• DocumentCode
    950123
  • Title

    Collaborative Detection of DDoS Attacks over Multiple Network Domains

  • Author

    Chen, Yu ; Hwang, Kai ; Wei-Shinn Ku

  • Author_Institution
    State Univ. of New York-Binghamton, Binghamton
  • Volume
    18
  • Issue
    12
  • fYear
    2007
  • Firstpage
    1649
  • Lastpage
    1662
  • Abstract
    This paper presents a new distributed approach to detecting DDoS (distributed denial of services) flooding attacks at the traffic-flow level The new defense system is suitable for efficient implementation over the core networks operated by Internet service providers (ISPs). At the early stage of a DDoS attack, some traffic fluctuations are detectable at Internet routers or at the gateways of edge networks. We develop a distributed change-point detection (DCD) architecture using change aggregation trees (CAT). The idea is to detect abrupt traffic changes across multiple network domains at the earliest time. Early detection of DDoS attacks minimizes the floe cling damages to the victim systems serviced by the provider. The system is built over attack-transit routers, which work together cooperatively. Each ISP domain has a CAT server to aggregate the flooding alerts reported by the routers. CAT domain servers collaborate among themselves to make the final decision. To resolve policy conflicts at different ISP domains, a new secure infrastructure protocol (SIP) is developed to establish mutual trust or consensus. We simulated the DCD system up to 16 network domains on the Cyber Defense Technology Experimental Research (DETER) testbed, a 220-node PC cluster for Internet emulation experiments at the University of Southern California (USC) Information Science Institute. Experimental results show that four network domains are sufficient to yield a 98 percent detection accuracy with only 1 percent false-positive alarms. Based on a 2006 Internet report on autonomous system (AS) domain distribution, we prove that this DDoS defense system can scale well to cover 84 AS domains. This security coverage is wide enough to safeguard most ISP core networks from real-life DDoS flooding attacks.
  • Keywords
    Internet; telecommunication network routing; telecommunication security; Cyber Defense Technology Experimental Research testbed; Internet service providers; University of Southern California Information Science Institute; autonomous system domain distribution; channel aggregation trees; collaborative detection; cyber defense; distributed change-point detection architecture; distributed denial of services attacks; multiple network domains; network security; secure infrastructure protocol; Cyber defense; DDoS attacks; Internet technology; network security;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Parallel and Distributed Systems, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1045-9219
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TPDS.2007.1111
  • Filename
    4359399