Title
Impact of denial of service attacks on ad hoc networks
Abstract
Significant progress has been made towards making ad hoc networks secure and DoS resilient. However, little attention has been focused on quantifying DoS resilience: Do ad hoc networks have sufficiently redundant paths and counter-DoS mechanisms to make DoS attacks largely ineffective? Or are there attack and system factors that can lead to devastating effects? In this paper, we design and study DoS attacks in order to assess the damage that difficult-to-detect attackers can cause. The first attack we study, called the JellyFish attack, is targeted against closed-loop flows such as TCP; although protocol compliant, it has devastating effects. The second is the Black Hole attack, which has effects similar to the JellyFish, but on open-loop flows. We quantify via simulations and analytical modeling the scalability of DoS attacks as a function of key performance parameters such as mobility, system size, node density, and counter-DoS strategy. One perhaps surprising result is that such DoS attacks can increase the capacity of ad hoc networks, as they starve multi-hop flows and only allow one-hop communication, a capacity-maximizing, yet clearly undesirable situation.
Year
DOI
Venue
2008
10.1109/TNET.2007.904002
IEEE/ACM Trans. Netw.
Keywords
Field
DocType
Computer crime,Ad hoc networks,Resilience,Analytical models,Routing protocols,Scalability,Laboratories,Performance analysis,Spread spectrum communication,Europe
Psychological resilience,Packet drop attack,Denial-of-service attack,Computer science,Computer security,Telecommunication security,Computer network,Wireless ad hoc network,Telecommunications service,Routing protocol,Scalability
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
16
4
1063-6692
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
37
1.74
27
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Imad Aad11150104.13
J. -P. Hubaux210006772.23
Edward W. Knightly34763371.38