Title
A measurement study of scheduler-based attacks in 3G wireless networks
Abstract
Though high-speed (3G) wide-area wireless networks have been rapidly proliferating, little is known about the robustness and security properties of these networks. In this paper, we make initial steps towards understanding these properties by studying Proportional Fair (PF), the scheduling algorithm used on the downlinks of these networks. We find that the fairness-ensuring mechanism of PF can be easily corrupted by a malicious user to monopolize the wireless channel thereby starving other users. Using extensive experiments on commercial and laboratory-based CDMA networks, we demonstrate this vulnerability and quantify the resulting performance impact. We find that delay jitter can be increased by up to 1 second and TCP throughput can be reduced by as much as 25-30% by a single malicious user. Based on our results, we argue for the need to use a more robust scheduling algorithm and outline one such algorithm.
Year
Venue
Keywords
2007
PAM
tcp throughput,single malicious user,fairness-ensuring mechanism,scheduling algorithm,robust scheduling algorithm,delay jitter,malicious user,measurement study,scheduler-based attack,proportional fair,wide-area wireless network,extensive experiment,wireless network
Field
DocType
Volume
Wireless network,Wireless,Scheduling (computing),Computer science,Communication channel,Computer network,Real-time computing,Robustness (computer science),Jitter,Throughput,Proportionally fair
Conference
4427
ISSN
Citations 
PageRank 
0302-9743
10
0.74
References 
Authors
4
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Soshant Bali1303.77
Sridhar Machiraju243537.08
Hui Zang3105277.25
Victor Frost46512.76