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Details of Grant
 
EPSRC Reference: EP/G004021/1
Title: Enforcement of Constraints on XML Streams
Principal Investigator: Professor M Benedikt
Other Investigators:
Researcher Co-investigator:
Project Partner:
Department: Computing Laboratory
Organisation: University of Oxford
Scheme: Standard Research
Starts: 30 March 2009 Ends: 29 January 2013 Value (£): 533,789
EPSRC Research Topic Classifications:
Information and Knowledge Management
EPSRC Industrial Sector Classifications:
Information Technologies
Related Grants:
Panel History:
Panel DatePanel NameOutcome
05 Jun 2008 ICT Prioritisation Panel (June 2008) Announced
Summary
The eXtensible Markup Language (XML) has become a ubiquitous format for exchanging data. Enterprise data from industries as diverse as finance, healthcare, and genomics are routinely exchanged as XML. Much of this XML-encoded information has to be queried on-the-fly as it arrives -- that is, as an XML stream. News and event information, for example, is available in the form of XML feeds; applications that react to these events must process the feeds in streaming fashion. Communication and messaging protocols also make use of XML, and the corresponding protocol handlers are thus also XML stream-processors.

A crucial aspect of processing any form of data is validation: before data is made available to applications, it must be in a "sane'' state. In the context of data being exchanged over networks data corruption is ubiquitous, because messages are received from untrusted or even unknown parties. Indeed, many or even most of the data being sent to web-accessible application servers may be from malicious or compromised hosts.

The XML community has already developed standardized means for describing constraints on the structure of XML documents. On the one hand, there are schema-based constraints, such as Document Type Definitions (DTDs) giving limitations on the tags that can occur within a document. Qualifiers in the XML query language XPath provide a more flexible method for adding application-specific constraints. But how can a firewall enforce these constraints efficiently on large collections of parallel feeds? This is a critical issue, whether the XML streams represent signalling messages, event feeds, or web service calls.

This project will study which constraints can and cannot be enforced efficiently, and will provide tools and technologies to effectively monitor XML streams for violation of both schema constraints and application-specific constraints.

Final Report Summary
No final report summary is available for this grant.
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Organisation Website: http://www.ox.ac.uk
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