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Defending Against Low-rate TCP Attack: Dynamic Detection and Protection

Defending Against Low-rate TCP Attack: Dynamic Detection and Protection. David K.Y.Yau CS Dept. Purdue U. Haibin Sun John C.S.Lui CSE Dept. CUHK. Introduction to the Low-rate TCP Attack Formal Description of Low-rate TCP Attack Distributed Detection Defense Mechanism Conclusion.

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Defending Against Low-rate TCP Attack: Dynamic Detection and Protection

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  1. Defending Against Low-rate TCP Attack:Dynamic Detection and Protection David K.Y.Yau CS Dept. Purdue U. Haibin Sun John C.S.Lui CSE Dept. CUHK

  2. Introduction to the Low-rate TCP Attack Formal Description of Low-rate TCP Attack Distributed Detection Defense Mechanism Conclusion Outline

  3. Introduction to the Low-rate TCP Attack • Common DoS attack • Consume resources (bandwidth, buffer …etc) • Keep legitimate users away form service • Large number of machines or agents are involved • Harmful, but relatively easy to be detected • Low-rate DoS attack • Aim to deny the bandwidth of legitimate TCP flows • Attacker sends the attack stream with low volume • Exploit the TCP congestion control feature • Attacker sends a periodicshort burst to victim/router

  4. TCP Retransmission Mechanism • TCP congestion control If under severe network congestion: • Wait until retransmission timeout (RTO) • Reduce the congestion window double the RTO retransmit the packet • If succeed, enter slow start phase else, exponential back off again • Calculation of RTO InRFC 2988: RTO=max(minRTO,SRTT+max(G,4RTTVAR)) • Usually, RTO = minRTO when slow start • minRTO=1 second(recommended in RFC 2988)

  5. TCP Low-rate DoS Attack to TCP Flow • A example of low-rate DoS attack Avg BW= lR/T • Sufficiently large attack burst • Packet loss at congested router • TCP time out & retransmit after RTO • Attack period = RTOof TCP flow, • TCP continually incurs loss & achieves zero or very low throughput.

  6. Introduction to the low-rate TCP Attack Formal Description of Low-rate TCP Attack Distributed Detection Defense Mechanism Conclusion What is the next?

  7. T S l R N Formal Description • Mathematical Description • T: Attack period • l: Length of attack burst • R: Rate of attack burst • N: Background noise • S: Time shift

  8. The periodic burst may have different patterns: Low-rate DoS Traffic Pattern • Simple Square wave (Kuzmanovic & Knightly in Sigcomm 03) • Attack traffic is not easy to remain the same as the original at the victim router. • Attack traffic between different period may not be the same, thus T, l, R may vary. • We need a “ROBUST ” method to identify attack • Step-like double rate stream (Kuzmanovic & Knightly in Sigcomm 03) • General peaks with background noise

  9. Low-rate DoS Traffic Pattern • Small Burst combination • Multiple distributed attack sources • Long Period combination

  10. Introduction to the low-rate TCP Attack Formal Description of Low-rate TCP Attack Distributed Detection Defense Mechanism Conclusion What is the next?

  11. Distributed Detection • Overall Idea of Distributed Detection

  12. Distributed Detection • Traffic signature Detection • Small average throughput => Throughput based IDS • No signature in packet => “per packet” approaches • Extract the essential signatureof attack traffic X X √

  13. Algorithm of Detection Samplethe traffic Samplethe traffic Filter the noise Filter the noise Extract the signature Extract the signature Pattern match Pattern match • Similarity between the template and input should be calculated. • We use the Dynamic Time Warping (DTW). (The detail algorithm of DTW is provided in the paper) • The smaller the DTW value, the more similar they are. • DTW values will be clustered; threshold can be set to distinguish them. • Autocorrelation is adopted to extract the periodic signature of input signal.periodic input => special pattern of its autocorrelation.(Autocorrelation can also mask the difference of time shift S) • Unbiased normalizationM: length of input sequencem: index of autocorrelation • The background noise of samples need to be filtered • Background noise(UDP flows and other TCP flows that less sensitive to attack) • For simplicity, a threshold filter can be used. • Sample recent instantaneous throughput at a constant rate(The rate should be frequent enough but not over burden system) • Each time of detection consists of a sequence of instantaneous throughput(The length of sequence should also be properly adjusted) • Normalization is necessary Demo in Matlab

  14. Robustness of Detection • Attack traffic simulations • DTW values for low-rate attack • Square, step, general peaks • T ,l : Uniformly distributed s.t. :l /T<=0.25 • R : 1 (full bandwidth) • N,S : Uniformly distributed • 1000 simulations /type

  15. Robustness of Detection • DTW values for Legitimate traffic • Legitimate traffic composition. • Legitimate traffic simulation: C+ Gaussian(0, N) • Run simulation 100 times for each C • Large DTW value for legitimated traffic

  16. threshold Robustness of Detection • Probability distribution of DTW values • Attack flows V.S. legitimate flows • Expect a separation between them.

  17. Introduction to the low-rate DoS Attack Formal Description of Low-rate TCP Attack Distributed Detection Defense Mechanism Conclusion What is the next?

  18. Defense Mechanism • Router deployment • Pushback detection • Pushback to deployed router distributed attack • Deficit round robin (DRR) }Resource Management

  19. Quantum=1000 bytes 2000 1000 0 1500 A 500 300 B 600 600 C Head of Queue Second Round First Round Defense Mechanism • Deficit Round Robin (DRR) • 1st Round • A’s count : 1000 • B’s count : 200 (served twice) • C’s count : 400 • Classify packets according to the input port [i]. • deficit_counter[i]+= Quantum • If packet’s size<= deficit_counter[i] , serve the packet • deficit_counter[i] -=packet’s size. • If no packet[i],deficit_counter[i] =0. • 2nd Round • A’s count : 500 (served) • B’s count : 0 • C’s count : 800 (served)

  20. Experiment of Defense Mechanism • Multiple TCP flows vs. single source attacker • Eight TCP flows • Single low-rate attacker • Go through the same router • Link Capacity 5Mbps

  21. Experiment of Defense Mechanism • Network model of attack vs. Multiple TCP flows • 4 TCP flows • Single attacker • 7 routers network • R1,R2,R4,R6 may run DRR • Link capacity 5 Mb

  22. Introduction to the low-rate TCP Attack Formal Description of Low-rate TCP Attack Distributed Detection Defense Mechanism Conclusion What is the next?

  23. Conclusion • Conclusions • Formal model to describe low-rate TCP attack. • Distributed detection mechanism using Dynamic Time Wrapping • The push back mechanism • DRR approach protection and isolation

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