scispace - formally typeset
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Advanced and authenticated marking schemes for IP traceback

Dawn Song, +1 more
- Vol. 2, pp 878-886
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Two new schemes are presented, the advanced marking scheme and the authenticated marking scheme, which allow the victim to trace-back the approximate origin of spoofed IP packets and provide efficient authentication of routers' markings such that even a compromised router cannot forge or tamper markings from other uncompromised routers.
Abstract
Defending against distributed denial-of-service attacks is one of the hardest security problems on the Internet today. One difficulty to thwart these attacks is to trace the source of the attacks because they often use incorrect, or spoofed IP source addresses to disguise the true origin. In this paper, we present two new schemes, the advanced marking scheme and the authenticated marking scheme, which allow the victim to trace-back the approximate origin of spoofed IP packets. Our techniques feature low network and router overhead, and support incremental deployment. In contrast to previous work, our techniques have significantly higher precision (lower false positive rate) and fewer computation overhead for the victim to reconstruct the attack paths under large scale distributed denial-of-service attacks. Furthermore the authenticated marking scheme provides efficient authentication of routers' markings such that even a compromised router cannot forge or tamper markings from other uncompromised routers.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

A taxonomy of DDoS attack and DDoS defense mechanisms

TL;DR: This paper presents two taxonomies for classifying attacks and defenses in distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) and provides researchers with a better understanding of the problem and the current solution space.
Proceedings Article

Inferring internet denial-of-service activity

TL;DR: This article presents a new technique, called “backscatter analysis,” that provides a conservative estimate of worldwide denial-of-service activity, and believes it is the first to provide quantitative estimates of Internet-wide denial- of- service activity.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Hash-based IP traceback

TL;DR: This work presents a hash-based technique for IP traceback that generates audit trails for traffic within the network, and can trace the origin of a single IP packet delivered by the network in the recent past and is implementable in current or next-generation routing hardware.
Journal ArticleDOI

Survey of network-based defense mechanisms countering the DoS and DDoS problems

TL;DR: This survey analyzes the design decisions in the Internet that have created the potential for denial of service attacks and the methods that have been proposed for defense against these attacks, and discusses potential countermeasures against each defense mechanism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inferring Internet denial-of-service activity

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a new technique, called backscatter analysis, that provides a conservative estimate of worldwide denial-of-service activity, and quantitatively assess the number, duration and focus of attacks, and qualitatively characterize their behavior.
References
More filters
Proceedings Article

The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm

TL;DR: This document describes the MD5 message-digest algorithm, which takes as input a message of arbitrary length and produces as output a 128-bit "fingerprint" or "message digest" of the input.

HMAC: Keyed-Hashing for Message Authentication

TL;DR: This document describes HMAC, a mechanism for message authentication using cryptographic hash functions that can be used with any iterative cryptographic hash function, e.g., MD5, SHA-1, in combination with a secret shared key.

Network Ingress Filtering: Defeating Denial of Service Attacks which employ IP Source Address Spoofing

P. Ferguson, +1 more
TL;DR: A simple, effective, and straightforward method for using ingress traffic filtering to prohibit DoS attacks which use forged IP addresses to be propagated from 'behind' an Internet Service Provider's (ISP) aggregation point is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Practical network support for IP traceback

TL;DR: A general purpose traceback mechanism based on probabilistic packet marking in the network that allows a victim to identify the network path(s) traversed by attack traffic without requiring interactive operational support from Internet Service Providers (ISPs).