Timothy Wood

2papers

2 Papers

22.4NIMar 21
immUNITY: Detecting and Mitigating Low Volume & Slow Attacks with Programmable Switches and SmartNICs

Cuidi Wei, Shaoyu Tu, Daiki Hata et al.

Our analysis of recent Internet traces shows that up to 71% of flows contain suspicious behaviors indicative of low-volume network attacks such as port scans. However, distinguishing anomalous traffic in real time is challenging as each attack flow may comprise only a few packets. We extend prior work that tracks heavy hitter flows to also detect low-volume and slow attacks by combining the capabilities of both switches and SmartNICs. We flip the usual design approach by proposing an efficient filter data structure used to quickly route traffic marked as benign towards destination end-systems. We make careful use of limited programmable switch memory and pipeline stages, and complement them with SmartNIC resources to analyze the remaining traffic that may be anomalous. Using machine learning classifiers and intrusion detection rules deployed on the SmartNIC, we identify malicious source IPs, which then undergo more detailed forensics for attack mitigation. Finally, we develop a dataplane based protocol to rapidly coordinate data structure updates between these devices. We implement immUNITY in a testbed with Tofino v1 switch and Bluefield 3 SmartNIC, demonstrating its high accuracy, while minimizing traffic that's analyzed outside the switch.

LGApr 18, 2018
Improving Long-Horizon Forecasts with Expectation-Biased LSTM Networks

Aya Abdelsalam Ismail, Timothy Wood, Héctor Corrada Bravo

State-of-the-art forecasting methods using Recurrent Neural Net- works (RNN) based on Long-Short Term Memory (LSTM) cells have shown exceptional performance targeting short-horizon forecasts, e.g given a set of predictor features, forecast a target value for the next few time steps in the future. However, in many applica- tions, the performance of these methods decays as the forecasting horizon extends beyond these few time steps. This paper aims to explore the challenges of long-horizon forecasting using LSTM networks. Here, we illustrate the long-horizon forecasting problem in datasets from neuroscience and energy supply management. We then propose expectation-biasing, an approach motivated by the literature of Dynamic Belief Networks, as a solution to improve long-horizon forecasting using LSTMs. We propose two LSTM ar- chitectures along with two methods for expectation biasing that significantly outperforms standard practice.