Title :
On New Approaches of Assessing Network Vulnerability: Hardness and Approximation
Author :
Dinh, Thang N. ; Xuan, Ying ; Thai, My T. ; Pardalos, Panos M. ; Znati, Taieb
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. & Inf. Sci. & Eng., Univ. of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA
fDate :
4/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Society relies heavily on its networked physical infrastructure and information systems. Accurately assessing the vulnerability of these systems against disruptive events is vital for planning and risk management. Existing approaches to vulnerability assessments of large-scale systems mainly focus on investigating inhomogeneous properties of the underlying graph elements. These measures and the associated heuristic solutions are limited in evaluating the vulnerability of large-scale network topologies. Furthermore, these approaches often fail to provide performance guarantees of the proposed solutions. In this paper, we propose a vulnerability measure, pairwise connectivity, and use it to formulate network vulnerability assessment as a graph-theoretical optimization problem, referred to as -disruptor. The objective is to identify the minimum set of critical network elements, namely nodes and edges, whose removal results in a specific degradation of the network global pairwise connectivity. We prove the NP-completeness and inapproximability of this problem and propose an pseudo-approximation algorithm to computing the set of critical nodes and an pseudo-approximation algorithm for computing the set of critical edges. The results of an extensive simulation-based experiment show the feasibility of our proposed vulnerability assessment framework and the efficiency of the proposed approximation algorithms in comparison to other approaches.
Keywords :
approximation theory; computational complexity; graph theory; information systems; large-scale systems; planning; risk management; security of data; telecommunication network reliability; NP-completeness problem; critical network element; graph-theoretical optimization problem; heuristic solution; information system; large-scale system; network global pairwise connectivity; network topology; network vulnerability assessment; networked physical infrastructure; planning; pseudo-approximation algorithm; risk management; Approximation algorithms; Approximation methods; Heuristic algorithms; Optimization; Partitioning algorithms; Polynomials; Vegetation; Approximation algorithm; hardness; network vulnerability; pairwise connectivity;
Journal_Title :
Networking, IEEE/ACM Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNET.2011.2170849