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Research in Networking

Research in Networking. Dong Xuan Dept. of Computer Science and Engineering The Ohio State University. Outline. Group Research Overview Performance - Optimal Deployment in Wireless Sensor Networks Security - Flow Marking in the Internet. Group Members.

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Research in Networking

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  1. Research in Networking Dong Xuan Dept. of Computer Science and Engineering The Ohio State University

  2. Outline • Group Research Overview • Performance - Optimal Deployment in Wireless Sensor Networks • Security - Flow Marking in the Internet

  3. Group Members • Student members: Xiaole Bai, Adam Champion, Sriram Chellappan (to be assistant professor in Univ. of Missouri at Rolla), Boxuan Gu, Wenjun Gu, Thang Le, Zhimin Yang • Former members: Sandeep Reddy (M.S., 2004, Microsoft), Lamonte Glove (M.S., 2004, Avaya) and  Kurt Schosek (M.S., 2005), Xun Wang(Ph.D, 2007, CISCO) • Faculty member: Dong Xuan

  4. Research Interests • Real-time computing and communications • Deterministic and statistic QoS guarantees [ICDCS00, INFOCOM01, RTSS01, ToN04] • Voice over IP [RTAS02, TPDS05] • Performance • Topology control [MOBIHOC06, INFOCOM08] • Mobility control [TPDS06, TMC07] • Security • Internet security • Overlay security [ICDCS04, TPDS06] • Anonymous communications [IPDPS05, SP07, INFOCOM08_mini] • Worm/Malware defense[SECURECOM06, 07, ACSAC06] • Wireless network security [IWQoS06, TPDS06]

  5. Research Grants • ARO: “Defending against Physical Attacks in Wireless Sensor Networks”, (PI, 2007-2010) • NSF: “Efficient Resource Over-Provisioning for Network Systems and Services”, (PI, CAREER award, 2005-2010) • NSF: “Overlay Network Support to Remote Visualization on Time-Varying Data”, (PI, 2003-2006) • SBC/Ameritech: “Providing Statistic Real-time Guarantees to Multimedia Teleconferences”, (PI, 2002-2003)

  6. Performance: Optimal Deployment Patterns in WSNs • Xiaole Bai, Santosh Kumar, Dong Xuan, Ziqiu Yun and Ten H. Lai, Deploying Wireless Sensors to Achieve Both Coverage and Connectivity, in ACM International Symposium on Mobile Ad Hoc Networking and Computing (MobiHoc), 2006      • Xiaole Bai, Ziqiu Yun, Dong Xuan, Ten H. Lai and Weijia Jia,Deploying Four-Connectivity And Full-Coverage Wireless Sensor Networks, in IEEE International Conference on Computer Communications (INFOCOM), 2008

  7. Problem Definition • What is the optimal number of sensors needed to achieve p-coverage and q-connectivity in WSNs? • An important problem in WSNs: • Connectivity is for information transmission and coverage is for information collection • Avoid ad hoc deployment to save cost • To help design topology control algorithms and protocols • other practical benefits The Ohio State University

  8. p-Coverage and q-Connectivity • q-connectivity: there are at least q disjoint paths between any two sensors • p-coverage: every point in the plane is covered by at least p different sensors Node C rc rs Node D For example, nodes A, B, C and D are two connected Node A Node B

  9. Relationship between rs and rc • Most existing work is focused on • In reality, there are various values of • The communication range of the Extreme Scale Mote (XSM) platform is 30 m and the sensing range of the acoustics sensor is 55 m • Sometimes even when it is claimed for a sensor to have , it may not hold in practice because the reliable communication range is often 60-80% of the claimed value

  10. A Big Picture Research on Asymptotically Optimal Number of Nodes INFOCOM 08 MobiHoc06 [1] R. Kershner. The number of circles covering a set. American Journal of Mathematics, 61:665–671, 1939, reproved by Zhang and Hou recently. [2] R. Iyengar, K. Kar, and S. Banerjee. Low-coordination topologies for redundancy in sensor networks. MobiHoc2005.

  11. d2 Known Results: Triangle Pattern[1] d1 Notice it actually achieves 1-coverage and 6-connectivity

  12. A d2 d1 Our Optimal Pattern for 1-Connectivity • Place enough disks between the strips to connect them • See the paper for a precise expression • The number is disks needed is negligible asymptotically Note : it may be not the only possible deployment pattern

  13. A d2 d1 Our Optimal Pattern for 2-Connectivity • Connect the neighboring horizontal strips at its two ends Note : it may be not the only possible deployment pattern

  14. A d2 d1 Our Optimal Pattern for 4-Connectivity Square pattern Note : it may be not the only possible deployment pattern

  15. A d2 d1 Our Optimal Pattern for 4-Connectivity Diamond pattern Note : it may be not the only possible deployment pattern

  16. Workflow of optimality proof (1) • Step 1 • We lay out the theoretical foundation of the optimality proof: for any collection of the Voronoi polygons forming a tessellation,  the average edge number of them is not larger than six asymptotically. • It is built on the well known Euler formula. • Step 2 • We show that any collection of Voronoi polygons generated in any deployment can be transformed into the same number of Voronoi polygons generated in a regular deployment while full coverage and desired connectivity can still be achieved.  • The proof  is based on the technique of pattern transformation and the theoretical foundation obtained in Step 1.

  17. Workflow of optimality proof (2) • Step 3 • We prove the number of Voronoi polygons from any regular deployment has a lower bound. • Step 4 • We show that the number of Voronoi polygons used in the patterns we proposed is exactly the lower bound value. Hence the patterns we proposed are the optimal in all regular deployment patterns. • Based on the conclusion obtained in Step 2, the patterns we proposed are also the optimal among all the deployment patterns.

  18. Future Work Research on Asymptotically Optimal Number of Nodes

  19. Security: Flow Marking Techniques in the Internet Security • Wei Yu, Xinwen Fu,  Steve Graham, Dong Xuan and Wei Zhao, DSSS-Based Flow Marking Technique for Invisible Traceback, in Proc. of IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (Oakland), May  2007, pp18-32 • Xun Wang, Wei Yu, Xinwen Fu, Dong Xuan and Wei Zhao, iLOC: An invisible LOCalization Attack to Internet Threat Monitoring System, accepted to appear in the mini-conference conjunction with IEEE International Conference on Computer Communications (INFOCOM), April 2008.

  20. Invisible Traceback in the Internet • Internet has brought convenience to our everyday lives • However, it has also become a breeding ground for a variety of crimes • Network forensics has become part of legal surveillance • We study flow marking for a fundamental network-based forensic technique,traceback

  21. Problem Definition Network Sender Receiver • Suspect Sender is sending traffic through encrypted and anonymous channel, how can Investigators trace who is the receiver?

  22. Sniffer Interferer Investigator HQ The investigators know that Sender communicates with Receiver Traffic Confirmation by Flow Marking • Investigators want to know if Sender and Receiver are communicating Sender Receiver Anonymous Channel

  23. Issues in Flow Marking • Traceback accuracy • Periodic pattern ok? • Traceback secrecy • Traceback without conscience of suspects DSSS-based technique for accuracy and secrecy in traceback!

  24. Basic Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS) • A pseudo-noise code is used for spreading a signal and despreading the spread signal Interferer Sniffer rb dr Spreading Despreading Original Signal dt Recovered Signal tb noisy channel cr ct PN Code PN Code

  25. Tc (chip) NcTc Example – Spreading and Despreading • Signal dt: 1 -1 • DSSS code ct: 1 1 1 -1 1 -1 -1 • Spread signal tb=dt.ct=1 1 1 -1 1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 +1 -1 1 1 • One symbol is “represented” by 7 chips • PN code is random and not visible in time and frequency domains • Despreading is the reverse process of spreading +1 dt t -1 tb t +1 t ct -1

  26. Mark Generation by Interferer Original Signal dt • Choose a random signal • Obtain the spread signal • Modulate a target traffic flow by appropriate interference • Chip +1: without interference • Chip -1: with interference • Low interference favors traceback secrecy ct PN Code tb Flow Modulator tx Internet rx = spread signal + noise

  27. Mark Recognition by Sniffer rx = spread signal + noise • Sample received traffic to derive traffic rate time series • Use high-pass filter to remove direct component by Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) • Despreading by local DSSS code • Use low-pass filter to remove high-frequency noise • Make decision • Recovered signal == Original signal? High-pass Filter rx’ cr PN Code rb Low-pass Filter Decision Rule

  28. Invisible Location Attack to Internet Monitoring Systems • Widespread attackers attempt to evade the distributed monitoring/detection systems • We design invisible LOCalization (iLOC) attack which can locate the detection monitors accurately and invisibly. Then the widespread attacks can evade these located monitors. • Effectiveness of iLOC attack • We implement iLOC attack, carry out experiments and analyze the effectiveness of iLOC attack.

  29. Data center MONITORS’ LOG UPDATE Attacker Attacker Network B Network A Network C Internet monitors monitors Internet Threat Monitoring Systems Global traffic monitoring based Internet Threat Monitor Systems (ITM): - Distributed monitors - Data center • A vulnerability: location privacy of monitors (ITM only monitors a small part of whole IP address space.)

  30. Two Stages: - Attack traffic generating - Attack traffic decoding invisible LOCalization Attack Basic idea: Verify attack traffic in traffic report, verify existence of monitors. Embed an attack mark in the attack traffic, which can be recognized by the attacker.

  31. Final Remarks • Group research: theorem and implementation • Research on Performance • Optimal deployment pattern in WSNs • Limited mobility WSNs • Research Security • Flow marking in internet security • Worm detection • Wireless security

  32. Thank you ! Questions?

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