Abstract

Access control (AC) is a computer security requirement used to control, in a computing environment, what the user can access, when and how. Policy administration is an essential feature of an AC system. As the number of computers are in hundreds of millions, and due to the different organization requirements, applications and needs, various AC models are presented in literature, such as: Discretionary Access Control (DAC), Mandatory Access Control (MAC), Role Based Access Control (RBAC), etc. These models are used to implement organizational policies that prevent the unauthorized disclosure of sensitive data, protecting the data integrity, and enabling secure access and sharing of information. Each AC model has its own methods for making AC decisions and policy enforcement. However, due to the diversity of AC models and the various concerns and restrictions, its essential to find AC metamodels with higher level of abstraction. Access control metamodels serve as a unifying framework for specifying any AC policy and should ease the migration from an AC model to another. This study reviews existing works on metamodels descriptions and representations. But, are the presented metamodels sufficient to handle the needed target of controlling access especially in the presence of the current information technologies? Do they encompass all features of other AC models? In this paper we are presenting a survey on AC metamodels.

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