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96 lines
4.6 KiB
Plaintext
96 lines
4.6 KiB
Plaintext
From the FAQ:
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5. 'Saaaay, what _is_ the design of Penguin?'
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Glad you asked.
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Consider two machines, foo and bar. A user on foo (or perhaps
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a program on foo) wishes to execute a program on machine bar.
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However, imagine that the people running bar don't want just
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anyone running code on their machine for security reasons.
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This is the normal case on the Internet, and one which the
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World Wide Web attempts to emulate with HTTP and CGI.
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Normally, there is no well-known channel for foo to transmit
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code to bar. Further, there is no provision for the code to
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undergo verification after transmission. Too, there is no
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well-defined way for bar to ensure that foo's code does not
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attempt to perform insecure or damaging operations.
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Penguin attempts to solve these issues while making sure the
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code language maintains some acceptable degree of sufficiency
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and power.
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Using Penguin, the user/program on foo 'digitally signs' the
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code that's earmarked for delivery to bar. The signature
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encodes the code in such a way that it is impossible to alter
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the code or deny that the signer signed it.
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The code is then wrapped up into a packet and transmitted
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through a 'channel' to a Penguin process running on machine
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bar. The channel's protocol layer is abstracted away
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enough that it becomes unimportant; Penguin code can just
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as easily be delivered through SMTP or AOL Mail as through
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TCP/IP, DECNet, AppleTalk, whatever.
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The Penguin process on bar unwraps the packet, which contains
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further verification and checksum information, and then
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'digitally unsigns' the code, a process which provides the
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code in 'clear' form while telling the receiver who digitally
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signed it.
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The receiver then cross-references the signer's identity with
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a list of rights that the receiver associates with the signer,
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reverting to a set of default rights if the signer is unknown
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or unlisted.
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A safe compartment is then created, populated with the
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functions allowed to the signer, and told to limit the
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operations it can perform to only those permitted to the
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signer.
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The code is then compiled within that safe compartment. If
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it attempts to do something which the signer is not allowed
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to do, or if it attempts to call a function not permitted
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to the signer, the compartment immediately traps the operation
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and throws the code away before it can execute. If the code
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uses no unsafe or illegal operations, then it executes and
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produces a result.
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The code executing side then becomes the master in the
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transaction, and can send code to the original sender,
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send the return value back in a data packet, and so forth.
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The process repeats as necessary until both parties are
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done; the channel then closes, and the Penguin transaction is complete.
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The basic sentiment behind the idea of 'identity' being
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correlated to 'rights' in the receiver is that in signing
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the code, the signer commits her identity and her reputation
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on the correct operation of the code.
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'highly trustable' signers (as one might imagine Larry Wall,
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Randal Schwartz, and Tom Christiansen to be) might be assigned
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very high levels of trust and equivalent degrees of 'rights',
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so that programs they sign can perform very complex and
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interesting operations on your computer. By the same token,
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paranoid sites or those wishing isolation could assign zero
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rights to everyone except for a select (perhaps internal) few.
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Part of the 'rights' given to signers include possibly specialized
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functions that encapsulate the functionality of extremely dangerous
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operations. For instance, a store opening up on the Internet might
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put up a Penguin server which put functions called 'list_items'
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and 'buy_item()' into the limited compartments all users get.
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'list_items' might open up a file on the store's machine, read
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the contents, and spit them out -- an operation which, if allowed
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in the general case, would clearly breach security. However,
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by creating a specialized function, the security concern is
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removed, and by letting potential customers know of the function,
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the power and ease of use are kept high.
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Niggling but important technical issues currently being wrestled
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with include the way that foreign functions are registered into
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the namespace, the construction of a foreign function framework
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so that the names and function of the functions are well-known,
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and a superior-than-current 'digital signature' method.
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