Authenticated
Key Exchange Protocols for Parallel Network File Systems
Abstract:
We study the problem of key establishment
for secure many-to-many communications. The problem is inspired by the
proliferation of large-scale distributed file systems supporting parallel access to multiple storage devices.
Our work focuses on the current Internet standard for such file systems,
i.e., parallelNetwork File System (pNFS), which makes use of Kerberos to
establish parallel session keys between clients and storage devices.
Our review of the existing Kerberos-based protocol shows
that it has a number of limitations: (i) a metadata server facilitating key exchange between the clients and the storage
devices has heavy workload that restricts the scalability of the protocol;
(ii) the protocol does not provide forward secrecy;
(iii) the metadata server generates itself all the session keys that are used between the clients and
storage devices, and this inherently leads to key escrow.
In this paper, we propose a variety of authenticated key exchange protocols that
are designed to address the above issues. We show that our protocols are capable of reducing up to
approximately 54 percent of the workload of the metadata server and
concurrently supporting forward secrecy and escrow-freeness. All this requires
only a small fraction of increased computation overhead at the client.
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