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Home > Computing > Data Recovery > What Are Survivable Compu...
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What Are Survivable Computer Systems
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A computer system, which may be made up of multiple individual systems
and components, designed to provide mission critical services must be
able to perform in a consistent and timely manner under various
operating conditions. It must be able to meet its goals and objectives
whether it is in a state of normal operation or under some sort of
stress or in a hostile environment. A discussion on survivable computer
systems can be a very complex and far reaching one. However, in this
article we will touch on just a few of the basics.
Computer Security And Survivable Computer Systems
--------------------------------------------------
Survivable computer systems and computer security are in many ways
related but at a low-level very much different. For instance, the
hardening of a particular system to be resistant against intelligent
attacks may be a component of a survivable computer system. It does not
address the ability of a computer system to fulfill its purpose when it
is impacted by an event such as a deliberate attack, natural disaster
or accident, or general failure. A survivable computer system must be
able to adapt, perform its primary critical functions even if in a
hostile environment, even if various components of the computer system
are incapacitated. In some cases, even if the entire "primary" system
has been destroyed.
As an example; a system designed to provide real-time critical
information regarding analysis of specialized medications ceases to
function for a few hours because of wide spread loss of communication.
However, it maintains the validity of the data when communication is
restored and systems come back online. This computer system could be
considered to have survived under conditions outside of its control.
On the other hand, the same system fails to provide continuous access
to information under normal circumstances or operating environment,
because of a localized failure, may not be judged to have fulfilled its
purpose or met its objective.
Fault Tolerant And Highly Availability Computer Systems
----------------------------
Many computer systems are designed with fault tolerant components so
they continue to operate when key portions of the system fail. For
instance; multiple power supplies, redundant disk drives or arrays,
even multiple processors and system boards that can continue to
function even if its peer component is destroyed or fails. The
probability of all components designed to be redundant failing at one
time may be quite low. However, a malicious entity that knows how the
redundant components are configured may be able to engineer critical
failures across the board rendering the fault tolerant components
ineffective.
High availability also plays a role in a survivable computer system.
However this design component may not maintain computer system
survivability during certain events such as various forms of malicious
attack . An example of this might be a critical web service that has
been duplicated, say across multiple machines, to allow continuous
functionality if one or more the individual web servers was to fail.
The problem is that many implementations of high availability use the
same components and methodology on all of the individual systems. If an
intelligent attack or malicious event takes place and is directed at a
specific set of vulnerabilities on one of the individual systems, it is
reasonable to assume the remaining computer systems that participate in
the highly available implementation are also susceptible to the same or
similar vulnerabilities. A certain degree of variance must be achieved
in how all systems participate in the highly available implementation.
What's The Difference Between An Attack, Failure, And Accident?
How Do These Differences Impact A Survivable Computer System
----------------------------------------------------------
In many cases when I am discussing the security of systems with
customers, the question of business continuity and disaster recovery
come up. Most companies that provide a service that they deem critical
just know the system needs to be operational in a consistent manner.
However, there is typically little discussion about the various events
or scenarios surrounding this and that can lead to great disappointment
in the future when what the customer thought was a "survivable computer
system" does not meet their expectations. Some of the items I like to
bring up during these conversations is what their computer systems goal
and objective is, what specifically does continuous operation mean to
them, and specifically what constitutes an attack, failure, or accident
that can cause loss of operation or failure to meet objectives.
A failure may be defined as a localized event that impacts the
operation of a system and its ability to deliver services or meet its
objectives. An example might be the failure of one or more critical or
non-critical functions that effect the performance or overall operation
of the system. Say, the failure of a module of code that causes a
cascading event that prevents redundant modules from performing
properly. Or, a localize hardware failure that incapacitates the
computer system.
An accident is typically an event that is outside the control of the
system and administrators of a local / private system. An example of
this would be natural disasters such as hurricanes, if you live in
south Florida like I do, or floods, or wide spread loss of power
because the utility provider cut the wrong power lines during an
upgrade to the grid. About two years ago, a client of mine who provides
web based document management services could not deliver revenue
generating services to their customers because a telecommunications
engineer cut through a major phone trunk six blocks away from their
office. They lost phone and data services for nearly a week.
An now we come to "attack". We all know accidents will happen, we know
that everything fails at one time or another, and typically we can
speculate on how these things will happen. An attack, executed by an
intelligent, experienced individual or group can be very hard to
predict. There are many well known and documented forms of attacks. The
problem is intelligence and human imagination continuously advance the
form of malicious attacks and can seriously threaten even the most
advanced designed survivable computer systems. An accident or failure
does not have the ability to think out of the box or realize that a
highly available design is flawed because all participants use the same
design. The probability that an attack might occur, and succeed may be
quite low, but the impact may be devastating.
Conclusion
-----------------------------------------------
One of the reasons I wrote this article was to illustrate that it's not
all about prevention. Although prevention is a big part of survivable
computer system design, a critical computer system must be able to meet
its objectives even when operating under hostile or stressful
circumstances. Or if the steps taking for prevention ultimately prove
inadequate. It may be impossible to think of all the various events
that can impact a critical computer system but it is possible to
reasonably define the possibilities.
The subject of survivable computer systems is actually one of
complexity and ever evolving technology. This article has only touched
on a few of the basic aspects of computer system survivability. I
intend on continuing this article to delve deeper into the subject of
survivable computer systems.
You may reprint or publish this article free of charge as long as the bylines are included.
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