2 research outputs found
Trust-based security for the OLSR routing protocol
International audienceThe trust is always present implicitly in the protocols based on cooperation, in particular, between the entities involved in routing operations in Ad hoc networks. Indeed, as the wireless range of such nodes is limited, the nodes mutually cooperate with their neighbors in order to extend the remote nodes and the entire network. In our work, we are interested by trust as security solution for OLSR protocol. This approach fits particularly with characteristics of ad hoc networks. Moreover, the explicit trust management allows entities to reason with and about trust, and to take decisions regarding other entities. In this paper, we detail the techniques and the contributions in trust-based security in OLSR. We present trust-based analysis of the OLSR protocol using trust specification language, and we show how trust-based reasoning can allow each node to evaluate the behavior of the other nodes. After the detection of misbehaving nodes, we propose solutions of prevention and countermeasures to resolve the situations of inconsistency, and counter the malicious nodes. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our solution taking different simulated attacks scenarios. Our approach brings few modifications and is still compatible with the bare OLSR
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Nonintrusive tracing in the Internet
Intruders that log in through a series of machines when conducting an attack are hard to trace because of the complex architecture of the Internet. The thumbprinting method provides an efficient way of tracing such intruders by determining whether two connections are part of the same connection chain. Because many connections are transient and therefore short in length, choosing the best time interval to thumbprint over can be an issue. In this paper, we provide a way to shorten the time interval used for thumbprinting. We then study some special properties of the thumbprinting function. We also study another mechanism for tracing intruders in the Internet based on a timestamping approach, which passively monitors flows between source and destination pairs. Given a potentially suspicious source, we identify its true destination. We compute the error probability of our algorithm and show that its value decreases exponentially as the observation time increases. Our simulation results show that our approach performs well