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Paper 2008/489

HAIL: A High-Availability and Integrity Layer for Cloud Storage

Kevin D. Bowers and Ari Juels and Alina Oprea

Abstract

We introduce HAIL (High-Availability and Integrity Layer), a distributed cryptographic system that permits a set of servers to prove to a client that a stored file is intact and retrievable. HAIL strengthens, formally unifies, and streamlines distinct approaches from the cryptographic and distributed-systems communities. Proofs in HAIL are efficiently computable by servers and highly compact---typically tens or hundreds of bytes, irrespective of file size. HAIL cryptographically verifies and reactively reallocates file shares. It is robust against an active, mobile adversary, i.e., one that may progressively corrupt the full set of servers. We propose a strong, formal adversarial model for HAIL, and rigorous analysis and parameter choices. We show how HAIL improves on the security and efficiency of existing tools, like Proofs of Retrievability (PORs) deployed on individual servers. We also report on a prototype implementation.

Metadata
Available format(s)
PDF
Category
Cryptographic protocols
Publication info
Published elsewhere. Unknown where it was published
Keywords
storage securityproofs of retrievabilityerasure coding
Contact author(s)
Alina Oprea (aoprea @ rsa com)
History
2009-04-20: last of 4 revisions
2008-11-21: received
See all versions
Short URL
https://ia.cr/2008/489
License
Creative Commons Attribution
CC BY
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