Risk Assessment and Decision Support for Security Policies and Related Enterprise Operational Proces

 
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Old 01-25-2011
Risk Assessment and Decision Support for Security Policies and Related Enterprise Operational Proces

HPL-2011-12 Risk Assessment and Decision Support for Security Policies and Related Enterprise Operational Processes - Casassa Mont, Marco; Brown, Richard
Keyword(s): Security Policies, Risk Assessment, Decision Support, Access Management, Security Analytics, Modelling, Simulation
Abstract: This paper presents and discusses our work to provide organizations with risk assessment and decision support capabilities when dealing with their strategic security policies. Traditional work in the policy management space primarily focuses on technical languages and frameworks to manage and enforc ...
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Perl::Critic::Policy::Miscellanea::ProhibitUnrestrictedNUsertContributed Perl Perl::Critic::Policy::Miscellanea::ProhibitUnrestrictedNoCritic(3pm)

NAME
Perl::Critic::Policy::Miscellanea::ProhibitUnrestrictedNoCritic - Forbid a bare "## no critic" AFFILIATION
This Policy is part of the core Perl::Critic distribution. DESCRIPTION
A bare "## no critic" annotation will disable all the active Policies. This creates holes for other, unintended violations to appear in your code. It is better to disable only the particular Policies that you need to get around. By putting Policy names in a comma-separated list after the "## no critic" annotation, then it will only disable the named Policies. Policy names are matched as regular expressions, so you can use shortened Policy names, or patterns that match several Policies. This Policy generates a violation any time that an unrestricted "## no critic" annotation appears. ## no critic # not ok ## no critic '' # not ok ## no critic () # not ok ## no critic qw() # not ok ## no critic (Policy1, Policy2) # ok ## no critic (Policy1 Policy2) # ok (can use spaces to separate) ## no critic qw(Policy1 Policy2) # ok (the preferred style) NOTE
Unfortunately, Perl::Critic is very sloppy about parsing the Policy names that appear after a "##no critic" annotation. For example, you might be using one of these broken syntaxes... ## no critic Policy1 Policy2 ## no critic 'Policy1, Policy2' ## no critic "Policy1, Policy2" ## no critic "Policy1", "Policy2" In all of these cases, Perl::Critic will silently disable all Policies, rather than just the ones you requested. But if you use the "ProhibitUnrestrictedNoCritic" Policy, all of these will generate violations. That way, you can track them down and correct them to use the correct syntax, as shown above in the "DESCRIPTION". If you've been using the syntax that is shown throughout the Perl::Critic documentation for the last few years, then you should be fine. CONFIGURATION
This Policy is not configurable except for the standard options. AUTHOR
Jeffrey Ryan Thalhammer <jeff@imaginative-software.com> COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2008-2011 Imaginative Software Systems. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. The full text of this license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module. perl v5.14.2 2012-06-07Perl::Critic::Policy::Miscellanea::ProhibitUnrestrictedNoCritic(3pm)