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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Dienstbar - aber sicher

Schreiber, Alexander 20 March 2000 (has links) (PDF)
Der Server ist am Netz und läuft, ftp-Anfragen werden beantwortet, http-requests sind kein Problem, alles ist bestens - solange keine ungebetenen Gäste kommen. Der Vortrag behandelt die Maßnahmen, die ein Systembetreiber ergreifen kann oder soll, um sich gegen einige der gebräuchlichen Attacken zu wappnen. Es wird die Gratwanderung zwischen der Forderung nach hoher Sicherheit einerseits und voller Funktionalität vieler Internet-Dienste andererseits beschrieben.
2

NIDS im Campusnetz

Schier, Thomas 04 May 2004 (has links)
Workshop "Netz- und Service-Infrastrukturen" Dieser Beitrag zum Workshop "Netz- und Service-Infrastrukturen" behandelt den Aufbau eines Network Intrusion Detection System im Campusnetz.
3

Dienstbar - aber sicher

Schreiber, Alexander 20 March 2000 (has links)
Der Server ist am Netz und läuft, ftp-Anfragen werden beantwortet, http-requests sind kein Problem, alles ist bestens - solange keine ungebetenen Gäste kommen. Der Vortrag behandelt die Maßnahmen, die ein Systembetreiber ergreifen kann oder soll, um sich gegen einige der gebräuchlichen Attacken zu wappnen. Es wird die Gratwanderung zwischen der Forderung nach hoher Sicherheit einerseits und voller Funktionalität vieler Internet-Dienste andererseits beschrieben.
4

NIDS im Campusnetz

Schier, Thomas 04 May 2004 (has links)
Workshop "Netz- und Service-Infrastrukturen" Dieser Beitrag zum Workshop "Netz- und Service-Infrastrukturen" behandelt den Aufbau eines Network Intrusion Detection System im Campusnetz.
5

Onions in the queue

Tschorsch, Florian 07 July 2016 (has links)
Performanz ist ein zentraler Bestandteil des Designs von Anonymisierungsdiensten. Ihre zunehmende Popularität führt jedoch zu einer hohen Netzwerklast, die unzulängliche Entwurfsentscheidungen imminent macht. Die Anforderungen und die vielschichtige Architektur von Anonymisierungsdiensten machen die Thematik zu einem anspruchsvollen und zugleich inspirierenden Forschungsgegenstand. Die vorliegende Arbeit diskutiert das Design von sogenannten Niedriglatenz-Anonymisierungsdiensten im Allgemeinen und dem Tor-Netzwerk als relevantesten Vertreter im Speziellen. Es werden Lösungen für eine Reihe von Forschungsfragen entwickelt, die allesamt das Ziel verfolgen, diese Overlay-Netzwerke zu verbessern und sicherer zu gestalten. Es entsteht ein fundamentales Verständnis zu Netzwerkaspekten in Anonymisierungs-Overlays, das die Netzwerklast, als vorherrschende Ursache für die schwache Performanz, thematisiert. / Performance is a pivot point in the design of anonymity overlays. Due to their growing popularity, they are faced with increasing load, which makes design problems imminent. The special requirements and complex architecture of anonymity overlays renders the topic a challenging but likewise inspiring object of research. In this work, we discuss the design of low-latency anonymous communication systems in general and the Tor network as the de-facto standard in particular. We develop solutions to a number of research questions, all collectively following the aim of enhancing and securing such networks. By doing this we create a fundamental technical understanding of networking aspects in anonymity overlays and tackle the most prevalent performance issue experienced today: network congestion.
6

Conserve and Protect Resources in Software-Defined Networking via the Traffic Engineering Approach

Li, Tao 13 October 2020 (has links)
Software Defined Networking (SDN) is revolutionizing the architecture and operation of computer networks and promises a more agile and cost-efficient network management. SDN centralizes the network control logic and separates the control plane from the data plane, thus enabling flexible management of networks. A network based on SDN consists of a data plane and a control plane. To assist management of devices and data flows, a network also has an independent monitoring plane. These coexisting network planes have various types of resources, such as bandwidth utilized to transmit monitoring data, energy spent to power data forwarding devices and computational resources to control a network. Unwise management, even abusive utilization of these resources lead to the degradation of the network performance and increase the Operating Expenditure (Opex) of the network owner. Conserving and protecting limited network resources is thus among the key requirements for efficient networking. However, the heterogeneity of the network hardware and network traffic workloads expands the configuration space of SDN, making it a challenging task to operate a network efficiently. Furthermore, the existing approaches usually lack the capability to automatically adapt network configurations to handle network dynamics and diverse optimization requirements. Addtionally, a centralized SDN controller has to run in a protected environment against certain attacks. This thesis builds upon the centralized management capability of SDN, and uses cross-layer network optimizations to perform joint traffic engineering, e.g., routing, hardware and software configurations. The overall goal is to overcome the management complexities in conserving and protecting resources in multiple functional planes in SDN when facing network heterogeneities and system dynamics. This thesis presents four contributions: (1) resource-efficient network monitoring, (2) resource-efficient data forwarding, (3) using self-adaptive algorithms to improve network resource efficiency, and (4) mitigating abusive usage of resources for network controlling. The first contribution of this thesis is a resource-efficient network monitoring solution. In this thesis, we consider one specific type of virtual network management function: flow packet inspection. This type of the network monitoring application requires to duplicate packets of target flows and send them to packet monitors for in-depth analysis. To avoid the competition for resources between the original data and duplicated data, the network operators can transmit the data flows through physically (e.g., different communication mediums) or virtually (e.g., distinguished network slices) separated channels having different resource consumption properties. We propose the REMO solution, namely Resource Efficient distributed Monitoring, to reduce the overall network resource consumption incurred by both types of data, via jointly considering the locations of the packet monitors, the selection of devices forking the data packets, and flow path scheduling strategies. In the second contribution of this thesis, we investigate the resource efficiency problem in hybrid, server-centric data center networks equipped with both traditional wired connections (e.g., InfiniBand or Ethernet) and advanced high-data-rate wireless links (e.g., directional 60GHz wireless technology). The configuration space of hybrid SDN equipped with both wired and wireless communication technologies is massively large due to the complexity brought by the device heterogeneity. To tackle this problem, we present the ECAS framework to reduce the power consumption and maintain the network performance. The approaches based on the optimization models and heuristic algorithms are considered as the traditional way to reduce the operation and facility resource consumption in SDN. These approaches are either difficult to directly solve or specific for a particular problem space. As the third contribution of this thesis, we investigates the approach of using Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL) to improve the adaptivity of the management modules for network resource and data flow scheduling. The goal of the DRL agent in the SDN network is to reduce the power consumption of SDN networks without severely degrading the network performance. The fourth contribution of this thesis is a protection mechanism based upon flow rate limiting to mitigate abusive usage of the SDN control plane resource. Due to the centralized architecture of SDN and its handling mechanism for new data flows, the network controller can be the failure point due to the crafted cyber-attacks, especially the Control-Plane- Saturation (CPS) attack. We proposes an In-Network Flow mAnagement Scheme (INFAS) to effectively reduce the generation of malicious control packets depending on the parameters configured for the proposed mitigation algorithm. In summary, the contributions of this thesis address various unique challenges to construct resource-efficient and secure SDN. This is achieved by designing and implementing novel and intelligent models and algorithms to configure networks and perform network traffic engineering, in the protected centralized network controller.

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