Title
FIJI: Fighting Implicit Jamming in 802.11 WLANs.
Abstract
The IEEE 802.11 protocol inherently provides the same long-term throughput to all the clients associated with a given access point (AP). In this paper, we first identify a clever, low-power jamming attack that can take advantage of this behavioral trait: the placement of a low-power jammer in a way that it affects a single legitimate client can cause starvation to all the other clients. In other words, the total throughput provided by the corresponding AP is drastically degraded. To fight against this attack, we design FIJI, a cross-layer anti-jamming system that detects such intelligent jammers and mitigates their impact on network performance. FIJI looks for anomalies in the AP load distribution to efficiently perform jammer detection. It then makes decisions with regards to optimally shaping the traffic such that: (a) the clients that are not explicitly jammed are shielded from experiencing starvation and, (b) the jammed clients receive the maximum possible throughput under the given conditions. We implement FIJI in real hardware; we evaluate its efficacy through experiments on a large-scale indoor testbed, under different traffic scenarios, network densities and jammer locations. Our measurements suggest that FIJI detects such jammers in real-time and alleviates their impact by allocating the available bandwidth in a fair and efficient way.
Year
Venue
Keywords
2009
Lecture Notes of the Institute for Computer Sciences, Social Informatics, and Telecommunications Engineering
IEEE 802.11 WLANs,Fairness,Jamming,Measurement
Field
DocType
Volume
Computer security,Computer science,Computer network,Testbed,Bandwidth (signal processing),Jamming attack,Throughput,Jamming,Network performance
Conference
19
ISSN
Citations 
PageRank 
1867-8211
11
0.71
References 
Authors
16
5
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Ioannis Broustis142529.27
Konstantinos Pelechrinis269248.45
Dimitris Syrivelis312415.71
Srikanth V. Krishnamurthy464561.55
Leandros Tassiulas57692757.41