113 research outputs found
DUNE: Improving Accuracy for Sketch-INT Network Measurement Systems
In-band Network Telemetry (INT) and sketching algorithms are two promising
directions for measuring network traffics in real time. To combine sketch with
INT and preserve their advantages, a representative approach is to use INT to
send a switch sketch in small pieces (called sketchlets) to end-host for
reconstructing an identical sketch. However, in this paper, we reveal that when
naively selecting buckets to sketchlets, the end-host reconstructed sketch is
inaccurate. To overcome this problem, we present DUNE, an innovative sketch-INT
network measurement system. DUNE incorporates two key innovations: First, we
design a novel scatter sketchlet that is more efficient in transferring
measurement data by allowing a switch to select individual buckets to add to
sketchlets; Second, we propose lightweight data structures for tracing
"freshness" of the sketch buckets, and present algorithms for smartly selecting
buckets that contain valuable measurement data to send to end-host. We
theoretically prove the effectiveness of our proposed methods, and implement a
prototype on commodity programmable switch. The results of extensive
experiments driven by real-world traffics on DUNE suggest that our proposed
system can substantially improve the measurement accuracy at a trivial cost.Comment: Technical report for the paper published in IEEE INFOCOM 202
Secure Dual-Functional Radar-Communication Transmission: Exploiting Interference for Resilience Against Target Eavesdropping
We study security solutions for dual-functional radar communication (DFRC) systems, which detect the radar target and communicate with downlink cellular users in millimeter-wave (mmWave) wireless networks simultaneously. Uniquely for such scenarios, the radar target is regarded as a potential eavesdropper which might surveil the information sent from the base station (BS) to communication users (CUs), that is carried by the radar probing signal. Transmit waveform and receive beamforming are jointly designed to maximize the signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) of the radar under the security and power budget constraints. We apply a Directional Modulation (DM) approach to exploit constructive interference (CI), where the known multiuser interference (MUI) can be exploited as a source of useful signal. Moreover, to further deteriorate the eavesdropping signal at the radar target, we utilize destructive interference (DI) by pushing the received symbols at the target towards the destructive region of the signal constellation. Our numerical results verify the effectiveness of the proposed design showing a secure transmission with enhanced performance against benchmark DFRC techniques
Secure Dual-Functional Radar-Communication Transmission: Exploiting Interference for Resilience Against Target Eavesdropping
We study security solutions for dual-functional radar communication (DFRC) systems, which detect the radar target and communicate with downlink cellular users in millimeter-wave (mmWave) wireless networks simultaneously. Uniquely for such scenarios, the radar target is regarded as a potential eavesdropper which might surveil the information sent from the base station (BS) to communication users (CUs), that is carried by the radar probing signal. Transmit waveform and receive beamforming are jointly designed to maximize the signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) of the radar under the security and power budget constraints. We apply a Directional Modulation (DM) approach to exploit constructive interference (CI), where the known multiuser interference (MUI) can be exploited as a source of useful signal. Moreover, to further deteriorate the eavesdropping signal at the radar target, we utilize destructive interference (DI) by pushing the received symbols at the target towards the destructive region of the signal constellation. Our numerical results verify the effectiveness of the proposed design showing a secure transmission with enhanced performance against benchmark DFRC techniques
An Adaptive Self-Interference Cancelation/Utilization and ICA-Assisted Semi-Blind Full-Duplex Relay System for LLHR IoT
In this article, we propose a semi-blind full-duplex (FD) amplify-and-forward (AF) relay system with adaptive self-interference (SI) processing assisted by independent component analysis (ICA) for low-latency and high-reliability (LLHR) Internet of Things (IoT). The SI at FD relay is not necessarily canceled as much as possible like the conventional approaches, but is canceled or utilized based on a signal-to-residual-SI ratio (SRSIR) threshold at relay. According to the selected SI processing mode at relay, an ICA-based adaptive semi-blind scheme is proposed for signal separation and detection at destination. The proposed FD relay system not only features reduced signal processing cost of SI cancelation but also achieves a much higher degree of freedom in signal detection. The resulting bit error rate (BER) performance is robust against a wide range of SRSIR, much better than that of conventional FD systems, and close to the ideal case with perfect channel state information (CSI) and perfect SI cancelation. The proposed system also requires negligible spectral overhead as only a nonredundant precoding is needed for ambiguity elimination in ICA. In addition, the proposed system enables full resource utilization with consecutive data transmission at all time and same frequency, leading to much higher throughput and energy efficiency than the time-splitting and power-splitting-based self-energy recycling approaches that utilize only partial resources. Furthermore, an intensive analysis is provided, where the SRSIR thresholds for the adaptive SI processing mode selection and the BER expressions with ICA incurred ambiguities are derived
PHY Layer Anonymous Precoding: Sender Detection Performance and Diversity-Multiplexing Tradeoff
Departing from traditional data security-oriented designs, the aim of anonymity is to conceal the transmitters’ identities during communications to all possible receivers. In this work, joint anonymous transceiver design at the physical (PHY) layer is investigated. We first present sender detection error rate (DER) performance analysis, where closed-form expression of DER is derived for a generic precoding scheme applied at the transmitter side. Based on the tight DER expression, a fully DER-tunable anonymous transceiver design is demonstrated. An alias channel-based combiner is first proposed, which helps the receiver find a Euclidean space that is close to the propagation channel of the received signal for high quality reception, but does not rely on the recognition of the real sender’s channel. Then, two novel anonymous precoders are proposed under a given DER requirement, one being able to provide full multiplexing performance, and the other flexibly adjusting the number of multiplexing streams with further consideration of the receive-reliability. Simulation demonstrates that the proposed joint transceiver design can always guarantee the subscribed DER performance, while well striking the trade-off among the multiplexing, diversity and anonymity performance
Full-Duplex Versus Half-Duplex Amplify-and-Forward Relaying: Which is More Energy Efficient in 60-GHz Dual-Hop Indoor Wireless Systems?
We provide a comprehensive energy efficiency (EE) analysis of the full-duplex (FD) and half-duplex (HD) amplify-and-forward (AF) relay-assisted 60-GHz dual-hop indoor wireless systems, aiming to answer the question of which relaying mode is greener (more energy efficient) and to address the issue of EE optimization. We develop an opportunistic relaying mode selection scheme, where FD relaying with one-stage self-interference cancellation (passive suppression) or two-stage self-interference cancellation (passive suppression + analog cancellation) or HD relaying is opportunistically selected, together with transmission power adaptation, to maximize the EE with given channel gains. A low-complexity joint mode selection and EE optimization algorithm are proposed. We show a counter-intuitive finding that with a relatively loose maximum transmission power constraint, FD relaying with two-stage self-interference cancellation is preferable to both FD relaying with one-stage self-interference cancellation and HD relaying, resulting in a higher optimized EE. A full range of power consumption sources is considered to rationalize our analysis. The effects of imperfect self-interference cancellation at relay, drain efficiency, and static circuit power on EE are investigated. Simulation results verify our theoretical analysis
Physical Layer Anonymous Precoding Design: From the Perspective of Anonymity Entropy
In the era of e-Health, privacy protection has become imperative in applications that carry personal and sensitive data. Departing from the data-perturbation based privacy-preserving techniques that reduce the fidelity of the disclosed data, in this paper we investigate anonymous communications, which mask the identity of the data sender while providing high data reliability. Focusing on the physical (PHY) layer, we first explore the break of privacy through a statistical attribute based sender detection (SD) from the receiver. Compared to the existing literature, this enables a much enhanced SD performance, especially when the users are equipped with different numbers of antennas. To counteract the advanced SD approach above, we formulate explicit anonymity constraints for the design of the anonymous precoder, which mask the sender’s PHY attributes that can be exploited by SD, while at the same time preserving the reliability of the data. Then, anonymity entropy-oriented precoders are proposed for different antenna configurations at the users, which adaptively construct a maximum number of aliases while obeying users’ signal-to-noise-ratio requirements for data accuracy. Simulation results demonstrate that the proposed anonymous precoders provide the highest level of anonymity entropy over the benchmarks, while achieving reasonable symbol error rate for the communication signal
Multicluster-Coordination Industrial Internet of Things: The Era of Nonorthogonal Transmission
The imminent industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) aims to provide massive device connectivity and support ever-increasing data demands, putting today's production environment on the edge of a new era of innovations and changes. In a multicluster IIoT, devices may suffer severe intercluster interference due to the intensive frequency reuse among adjacent access points (APs), thus deteriorating their quality of service (QoS). To address this issue, conventional multicluster coordination in the IIoT provides orthogonal code-, frequency-, time- or spatial-domain multiple access for interference management, but this results in a waste of resources, especially in the context of the explosively increased number of devices
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