DocumentCode
43574
Title
A Passivity Framework for Modeling and Mitigating Wormhole Attacks on Networked Control Systems
Author
Lee, P. ; Clark, Andrew ; Bushnell, Linda ; Poovendran, R.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Univ. of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
Volume
59
Issue
12
fYear
2014
fDate
Dec. 2014
Firstpage
3224
Lastpage
3237
Abstract
Networked control systems consist of distributed sensors and actuators that communicate via a wireless network. The use of an open wireless medium and unattended deployment leaves these systems vulnerable to intelligent adversaries whose goal is to disrupt the system performance. In this paper, we study the wormhole attack on a networked control system, in which an adversary establishes a link between two geographically distant regions of the network by using either high-gain antennas, as in the out-of-band wormhole, or colluding network nodes as in the in-band wormhole. Wormholes allow the adversary to violate the timing constraints of real-time control systems by first creating low-latency links, which attract network traffic, and then delaying or dropping packets. Since the wormhole attack reroutes and replays valid messages, it cannot be detected using cryptographic mechanisms alone. We study the impact of the wormhole attack on the network flows and delays and introduce a passivity-based control-theoretic framework for modeling and mitigating the wormhole attack. We develop this framework for both the in-band and out-of-band wormhole attacks as well as complex, hereto-unreported wormhole attacks consisting of arbitrary combinations of in-and out-of band wormholes. By integrating existing mitigation strategies into our framework, we analyze the throughput, delay, and stability properties of the overall system. Through simulation study, we show that, by selectively dropping control packets, the wormhole attack can cause disturbances in the physical plant of a networked control system, and demonstrate that appropriate selection of detection parameters mitigates the disturbances due to the wormhole while satisfying the delay constraints of the physical system.
Keywords
computer network security; cryptography; delays; networked control systems; telecommunication traffic; wireless LAN; cryptographic mechanisms; delay constraints; network flows; network traffic; networked control systems; packet delays; passivity framework; wireless network; wormhole attacks; Cryptography; Delays; Networked control systems; Resource management; Routing; Silicon; Cyber-physical systems; networked control systems; passivity; wireless networks; wormhole attack;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Automatic Control, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9286
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TAC.2014.2351871
Filename
6882790
Link To Document