Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10341472 Computers & Security 2005 16 Pages PDF
Abstract
In this paper, we propose a new scheme, called ANTID, for detecting and filtering DDoS attacks which use spoofed packets to circumvent the conventional intrusion detection schemes. The proposed anti-DDoS scheme intends to complement, rather than replace conventional schemes. By embedding in each IP packet a unique path fingerprint that represents the route an IP packet has traversed, ANTID is able to distinguish IP packets that traverse different Internet paths. In ANTID, a server maintains for each of its communicating clients the mapping from the client's IP address to the corresponding path fingerprint. The construction and renewal of these mappings is performed in an on-demand fashion that helps to reduce the cost of maintenance. With presence of the mapping table, the onset of a spoofed DDoS attack can be detected by observing a surge of spoofed packets. Consequently, spoofed attack packets are filtered so as to sustain the quality of protected Internet services. ANTID is lightweight, robust, and incrementally deployable. Our experiment results showed that the proposed scheme can detect 99.95% spoofed IP packets and can discard them with little collateral damage to legitimate clients. It also showed that the higher the aggregated attack rate is, the sooner the attack can be detected.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Networks and Communications
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