• DocumentCode
    2328968
  • Title

    NIS01-6: Stasis Trap: Cross-Layer Stealthy Attacks in Wireless Ad Hoc Networks

  • Author

    Bian, Kaigui ; Park, Jung-Min ; Chen, Ruiliang

  • Author_Institution
    Bradley Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Virginia Polytech. Inst. & State Univ., Blacksburg, VA
  • fYear
    2006
  • fDate
    Nov. 27 2006-Dec. 1 2006
  • Firstpage
    1
  • Lastpage
    5
  • Abstract
    Denial-of-Service (DoS) attacks pose a major threat to the availability of wireless ad hoc networks. Fault tolerant operation of wireless ad hoc networks will depend on the placement of DoS countermeasures in sufficiently robust form. In this paper, we describe a novel type of DoS attack called the Stasis Trap attack, and propose a technique for detecting such an attack. Stasis Trap attack has two distinguishing characteristics-it has a cross-layer design, and is stealthy. The Stasis Trap attack has a cross-layer design in that it is launched from the MAC layer but its aim is to degrade the end-to-end throughput of flows at the transport layer by exploiting TCP\´s congestion-control mechanism. Specifically, an adversary launches a Stasis Trap attack against neighboring nodes by periodically preempting the wireless channel in order to cause large variations in the round trip time (RTT) of TCP flows. Channel preemptions are carried out by manipulating the back-off mechanism of the Distributed Coordinating Function of the 802.11 MAC protocol. The periodic preemptions induce large RTT variations in the TCP flows that are within the transmission range of the adversary. This in turn causes a significant drop in the throughput of those flows, thereby creating a "stasis trap" around the adversary that entangles TCP flows. The aforementioned attack severely degrades end-to-end throughput but has very little effect on MAC-layer throughput, and hence it is very hard to detect at the MAC layer, which is its point of attack. In this sense, this attack is stealthy. To detect the Stasis Trap attack, we propose a minimax robust decentralized detection framework with robust hypothesis testing.
  • Keywords
    access protocols; ad hoc networks; telecommunication congestion control; telecommunication security; channel preemptions; congestion-control mechanism; cross-layer stealthy attacks; denial-of-service; round trip time; stasis trap; wireless ad hoc networks; Availability; Computer crime; Cross layer design; Degradation; Fault tolerance; Media Access Protocol; Minimax techniques; Mobile ad hoc networks; Robustness; Throughput;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Global Telecommunications Conference, 2006. GLOBECOM '06. IEEE
  • Conference_Location
    San Francisco, CA
  • ISSN
    1930-529X
  • Print_ISBN
    1-4244-0356-1
  • Electronic_ISBN
    1930-529X
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/GLOCOM.2006.266
  • Filename
    4150896