J-kernel: A capability-based operating system for java

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Abstract

Safe language technology can be used for protection within a single address space. This protection is enforced by the language's type system, which ensures that references to objects cannot be forged. A safe language alone, however, lacks many features taken for granted in more traditional operating systems, such as rights revocation, thread protection, resource management, and support for domain termination. This paper describes the J-Kernel, a portable Java-based protection system that addresses these issues. J-Kernel protection domains can communicate through revocable capabilities, but are prevented from directly sharing unrevocable object references. A number of micro-benchmaxks characterize the costs of language-based protection, and an extensible web and telephony server based on the J-Kernel demonstrates the use of language-based protection in a large application.

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von Eicken, T., Chang, C. C., Czajkowski, G., Hawblitzel, C., Hu, D., & Spoonhowe, D. (1999). J-kernel: A capability-based operating system for java. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 1603, pp. 369–393). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-48749-2_17

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