Перейти к основному контенту

BLP

Overview

The Bell-LaPadula (BLP) model, developed by David Elliott Bell and Leonard J. LaPadula in 1973, is a formal state transition system for computer security policy. It defines access control rules using security labels on objects and clearances for subjects.

Model

[request_definition]
r = sub, sub_level, obj, obj_level, act

[policy_definition]
p = sub, obj, act

[role_definition]
g = _, _

[policy_effect]
e = some(where (p.eft == allow))

[matchers]
m = (r.act == "read" && r.sub_level >= r.obj_level) || (r.act == "write" && r.sub_level <= r.obj_level)

Policy

BLP typically requires no explicit policy rules since security levels determine access control. The matcher implements BLP rules:

  • No Read Up: Subjects cannot read objects with higher security levels
  • No Write Down: Subjects cannot write to objects with lower security levels

Examples

Request Examples

alice, 3, data1, 1, read    # alice (level 3) reads data1 (level 1) - ALLOWED
bob, 2, data2, 2, read # bob (level 2) reads data2 (level 2) - ALLOWED
charlie, 1, data1, 1, read # charlie (level 1) reads data1 (level 1) - ALLOWED
bob, 2, data3, 3, read # bob (level 2) reads data3 (level 3) - DENIED (No Read Up)
charlie, 1, data2, 2, read # charlie (level 1) reads data2 (level 2) - DENIED (No Read Up)

alice, 3, data3, 3, write # alice (level 3) writes data3 (level 3) - ALLOWED
bob, 2, data3, 3, write # bob (level 2) writes data3 (level 3) - ALLOWED
charlie, 1, data2, 2, write # charlie (level 1) writes data2 (level 2) - ALLOWED
alice, 3, data1, 1, write # alice (level 3) writes data1 (level 1) - DENIED (No Write Down)
bob, 2, data1, 1, write # bob (level 2) writes data1 (level 1) - DENIED (No Write Down)

Security Levels

BLP represents security levels as integers where higher values indicate greater security:

  • Level 1: Public/Unclassified
  • Level 2: Confidential
  • Level 3: Secret
  • Level 4: Top Secret

Use Cases

Common BLP model applications:

  • Military and government systems
  • Financial institutions
  • Healthcare systems
  • Environments requiring strict information flow control

Implementation Notes

  • Enforces mandatory access control (MAC)
  • System administrators assign security levels
  • Access decisions depend on security levels, not user identity
  • Prevents information leakage through read/write operations