assigning or otherwise associating a policy to each perimeter. The policy can identify external perimeters accessible by internal resources or internal resources that are or are not accessible by external resources. In addition to identifying what resources (e.g., data, network access) are accessible, the policy may identify specific users that can or cannot access specified resources. In some examples, the policy may identify that a specific user accessing an external resource can access a portion of the internal data. In some examples, a resource access policy for file data can identify that the file is visible to any application that is executing within the perimeter but only available to a specific trusted application executed outside the perimeter. In short, a resource policy can define access to both the external resources (in another perimeter) that can be accessed by internal applications (running in the perimeter) and internal resources that can be accessed by external applications. In some implementations, the policies from both perimeters determine whether access is granted, or, if there is a conflict, the strictest policy can be applied.
Turning to an example environment,
As for a high-level description, the system 100 includes a device 102 communicably coupled to networks 102a and 102b (individually and collectively referred to as 102). In addition, the device 102 may interact with a device owner 110, users 106a and 106b (individually and collectively referred to as 106), administrators 108a, 108b, 108c (individually and collectively referred to as 108), a combination of the foregoing, or others. The device 102 includes multiple perimeters 110a, 100b, 110c (individually and collectively referred to as 110). Each perimeter 110 includes data 112, network access resource 114 for providing access to networks, one or more applications 116 for providing services to users 106, configurations 118 for configuring resources, and one or more policies 120 for defining cross perimeter access. As for a high-level description of operation, the device owner 104 or the administrator 108 may generate perimeters 110 including data 112, network access resource 114, applications 116, configurations 118, and one or more policies 120. While the perimeters 110 are illustrated as including all of the resources, a perimeter 110 may include only a subset of the illustrated resources without departing from the scope of the disclosure. For example, a perimeter 110 may not include network access resource 114. In response to a user 106 requesting access to data 112 or network access resource 114 external to a perimeter 110, the device 110 may determine whether the policy 120 for the perimeter 110 currently accessed by the user 106 and the policy 120 for the requested perimeter 110 both grant access to the identified resource. For example, the user 106a may request access to the data 112c while accessing the perimeter 110a and the device 102 may determine whether the policy 120a and 120c grant access to the perimeter 110a.
Turning to a more detailed description of the elements of the system 100, the device 102 may comprise any computing device operable to receive requests from the user via a user interface, such as a Graphical User Interface (GUI), a CLI (Command Line Interface), or any of numerous other user interfaces. Thus, where reference is made to a particular interface, it should be understood that any other user interface may be substituted in its place. In various implementations, the device 102 comprises an electronic computing device operable to receive, transmit, process and store any appropriate data associated with the system 100. As used in this disclosure, the device 102 may comprise a tablet computer, a personal computer, a laptop computer, touch screen terminal, workstation, network computer, kiosk, wireless data port, wireless or wireline phone, personal data assistant (PDA), smartphone, at least one processor within these or other devices, or any other suitable processing device. For example, the device 102 may comprise a mobile device that includes an input device, such as a keypad, touch screen, mouse, or other device that can accept information, and an output device that conveys information associated with the operation of the resources, including digital data, visual information, or GUI. Both the input device and output device may include fixed or removable storage media such as a magnetic computer disk, CD-ROM, or other suitable media to both receive input from and provide output to users of terminals 106 through the display, such as a GUI.
In the illustrated implementation, the device 102 includes the perimeters 110a-c configured to prevent access to one or more resources assigned to the perimeter. For example, the perimeter 110 may include password protection, encryption, and other process for controlling access to resources assigned to the perimeter. A perimeter 110 may be generated by the device owner 104, a user 106, an administrator 108, or others. In some examples, the perimeter 110a may be a personal perimeter created by default for the user 106a and managed by the user 106a. In some examples, the perimeter 110a may be an enterprise perimeter created by an administrator 108a for an enterprise and may be managed by a remote management server. In addition, a given perimeter 110 may be accessed by the device owner 104, a user 106, an administrator 108, a combination of the foregoing, or others. In some implementations, each perimeter may be associated with a single user 106, and at least some users 106 may access multiple device perimeters 110. For example, the user 106a may access resources within both the perimeter 110a and the perimeter 110b, and the user 106b may have only one perimeter 110c. The device owner 105 may have the ability to remove individual perimeters 110 from the device 102. In some implementations, the user 106 may create a perimeter 110 through the enrollment process. As part of the enrollment process, the organization associated with the enterprise network 102a may transmit information identifying the initial resources for the perimeter 110 to the device 102 including applications, configuration and policies. The perimeter administrator 108a-c may assign policies 120 for the perimeters 110 and initiate perimeter updates. In some implementations, the perimeter administrators 108 may remotely lock and/or wipe the perimeters 110.
In the illustrated implementation, a given perimeter 110 includes data 112, network access resource 114, applications 116, configurations 118, a policy 120, a combination of the foregoing, or other resources. The data 112 may be stored in any memory or database module and may take the form of volatile or non-volatile memory including, without limitation, magnetic media, optical media, random access memory (RAM), read-only memory (ROM), removable media, or any other suitable local or remote memory component. The data 112 may include various objects or data, including classes, frameworks, applications, backup data, business objects, jobs, web pages, web page templates, database tables, repositories storing business and/or dynamic information, and any other appropriate information including any parameters, variables, algorithms, instructions, rules, constraints, or references thereto associated with the purposes of the device 102 and its applications 116. Additionally, the data 112 may include any other appropriate data, such as data associated with VPN applications, firmware logs and policies, firewall policies, a security or access log, print or other reporting files, as well as others.
The network access resource 114 includes any parameters, variables, policies, algorithms, instructions, settings, or rules for granting access to the network 102a or 102b or other network. For example, the network access resource 114 may include or identify firewall policies for accessing the enterprise network 104a. In some implementations, the network access resource 114 include or otherwise identify one or more of the following: a username; a password; a security token; a Virtual Private Network (VPN) configuration; firewall policies; a communication protocol; encryption key certificate; or others.
The applications 116 may comprise any application, program, module, process, or other software that may execute, change, delete, generate, or otherwise manage business information according to the present disclosure. For example, portions of the composite application may be implemented as Enterprise Java Beans (EJBs) or design-time components may have the ability to generate run-time implementations into different platforms, such as J2EE (Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition), ABAP (Advanced Business Application Programming) objects, or Microsoft's .NET. Further, while illustrated as internal to the device 102, one or more processes associated with the application 116 may be stored, referenced, or executed remotely. For example, a portion of the application 116 may be an interface to a web service that is remotely executed. Moreover, the application 116 may be a child or sub-module of another software module or enterprise application (not illustrated) without departing from the scope of this disclosure. In some implementations, the application 116 may be a hosted solution that allows multiple parties in different portions of the process to perform the respective processing. For example, the enterprise network 102 may access the application 116 on the device 102 or even as a hosted application located over network 102b without departing from the scope of this disclosure. In another example, portions of the application 116 may be used by the user 106 working directly at the device 102, as well as remotely via enterprise network 102a.
The configuration files 118 includes any parameters, variables, policies, algorithms, instructions, settings, or rules for configuring software of the device 102. For example, the configuration files 118 may include a table that identifies settings for one or more applications 116. In some implementations, the configuration file 118 identifies initial settings for one or more applications 116. In addition to user applications 116, the configuration file 118 may identify settings for other types of applications such as operating system settings. The files 118 may be often written in ASCII and line-oriented, with lines terminated by a newline or carriage return/line feed pair, depending on the operating system.
The policy 120 includes any parameters, variables, policies, algorithms, instructions, settings, or rules for enabling cross perimeter access. For example, the policy 120a may identify one or more resources external to the perimeter 110a and accessible by a process executed internal to the perimeter 110a. In some implementations, the policy 120 may include or otherwise identify one or more of the following: a specific resource; an internal resource; a portion of a resource; a user; an owner; an administrator; an action type; a time period; or other information. In regards to external resources, the policy 120 may identify a specific resource external to the assigned perimeter 110 that can access internal resources. In some implementations, the policy 120 may identify specific resources that the external resource may access. For example, the policy 120a may identify that a specific trusted application in the applications 116b may access the data 112a or the network access resource 114a. In some implementations, the resource policy 120 defines access to both the external resources (in another perimeter 110) that can be accessed by internal applications 116 (running in the perimeter 110) and for internal resources that can be accessed by external applications 116. The policy 120 may be scoped to internal or external applications. In some implementations, perimeter access policies 120 may be applied to data (e.g., file system locations, networks access 114, applications 116). The access policies 120 may allow a controlled means for perimeters administrators 108 to manage, share and secure perimeters assets (data 112, network access resource 114, applications 116). In some implementations, the perimeter policy 120 may define which applications 116 may communicate across perimeters 110. Action type may include one or more of the following: copying, cutting, or pasting data; accessing specific network or type of network; or other types of action.
In some implementations, a policy 120 may define or otherwise identify a process for user authentication prior to enabling cross perimeter access. For example, the policy 120 may identify the type and content of user authentication (e.g., password strength, lifecycle) to apply to a cross-perimeter request. When the user 106 requests access to multiple perimeters 110, the request may be evaluated by both an internal policy 120 and an external policy 120. If both the policies 120 grant access, then the resource may execute the cross perimeter access. Otherwise, the more restrictive policy 120 may determine whether the resource is granted cross perimeter access. In terms of network resource accessibility, the policies 120 may identify or include information to determine which network accesses can be used by an external resource such as an application 116 executed in a different perimeter 110.
The device 102 may be connected to multiple networks, such as the enterprise network 104a and the public network 104b. The enterprise network 104a is a network associated with an enterprise. The enterprise may comprise a corporate or business entity, a government body, a non-profit institution, or any other organization connected to the device 102. The enterprise may be the owner 104 of device 102. Of course, the enterprise may also lease the device 102 or may hire contractors or agents who are responsible for maintaining, configuring, controlling, and/or managing the device 102. In the illustrated embodiment, the networks 104 facilitate wireless and/or wireline communication with the device 102. The networks 104 may communicate, for example, Internet Protocol (IP) packets, Frame Relay frames, Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) cells, voice, video, data, and other suitable information between network addresses. In addition, while the enterprise network 104a and the public network 104b are each illustrated as a single network, each network 102 may comprise a plurality of networks. In short, the enterprise network 104a and the public network 104b are any suitable network that configured to communicate with the device 104.
In some aspects of operation, a user 106 may access the application 116a in perimeter 110a and submit a request to access data 112c in perimeter 110c. In response to at least the request, the device 102 may identify the policy 120 assigned to the perimeter 110a and determine whether the policy 120a grants the application 116a to the data 112c. In addition, the device 102 may also identify the policy 120c assigned to the perimeter 110c to determine whether the policy 120a denies the application 116a access to the data 112c. If both allow access to the data 112c, the application 116a may transfer a portion of the data 112c to the perimeter 110a. Otherwise, the application 116a may be denied access or the device 102 may implement the more restrictive policy 120 in the event of a conflict.
In some implementations, the perimeter file system resources 202 may enable logical grouping of the file system resources such that the overarching application and account structure designed for the device 200 can be effectively partitioned by perimeters, such as the personal perimeter 209a and the corporate perimeter 209b. As illustrated, the grouped perimeters 210 and 220 may indicate information in the fields of application, application perimeter, user, target, target perimeter and permissions. As such, accessibility can be defined for each perimeter by describing the application to which the policy applies.
In some implementations, the application field 208a may include values 210a that indicate the personal perimeter 209a applies to all applications (i.e. for all authors, identifications, versions). Application-ID values 210a may indicate that the personal perimeter 209a applies to all versions of the specified application, the personal perimeter 209a applies to any application published by the specified author, the personal perimeter 209a applies to a specific version of the application, or others. Similarly, the application field 208b may include values 210b that indicate the corporate perimeter 209b applies to all applications (i.e. for all authors, identifications or versions), the corporate perimeter 209b applies to all versions of the specified application, the corporate perimeter 209b applies to any application published by the specified author, the corporate perimeter 209b applies to a specific version of the application, or others.
In some implementations, the device 200 may have an Application-Perimeter field describing whether the policy applies to applications within the perimeter (being local) or outside the perimeter (being external). A user field may enable description of whether the accessing policy applies to a specific user or all device users. A target field may enable definition of a file system path which can be used to specify which areas of the perimeter file system the policy applies to. The target field may not be required as the only area open for sharing has already been defined so that the target field may be useful when more open areas become available.
In some implementations, the device 200 may have a target-perimeter field that describes whether the perimeter policy applies to access of file system resources that are inside the perimeter (being local) or outside the perimeter (being external). A permissions field may describe what permissions the application described by the policy is allowed on the file system resource described by the policy.
The perimeter 306a and the perimeter 306b may include the network access resource 312a and the network access resource 312b, respectively. The application 308b in the perimeter 306a connects to the enterprise network 304b through the connection 312a. In some implementations, the application 308c in the perimeter 306b crosses perimeters to access the resource or network access resource 312a in the perimeter 306a to connect to the internet 304c. For example, the application 308c may be a personal application (e.g., online game, social networking application) that access the internet 304c using the network access resources 312a of the perimeter 306a, which may be a corporate perimeter. The application 308d in the perimeter 306b connects to the internet 365 through the network access resource 312b in the perimeter 306b. All the aforementioned network connections 312 may be physically connected through a physical interface 314, which may use wireless, Bluetooth, Universal Serial Bus (USB), Radio Frequency Identification (RFID), Near Field Communication (NFC), or other connection technologies. In some implementations, the perimeter 306a may be a corporate perimeter, and the perimeter 306b may be a personal perimeter.
In summary, the schematic 300 illustrates cross-perimeter access using networks. The perimeter configurations may define association between a connection and the underlying network(s) the perimeter exposes. The perimeter configuration may define association between a virtual private network and the underlying network(s) the perimeter exposes. The virtual private network and connection configuration may be stored inside a perimeter along with the policies that govern the network and configuration usage.
In some implementations, the perimeter network policy may include fields including an application, an application-perimeter, and a network field. For example, the application field may describe the application to which the policy is assigned. The application field may include values that indicate the perimeter may be applied to all applications regardless of author, id, and/or version. The application field may have an Author-ID value that indicates the perimeter may be applied to any application published by the specified author. The application field may have an Application-ID value that indicates the perimeter may be applied to all versions of the specified application. The application field may have an Application-Version-ID value that indicates the perimeter may be applied to a specific version of the application.
In some implementations, the device 300 may further include perimeter encryption policy, which may include fields such as the file system path, encryption, etc. The field for file system path may contain values that describe the area of the file system to which the policy applies. The values in the encryption field may describe whether the file system contents should be encrypted or unencrypted.
In some implementations, the perimeter network policy may include an application-perimeter field that describes whether the policy applies to applications within the perimeter, such as the perimeter 306a or the perimeter 306b, or outside the perimeter. A network field may further include values that describe what networks the policy is governing. For example, the values may show all networks are under the policy, all network defined in the perimeter, any network defined outside the perimeter, or a specific network defined in the perimeter.
The applications 308a-d may be assigned to the respective perimeter 306 that each has been assigned to at startup. For example, the applications 308a and 308b can be assigned to the perimeter 306a, and the applications 308c and 308d may be assigned to the perimeter 306b. In some implementations, these assignments cannot be changed in flight or after the system startup while the operating system is running. The perimeter 306 may define the environment available to each application, for example, the file directories, network resources, device capabilities, and others. In some implementations, running an application 308 in a corporate perimeter 306 can point the application 308 to a corporate repository. Applications are then installed and managed in the corporate perimeter 306.
An application may be installed into several perimeters 306 concurrently (e.g., different versions, different licenses, etc.). In these perimeters 306, each perimeter installation may follow its own lifecycle. The perimeter administrator, such as the administrator 108 as shown in
In the applications 308 within certain perimeters 306, when creating content and/or launching an application that is not associated with a resource, the perimeter context is to be stated explicitly. In certain cases, applications 308 may be shared between perimeters 306. For example, the installation directory with binaries may not be encrypted for the applications 308 to be shared. The applications 308 may be shared to all users, the same user, and/or a specific device user. When application 308 is shared, there may not be any associated user data to be shared with the application 308. In some implementations, the applications 308 execution inside a perimeter 308 may not use inter-process communication to communicate with applications executing outside the perimeter.
The platform services 408 may include any software, hardware, or firmware configured to access different perimeters and provide retrieved data to the unified applications 410. The platform services 408 may include services for each type of service such as, for example, notifications, messaging, contacts, calendar, other digital assistance services, a combination of the foregoing or others. In some implementations, the device 402 may comprise a tablet computer (e.g., a PlayBook device) that integrates with specific experience. For example, the BlackBerry experience may permeate the device 402 and the perimeters 410 contained within. In these instances, the set of unified applications 404 may all be BlackBerry applications. Both the unified applications 404 and the third party applications 406 may be presented in a unified view that spans multiple perimeters 410 while minimizing or otherwise limiting data exposure.
The platform services 408 may span perimeters 410 and safeguard the perimeter data providing a unified view for both the unified applications 404 and the third party applications 406. For example, the graphical user interface may be governed by the platform services 408 that assemble display information without revealing the related data. The contacts 404a may be coupled with the contacts function in the platform services 408. The calendar 404b may be coupled with the calendar function in the platform services 408. The messenger 404c may be coupled with the messenger function in the platform services 408. The messages 404d and the third party applications 406 may both be coupled with the messaging function in the platform services 408.
In some implementations, the contacts function in the platform services 408 may correspond to the application 412a defined in the perimeter 410a. The calendar function in the platform services 408 may correspond to both the application 412c in the perimeter 410a and the application 412e in the perimeter 410b. The messaging function in the platform services 408 may correspond to the application 412f in the perimeter 410b. Therefore, the examples illustrated in
For example, the calendar application 404a from each perimeter (there may be multiple perimeters that each define one calendar application 404a) can push minimal calendar data to cross-perimeter calendar service (e.g., date, time, optional subject, etc.), such as the platform services 408. The device may then present a unified view of the scheduled events. The event viewers are then executed inside the perimeter associated with the event. In another example, a browser may use a common application perimeter model through which the network access is dependent on the perimeter in which it executes.
In some implementations, a unified platform service can be used to show unified list entries. The list entries may include messaging, notifications, calendar, contacts, and other lists alike. The device 402 may include multiple certificate stores. Each perimeter may have its own store that can be managed by an administrator. Applications assigned to the perimeter may use the certificates in the local store only.
In some implementations, the enterprise connectivity may only be active over virtual private networks. Certain core application management may be authorized to upgrade the system. Certain perimeter application management may upgrade the system. Some upgrades may include updates of the perimeter applications. Crossing various perimeters, data may be backed-up and restored under certain policy specified conditions.
Method 500 begins at step 502 where a request to access data in a different perimeter is received. For example, the device 102 of
A number of implementations have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made. Other variations in the order of steps are also possible. Accordingly, other implementations are within the scope of the following claims.
This application is a continuation of and claims priority to U.S. application Ser. No. 13/293,743, entitled “Managing Cross Perimeter Access”, filed on Nov. 10, 2011, the entire contents of which is hereby incorporated by reference for all purposes.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20170208098 A1 | Jul 2017 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13293743 | Nov 2011 | US |
Child | 15478824 | US |