Doctor of Philosophy / Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering / Don M. Gruenbacher / Caterina M. Scoglio / As today's networks are no longer individual networks, networks are less robust towards failures and attacks. For example, computer networks and power networks are interdependent. Computer networks provide smart control for power networks, while power networks provide power supply. Localized network failures and attacks are amplified and exacerbated back and forth between two networks due to their interdependencies. This dissertation focuses on finding solutions to enhance network robustness. Software-defined networking provides a programmable architecture, which can dynamically adapt to any changes and can reduce the complexities of network traffic management. This architecture brings opportunities to enhance network robustness, for example, adapting to network changes, routing traffic bypassing malfunction devices, dropping malicious flows, etc. However, as SDN is rapidly proceeding from vision to reality, the SDN architecture itself might be exposed to some robustness threats. Especially, the SDN control plane is tremendously attractive to attackers, since it is the "brain" of entire networks. Thus, researching on network robustness helps protect network from a destructive disaster.
In this dissertation, we first build a novel, realistic interdependent network framework to model cyber-physical networks. We allocate dependency links under a limited budget and evaluate network robustness. We further revise a network flow algorithm and find solutions to obtain a basic robust network structure. Extensive simulations on random networks and real networks show that our deployment method produces topologies that are more robust than the ones obtained by other deployment techniques.
Second, we tackle middlebox chain problems using SDN. In computer networks, applications require traffic to sequence through multiple types of middleboxes to accomplish network functionality. Middlebox policies, numerous applications' requirements, and resource allocations complicate network management. Furthermore, middlebox failures can affect network robustness. We formulate a mixed-integer linear programming problem to achieve a network load-balancing objective in the context of middlebox policy chain routing. Our global routing approach manages network resources efficiently by simplifying candidate-path selections, balancing the entire network and using the simulated annealing algorithm. Moreover, in case of middlebox failures, we design a fast rerouting mechanism by exploiting the remaining link and middlebox resources locally. We implement proposed routing approaches on a Mininet testbed and evaluate experiments' scalability, assessing the effectiveness of the approaches.
Third, we build an adversary model to describe in detail how to launch distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks to overwhelm the SDN controller. Then we discuss possible defense mechanisms to protect the controller from DDoS attacks. We implement a successful DDoS attack and our defense mechanism on the Mininet testbed to demonstrate its feasibility in the real world.
In summary, we vertically dive into enhancing network robustness by constructing a topological framework, making routing decisions, and protecting the SDN controller.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:KSU/oai:krex.k-state.edu:2097/38236 |
Date | January 1900 |
Creators | Li, Xin |
Publisher | Kansas State University |
Source Sets | K-State Research Exchange |
Language | en_US |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Dissertation |
Page generated in 0.0021 seconds