Cooperation of Mutually Suspicious Subsystems in a Computer Utility
Author(s)
Schroeder, Michael D.Abstract
This thesis describes practical protection mechanisms that allow mutually suspicious subsystems to cooperate in a single computation and still be protected from one another. The mechanisms are based on the division of a computation into independent domains of access privilege, each of which may encapsulate a protected subsystem. The central component of the mechanisms is a hardware processor that automatically enforces the access constraints associated with a multidomain computation implemented as a single execution point in a segmented virtual memory.
Date issued
1972-09Series/Report no.
MIT-LCS-TR-104MAC-TR-104