Title :
Layer-4 service differentiation and resource isolation
Author :
Wang, Haining ; Shin, Kang G.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Michigan Univ., Ann Arbor, MI, USA
Abstract :
While the differentiated services (DiftServ) infrastructure is scalable and robust in providing network quality of service (QoS), there are serious drawbacks with the services provided by DiffServ: (1) the services are coarse-grained and one-way only; (2) no service differentiation and resource isolation are provided to meta-data packets such as TCP SYN and ACK packets. Moreover the coarse-grained service differentiation and the lack of resource isolation at IP routers exposes its vulnerability to distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks. Based on the concept of layer-4 service differentiation and resource isolation, where the transport-layer information is inferred from the IP headers and used for packet classification and resource management, we present a scalable fine-grained DiffServ (sf-DiffServ) architecture that provides fine-grained service differentiation and resource isolation among thinner behavior aggregates (BAs). The sf-DiffServ architecture consists of a fine-grained QoS classifier and an adaptive weight-based resource manager at IP routers. A two-stage packet classification mechanism is devised to decouple the fine-grained QoS lookup from the routing lookup at core routers. Due to its scalable QoS support for TCP control segments, sf-DiffServ supports bi-directional differentiated services for TCP sessions. Most importantly, the fine-grained resource isolation provided inside the sf-DiffServ is a powerful built-in protection mechanism to counter DDoS attacks, reducing the vulnerability of the Internet to DDoS attacks.
Keywords :
Internet; quality of service; telecommunication network routing; telecommunication security; telecommunication traffic; transport protocols; IP headers; IP routers; Internet; QoS; TCP ACK packets; TCP SYN packets; adaptive weight-based resource manager; behavior aggregates; built-in protection mechanism; coarse-grained service differentiation; differentiated services infrastructure; distributed denial of service attacks; fine-grained QoS classifier; fine-grained QoS lookup; layer-4 service differentiation; meta-data packets; packet classification; resource isolation; resource management; routing lookup; scalable fine-grained DiffServ architecture; transport layer information; two-stage packet classification mechanism; Aggregates; Bidirectional control; Computer crime; Diffserv networks; Protection; Quality of service; Resource management; Robustness; Routing; TCPIP;
Conference_Titel :
Real-Time and Embedded Technology and Applications Symposium, 2002. Proceedings. Eighth IEEE
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-1739-0
DOI :
10.1109/RTTAS.2002.1137382